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Texas Pesticide Applicator Exam Study Guide

Everything you need to know to pass the TDA General Standards certification exam in 2026

✓ Complete topic breakdown ✓ Key formulas & concepts ✓ Study tips

Exam Overview

Format

Computer-based, multiple choice

Passing Score

70% or higher

Cost

$64 per attempt

Administered By

Metro Institute

⚡ Important: ALL Texas pesticide applicators must pass this General Standards exam before taking category-specific exams.

⚖️

Section 1: Texas Laws & Regulations

What You Need to Know:

TDA vs SPCS Jurisdiction

  • TDA regulates: Agricultural, Right-of-Way, Aquatic, Regulatory pest control
  • SPCS regulates: Structural pest control in and around buildings

License Types

  • Private: $100/5 years - For farmers applying restricted-use pesticides on own land
  • Commercial: $200/year - Pest control companies and contractors
  • Noncommercial: $140/year - Employees of single entity (schools, golf courses)
  • NCPS: $60/5 years - Limited scope for private applicators

CEU Requirements

  • Commercial/Noncommercial: 5 CEUs per year (1 in laws + 1 in IPM required)
  • Private: 15 CEUs every 5 years

Key Texas Regulations

  • Dual registration required (EPA + TDA)
  • 2-year recordkeeping requirement for applications
  • Spray permits required for certain regulated herbicides (like 2,4-D)
  • County-level pesticide regulations may be more restrictive than state
📋

Section 2: Label Reading & Compliance

Critical Concept: The Label is the Law

Never Legal To:

  • Exceed the label application rate
  • Apply to sites not listed on the label
  • Ignore label restrictions (wind speed, buffer zones, etc.)
  • Allow drift off target area

Signal Words (Memorize This)

  • DANGER = Toxicity Category I (highest toxicity) - May have skull & crossbones
  • WARNING = Category II (moderate toxicity)
  • CAUTION = Category III & IV (slight to low toxicity)

Key Label Components

  • Brand Name: Marketing name (e.g., "Roundup")
  • Active Ingredient: Chemical that kills pests
  • EPA Registration Number: Proves product is federally registered
  • Directions for Use: Legal instructions - must follow exactly
  • REI (Re-Entry Interval): Time to wait before entering treated area
  • PPE Requirements: Protective equipment you must wear
  • Environmental Hazards: Risks to water, wildlife, beneficial insects

Restricted-Use Pesticides (RUP)

Can ONLY be purchased and applied by certified applicators due to:

  • High toxicity to humans or wildlife
  • Environmental concerns (groundwater contamination, etc.)
  • Potential for misuse
🦺

Section 3: Pesticide Safety & PPE

Routes of Entry (Most to Least Common)

  1. Dermal (skin) - 90% of exposure incidents. Always wear chemical-resistant PPE.
  2. Inhalation (breathing) - Vapors, dusts, aerosols
  3. Oral (swallowing) - Eating/drinking with contaminated hands
  4. Ocular (eyes) - Direct splash or vapor irritation

PPE Selection

  • Chemical-resistant gloves: Nitrile, neoprene, butyl rubber (NOT cotton or leather)
  • Coveralls: Long-sleeved shirt and long pants minimum
  • Eye protection: Goggles or face shield for mixing/loading
  • Respirator: When required by label - cartridge or supplied-air types
  • Boots: Chemical-resistant, unlined

Poisoning Symptoms to Know

Acute (immediate) exposure:

  • Headache, dizziness, nausea
  • Excessive salivation or sweating
  • Muscle twitching or weakness
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Pinpoint pupils (organophosphates/carbamates)

Chronic (long-term) exposure:

  • Nervous system damage
  • Liver or kidney problems
  • Reproductive effects
  • Cancer (some pesticides)

🚨 First Aid Priority

Always follow label first aid instructions. For skin contact: Rinse immediately with water for 15+ minutes. For ingestion: Call Poison Control (1-800-222-1222) - do NOT induce vomiting unless instructed.

Heat Stress Warning

PPE traps heat. In hot weather, take frequent breaks, drink water, and watch for signs of heat exhaustion (dizziness, nausea, rapid pulse).

🚜

Section 4: Application Methods & Calibration

⚡ Math Alert: Calibration Problems Are Common

Practice these calculations until they're second nature. You'll likely see 3-5 math questions on the exam.

Key Formulas

Application Rate:

Amount per acre = (Acres treated) × (Rate per acre)

Tank Mix:

Pesticide amount = (Acres per tank) × (Rate per acre)

Total Volume Needed:

Total gallons = (Acres to treat) × (Gallons per acre)

Drift Prevention

  • Use larger droplets: Low pressure nozzles, drift-reduction tips
  • Avoid wind: Don't spray if wind >10 mph or during temperature inversions
  • Lower boom height: Keep nozzles closer to target
  • Buffer zones: Maintain distance from sensitive areas
  • Check weather: Temperature inversions (calm air, rising smoke) trap droplets

Nozzle Types

  • Flat fan: Most common for broadcast herbicide applications
  • Hollow cone: Fine spray for insecticides, fungicides on foliage
  • Solid cone: Medium to coarse spray
  • Flooding: Very coarse spray, low drift, soil-applied herbicides

Why Calibrate?

  • Apply correct rate (too little = poor control, too much = illegal/damage)
  • Prevent waste and save money
  • Comply with the law (label is legal document)
  • Protect environment from over-application
🌱

Section 5: Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

IPM Philosophy

Manage pests at acceptable levels using multiple tactics while minimizing economic, health, and environmental risks. NOT about eliminating all pests.

Economic Threshold vs Action Threshold

  • Economic Threshold (ET): Pest population level where control costs = damage prevented
  • Action Threshold: Set slightly BELOW ET to trigger control before economic damage

IPM Tactics (Use in Combination)

  • Cultural: Crop rotation, sanitation, planting dates, resistant varieties
  • Mechanical/Physical: Hand-pulling, tillage, traps, mulch, barriers
  • Biological: Natural enemies (predators, parasites, pathogens)
  • Chemical: Pesticides used as last resort or when threshold reached

Resistance Management

Prevent pests from becoming resistant to pesticides:

  • Rotate pesticides with different modes of action
  • Use pesticides only when needed (monitoring-based)
  • Apply at full label rates (don't under-dose)
  • Tank-mix products with different modes of action
  • Use non-chemical controls in rotation

Monitoring & Scouting

Regular field inspection to detect pests early and track populations. Use traps, visual inspection, and record-keeping to make informed decisions.

🌍

Section 6: Environmental Protection

Environmental Fate Processes

  • Drift: Airborne movement during/after application
  • Runoff: Pesticide carried by water across soil surface into streams
  • Leaching: Downward movement through soil into groundwater
  • Volatilization: Pesticide evaporating into gas after application
  • Adsorption: Pesticide binding to soil particles
  • Degradation: Breakdown by microbes, sunlight, or chemical reactions

Protecting Water Resources

  • Never mix or load near wells or water bodies
  • Use buffer zones near streams, ponds, rivers
  • Prevent back-siphoning into water sources
  • Don't apply before heavy rain (runoff risk)
  • Use vegetative filter strips
  • Properly dispose of rinsate

Protecting Non-Target Organisms

  • Pollinators: Don't spray blooming plants when bees are active
  • Beneficial insects: Use selective pesticides when possible
  • Aquatic life: Observe buffer zones, prevent drift over water
  • Wildlife: Avoid applications near nesting areas during breeding season
  • Endangered species: Check label bulletins for restrictions

Best Management Practices (BMPs)

  • Follow all label directions exactly
  • Calibrate equipment regularly
  • Maintain spray equipment (fix leaks immediately)
  • Triple-rinse containers before disposal
  • Store pesticides in locked, ventilated facilities
  • Keep spill cleanup materials on hand
  • Maintain accurate application records

Study Tips for Success

📚 Study Materials

  • • EPA Core Manual (primary source - free online)
  • • TDA website for Texas-specific regulations
  • • Practice tests (critical for self-assessment)
  • • Texas A&M Extension materials

⏱️ Time Management

  • • Study 2-4 weeks before exam
  • • 1-2 hours daily is ideal
  • • Focus on weak areas last week
  • • Take practice test 3 days before

🎯 Focus Areas

  • • Calibration math (practice 10+ problems)
  • • Signal words and label reading
  • • Texas licensing requirements
  • • PPE selection rules

✅ Day Before Exam

  • • Review formulas one last time
  • • Get 8 hours of sleep
  • • Prepare ID and confirmation
  • • Arrive 15 minutes early

Additional Resources

Official Study Manual

EPA National Pesticide Applicator Certification Core Manual (free PDF)

Download from EPA →

Texas Department of Agriculture

Licensing requirements, regulations, category information

Visit TDA Pesticide Programs →

Metro Institute Testing

Register for exam, find testing centers, check scores

Visit Metro Institute →

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