Explanation | Pesticide Registration Toolkit | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
FAO.org
العربية
中文
english
français
Русский
Español
Search this site only
Pesticide Registration Toolkit
Registration Tools
Information Sources
Special Topics
News
About
Training
Dgroups forum
Registration strategies
Registration process
Data requirements and testing guidelines
Make a selection
List all studies
Assessment methods
Risk mitigation
Decision Making
Registration criteria
Print
Explanation Intended Use
Some examples of the intended uses of a pesticide as listed in the selection box above
Broad use categories
Use pattern
Examples
Terrestrial
Food
Fruits and vegetable crops, cereals*, seed treatment (if residues end up in food), rodenticides used in food crops and food storage, post-harvest treatments (if treated outdoors and environmental exposure is expected)
Feed
Maize grown for forage, cotton (seed)**
Non-food
Turf, fibre crops**, crops grown for seed, seed treatment (if residues do not end up in food), mammalian repellents, recreational areas, parks, electricity poles, train tracks, weed control in paved areas, roadsides
Aquatic
Food
Aquatic rice*
Non-food
Ornamental ponds, application to water bodies to treat aquatic weeds, mosquito larviciding, wood treatments for wood used in aquatic settings (piers), antifoulant paint
Greenhouse
Food
Horticulltural crops
Non-food
Ornamentals shrubs, cut flowers, other ornamental plants
Forestry
Forestry
Forests, removal of alien vegetation
Residential outdoor
Residential outdoor
Lawn products for use around homes, space sprays (to control flying vectors, thermal or cold fogging), rodenticides used around residential premises, mammalian repellents, wood treatments (decking materials)
Indoor
Residential
Mosquito coils and vaporizers, aerosols, flea and tick products used on animals (veterinary uses), long-lasting insecticidal nets, residual sprays, space sprays for mosquito and fly control, rodenticides, wood treatments (termiticide uses)
Non-food, non-residential
Non-residential indoor uses (e.g. office buildings), animal premises (e.g. kennels), wood treatment (non-residential construction), aeroplanes
Food
Animal premises (e.g. barns, shelters), restaurants, post-harvest treatments (if treated indoor)
Direct application to humans
Direct application to humans
Repellents, insecticides for lice and scabies control
* Irrigated rice may be both a terrestrial food crop and an aquatic food crop
** cotton may be both terrestrial non-food and terrestrial feed if the cotton seed is used as livestock feed.
Language:English
Score: 2039608
-
https://www.fao.org/pesticide-...ke-a-selection/explanation/en/
Data Source: un
CASE STUDIES ON CONSERVATION AND REHABILITATION FOR USERS IN IMPLEMENTING THE CONVENTION : CONVENTION TO COMBAT DESERTIFICATION : NOTE / BY THE SECRETARIAT
Autogenic restoration process was followed comprising selective pruning of branches,
thinning of young seedlings and removal of biomass around the selected trees and shrubs.
Site preparation included trenching to retain the soil on sloping lands. (...) Impact Assessment:
The assessment of restoration units was carried out in 2004, which indicated a plant cover of 90%
comprising mainly herbs (30%), shrubs (40%) and tree species (80%). Survival percent of Pinus
halepensis was found to be better than Pinus pinaster.
Language:English
Score: 1394335.5
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...S=ICCD/COP(8)/CST/INF.3&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
Impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on the European inland water transport, lessons learned and next steps (Mr. Sim Turf, Chair of the Working Party on Inland Water Transport) | UNECE
Skip to main content
English
Advanced Search
Main navigation
About UNECE
Executive Secretary
Mission
Organizational structure
Secretariat
Executive Committee
Commission
Legal instruments
Work with us
Our work
Economic Cooperation & Integration
Environmental Policy
Forests
Housing & Land
Population
Sustainable Energy
Statistics
Trade
Transport
Themes
High-impact Areas
Circular Economy
Gender
SPECA
Technical cooperation
THE PEP
UN SG's Special Envoy for Road Safety
UN Road Safety Fund
UN cooperation in the UNECE region
Regional Forum on Sustainable Development
SDGs
Open UNECE
Events
Meetings & Events
Information for Delegates
Coronavirus Advisory
Publications
Media
Executive Secretary's Blog
News
Press Releases
Covid-19 Press Releases
Speeches
Stories
UNECE Weekly
Videos
UNECE
Media
Documents
More options
Media
Executive Secretary Blog
Press Releases
News
COVID-19 News & Press Releases
Speeches
Stories
UNECE weekly
Videos
Impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on the European inland water transport, lessons learned and next steps (Mr. Sim Turf, Chair of the Working Party on Inland Water Transport)
Languages and translations
English
File type1
3_3rd AGM on response to COVID_29 June'21_Turf_SC.3.pdf (application/pdf, 1.24 MB)
This document is associated with the following:
Event
Informal Multidisciplinary Advisory Group Meeting on Transport Policy Responses to the COVID-19 Crisis - 3rd session
Downloads
English
3_3rd AGM on response to COVID_29 June'21_Turf_SC.3.pdf
Document Information
Published:
21/07/2021
Updated
21/07/2021
Document Categories:
Presentations
ABOUT UNECE
Mission
Executive Secretary
Organizational Structure
OPPORTUNITIES
Vacancies
Internship Programme
RESOURCES
Statistical Database
Evaluations
Follow UNECE
Facebook
Twitter
Contact us
Flickr
Rss
Youtube
Instagram
© United Nations Economic Commission for Europe | Terms and Conditions of Use | Privacy Notice
Contact us
Language:English
Score: 1391565.3
-
https://unece.org/transport/do...uropean-inland-water-transport
Data Source: un
Local people were forced to clear the bushes and shrubs that were growing along the roadside in Thaygone and Padaung Townships.
It was found that no one from any organs of State’s Power issued any order to clear the roadside bushes and shrubs. It is customary that after every raining season, the roadside bushes and shrubs are cleared by residents of every quarter by their own accord.
Language:English
Score: 1321648.5
-
https://www.ilo.org/public/eng...b/docs/gb286/pdf/gb-6-1-ad.pdf
Data Source: un
Local people were forced to clear the bushes and shrubs that were growing along the roadside in Thaygone and Padaung Townships.
It was found that no one from any organs of State’s Power issued any order to clear the roadside bushes and shrubs. It is customary that after every raining season, the roadside bushes and shrubs are cleared by residents of every quarter by their own accord.
Language:English
Score: 1321648.5
-
www.ilo.org/public/engl...b/docs/gb286/pdf/gb-6-1-ad.pdf
Data Source: un
Tsunami forestry website
Please note that this page is no longer being updated and it is available for historical reference only
Forestry FAO tsunami websites: FAO | Agriculture | Fisheries | Maps & images
Contact us
Tsunami forestry website > FAO in action > Regional project > The Maldives
Forests and tsunamis Situation reports FAO in action
Regional project
Regional component
Coastal protection workshop Coastal forest rehabilitation workshop Coastal area planning workshop
Indonesia The Maldives Sri Lanka
Thailand
Newsroom
FAO news releases News clippings
Issues
Forestry and livelihoods Damage to forests and trees Wood for construction Soil salinity Integrated coastal zone management Forest rehabilitation Mangroves and tsunamis
Links and discussion fora
send by email
Project work in The Maldives
Damage and needs assessment
Forestry Assessment and Programme Planning, Maldives, 15 August - 19 September 2005
Forestry Assessment and Programme Planning, Maldives
Plan of operations
Plan of operations for Maldives component of the Finnish funded "Forestry Programme for Early Rehabilitation in Asian Tsunami Affected Countries"
Publications
Trees and shrubs of the Maldives - 1
Trees and shrubs of the Maldives - 2
Trees and shrubs of the Maldives - 3
Language:English
Score: 1319012
-
https://www.fao.org/forestry/tsunami/34433/en/
Data Source: un
TECHNICAL GUIDELINES: ADDENDUM: REVISED TECHNICAL GUIDELINES FOR THE ENVIRONMENTALLY SOUND MANAGEMENT OF USED AND WASTE PNEUMATIC TYRES
Ambient size
reduction Mechanical size reduction at or above ordinary room temperature.
Artificial turf Tyre granulates used as infill in synthetic fields, constituting the primary playing surface.
(...) Other studies show that leaching of heavy metals and organic chemicals such as phthalates and
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from recycled car tyres for use as infill in artificial turf systems is
well within the limits set in the Netherlands for soil and surface water quality. (...) The results of this study show that
the limit values in the present Dutch Soil Quality Decree will be reached after more than 60 years for a
sports system consisting of artificial turf with rubber infill, lava sublayer and sand base layer and after
7 to 70 years for a sports system consisting of only the artificial turf with rubber infill and the lava
sublayer.
Language:English
Score: 1291496.1
-
daccess-ods.un.org/acce...EP/CHW.10/6/ADD.1/REV.1&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
Providing bund level blocks on bund at 50m intervals
vii. Strip turfing to newly formed bund and watering until taken root including transport
viii. (...) Rehabilitation of irrigation canal
i. Clearing shrub and jungle along the channel and training bund, remove outside the reservation
ii. Earth excavation and forming channel bund to designed profile
iii. Strip turfing to channel bund and training bund including transport, laying and watering until takes for L.B main channel
iv.
Language:English
Score: 1273388.4
-
https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/gro...ts/publication/wcms_748304.pdf
Data Source: un
Forest invasive species
English
Español
FAO Home
Forestry
Alien species database
Bacteria
Fungi
Flatworms
Nematodes
Insects and arachnids
Molluscs
Amphibians
Reptiles
Birds
Mammals
Grasses
Plants
Trees and shrubs
Forest invasive species
send by email
Forest invasive species database
Invasive species occur in all major taxonomic groups from micro-organisms to mammals. (...) Bacteria
Nematode
Insects
Flatworms
Molluscs
Amphibians
Reptiles
Birds
Mammals
Grasses
Plants
Trees & shrubs
Fungi
See also
Forest health
Relevant links on invasive species
EPPO database
Global Invasive Species Database
last updated: Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Contact us | Privacy policy | Scam alert
© FAO, 2022
Language:English
Score: 1261116.7
-
https://www.fao.org/forestry/30373/en/
Data Source: un
PETITION FROM THE BABON-BATOUNI COMMITTEE OF THE UNION DES POPULATIONS DU CAMEROUN CONCERNING THE CAMEROONS UNDER FRENCH ADMINISTRATION
Ngninchidjou: 500 coffee-shrubs. Mantro Satchou 1,000 shrubs
and 50 catons i Noubouvoo Germain: 80 shrubs; Ngnipiep: 600 shrubs and
lOO catons.
(...) The day they seized the coffee shrubs everyone fled but one of them was
arrested and they beat him until he fell unconscious.
Language:English
Score: 1244070.6
-
https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...get?open&DS=T/PET.5/884&Lang=E
Data Source: ods