Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§4502a Tropical forestry research and assistance

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 65— - INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY COOPERATION › § 4502a

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Secretary of Agriculture can have the Forest Service help eligible groups in places that have U.S. tropical forests. The help is meant to improve forest management and conservation and to teach technical, managerial, education, and administrative skills to tropical-forest managers here or abroad. It covers eight kinds of work: developing and showing sustainable harvesting; protecting habitats and recovering species; keeping native plants, animals, and watersheds safe from non-native pests and diseases; using biological controls for invasive species; setting up forest monitoring to track baseline conditions and change; finding and assessing stresses like insects, disease, pollution, fire, invasive species, and human impacts; studying causes of changes with experiments and data; and doing research, demonstrations, education, training, and outreach. Help may be given as grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements. Eligible entities include a State forester or similar State official; a State or its local governments; a Federal agency; or a private organization, corporation, or person. “State” means the 50 States, Guam, American Samoa, the Republic of Palau (until its Compact of Free Association begins), Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §4502a

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)To promote sound management and conservation of tropical forests of the United States and to promote the development and transfer of technical, managerial, educational, and administrative skills to managers of tropical forests within or outside the United States, the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to provide assistance through the Forest Service to eligible entities in States with tropical forests to—
(1)develop, promote, and demonstrate sustainable harvesting of native woods and other forest products on a sustainable yield basis in balance with natural resource conservation;
(2)promote habitat preservation and species protection or recovery;
(3)protect indigenous plant and animal species and essential watersheds from non-native animals, plants, and pathogens;
(4)establish biological control agents for non-native species that threaten natural ecosystems;
(5)establish a monitoring system in tropical forests to identify baseline conditions and determine detrimental changes or improvements over time;
(6)detect and appraise stresses affecting tropical forests caused by insect infestations, diseases, pollution, fire, and non-native animal and plant species, and by the influence of people;
(7)determine the causes of changes that are detected through experimentation, intensive monitoring, and data collection at affected tropical forest sites; and
(8)engage in research, demonstration, education, training, and outreach that furthers the objectives of this subsection.
(b)Assistance provided to eligible entities under this section may be in the form of grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements.
(c)As used in this section:
(1)The term “eligible entity” means a State forester or equivalent State official, State, political subdivision of a State, Federal agency, private organization, corporation, or other private person.
(2)The term “State” means each of the 50 States, Guam, American Samoa, the Republic of Palau (until the Compact of Free Association enters into effect), Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

References in Text

For Oct. 1, 1994, as the date the Compact of Free Association with the Republic of Palau enters into effect, referred to in subsec. (c)(2), see Proc. No. 6726, Sept. 27, 1994, 59 F.R. 49777, set out as a note under section 1931 of Title 48, Territories and Insular Possessions. Codification Section was enacted as part of the Hawaii Tropical Forest Recovery Act, and not as part of the International Forestry Cooperation Act of 1990 which comprises this chapter.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Authorization of Appropriations Pub. L. 102–574, § 5, Oct. 29, 1992, 106 Stat. 4599, provided that: “There are authorized to be appropriated such sums as are necessary to carry out section 3 and 4 [enacting this section and provisions set out as a note under 4503a of this title].”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 4502a

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73