Displaying 101 to 120 of 417

  • Go Botany

    https://gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org/

    Native Plant Trust.

    Learn how to identify invasive plants and native lookalikes on our regional plant-identification tool. Also use PlantShare to share your plant sightings, get help with plant identification, collaborate on field surveys, and develop checklists of plants for particular sites you are exploring.

  • Governors Call on Congress to Provide Full Federal Funding for the Brandon Road Lock and Dam Project

    Dec 10, 2021
    https://gsgp.org/projects/aquatic-invasive-species/ais-news/governors-call-on-c…

    Conference of Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Governors and Premiers.

    In a letter [PDF, 396 KB] to the Chairs and Ranking Members of the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works and the U.S. House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, the Governors of the eight Great Lakes States have called on the U.S. Congress to provide full federal funding in the 2022 Water Resources Reform and Development Act for the remaining design, construction, operation, and maintenance costs of the Brandon Road Lock and Dam project. The project is intended to prevent invasive carp from migrating up the Mississippi River and entering and colonizing in the Great Lakes.

  • Great Lakes Aquatic Invasive Species and Climate Change K-12 Curriculum

    https://seagrant.psu.edu/topics/climate-change-and-hazard-resiliency/projects/g…

    Pennsylvania State University. Pennsylvania Sea Grant.

    Pennsylvania and New York Sea Grants worked together with funding from the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative to compile 10 lesson plans focusing on the potential interactions between aquatic invasive species and the changing climate.

  • Great Lakes Aquatic Invasive Species Landing Blitz

    https://www.glc.org/work/blitz

    Great Lakes Commission.

    The Great Lakes AIS "Landing Blitz" is a multi-agency partnership effort and events take place over a two-week period (June 26-July 6, 2024), emphasizing the need to Clean, Drain, Dry boats whenever they come out of the water, and Dispose of any unwanted bait in the trash. Local volunteers partner with state and provincial agencies to deliver consistent messaging about preventing the introduction and spread of AIS from the movement of watercraft and equipment between water bodies. Information on these events, including educational materials, locations and volunteer opportunities are posted on the Landing Blitz page as they become available.

  • Great Lakes Aquatic Nonindigenous Species Information System (GLANSIS)

    https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/glansis/

    DOC. NOAA. Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory. Great Lakes Aquatic Nonindigenous Species Information System (GLANSIS).

    The present database targets nonindigenous aquatic species that are not considered to have been native to any part of the Great Lakes basin. GLANSIS functions as a Great Lakes specific node of the USGS NAS national database.

  • Great Lakes Calendar

    https://www.glc.org/greatlakescalendar/

    Great Lakes Commission.

    The Great Lakes Calendar features events from around the region that may be of interest to Great Lakes stakeholders, with a focus on professional conferences and events relevant to research, science, policy, and education.

  • Great Lakes Commission Shares Lessons Learned from Fight Against Internet Sales of Aquatic Invasive Species

    Jul 12, 2022
    https://www.glc.org/news/gldiatr-071222

    Great Lakes Commission.

    The Great Lakes Commission (GLC) released a report on the second phase of its work to stop internet sales of aquatic invasive species (AIS) in the Great Lakes region. The GLC initiative, known as the Great Lakes Detector of Invasive Aquatics in Trade (GLDIATR), demonstrated that “web crawling” applications can be used to track the online sale of priority AIS and support the work of AIS researchers, outreach coordinators, managers, and law enforcement officials across the Great Lakes basin.

  • Great Lakes Detector of Invasive Species in Trade (GLDIATR)

    https://www.glc.org/work/gldiatr

    Great Lakes Commission.

    The Great Lakes Detector of Invasive Aquatics in Trade (GLDIATR) is an innovative approach developed by the Great Lakes Commission that uses advanced technology to search the internet for sites where aquatic invasive species can be purchased and shipped to the Great Lakes region. This information can be used by invasive species managers to inform and help target a variety of activities including outreach and education, risk assessment, monitoring and surveillance, and enforcement.

  • Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Applying for Funding

    http://www.glfc.org/for-researchers.php

    Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

    The commission funds projects submitted to the Fishery Research and Sea Lamprey Research Programs ranging from U.S.$20,000 to U.S.$100,000 per year (average approximately U.S.$55,000) that generally run for 3-4 years. For more information, review the current call for proposals. Projects that meet particular criteria can also be funded as pilot projects or through the Technical Assistance Program or Technical Assistance for Fisheries Research.

  • Great Lakes Fishery Trust

    https://www.glft.org/

    Great Lakes Fishery Trust.

    Provides funding to enhance, protect, and rehabilitate Great Lakes fishers resources.

  • Great Lakes Law: Aquatic Invasive Species and Ballast Water Pollution

    https://www.greatlakeslaw.org/blog/aquatic_invasive_species/

    Great Lakes Environmental Law Center.

    Great Lakes Law is an independent online resource (blog) by by Professor Noah Hall, which provides news, analysis, and commentary on all things wet and legal in the Great Lakes region. Includes various categories related to aquatic invasive species.

  • Great Lakes New Zealand Mud Snail Collaborative

    https://www.nzmscollaborative.org/

    Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.

    The New Zealand mud snail (NZMS) has been rapidly expanding its range throughout the Great Lakes Region with most recent discoveries occurring in Michigan and Wisconsin. The impacts of this invasion on native ecosystems and their communities in the Great Lakes region are currently unknown, serving as cause for region-wide concern. The formation of the Great Lakes New Zealand Mud Snail Collaborative is a regional approach for New Zealand mud snail management, research, outreach, and education. The formation of the Great Lakes New Zealand Mud Snail Collaborative is a regional approach for New Zealand mud snail management, research, outreach, and education.

  • Great Lakes Phragmites Collaborative

    https://www.greatlakesphragmites.net/pamf/about-pamf/

    Great Lakes Commission.

    The Great Lakes Phragmites Collaborative is a network of agencies, organizations and citizens who are engaged in Phragmites in some way, including management, research and communication. The Collaborative was established to facilitate communication among stakeholders across the region and serve as a resource center for information on Phragmites biology, management, and research.

    See also: Phragmites Adaptive Management Framework (PAMF) Strategic Plan (2020-2026). This strategic plan will guide successful implementation of PAMF by setting program-specific goals, objectives, and measures for the next five years. The PAMF core science team that developed the plan includes representatives from the Great Lakes Commission, U.S. Geological Survey, and University of Georgia.

  • Great Lakes Sea Grant Network Releases Comprehensive Report on Asian Carp

    Nov 2, 2017
    https://ohioseagrant.osu.edu/news/2017/7p0kn/asian-carp-report

    Ohio State University. Ohio Sea Grant College Program.

    The Great Lakes Sea Grant Network has released a comprehensive and coordinated outreach and education report on Asian carp in the region. The document includes information on carp life history, movement and behavior, monitoring, control, ecosystem impacts and gaps in current knowledge that need to be addressed further. The plan’s development was funded by the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative through the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee. See final report (Publication OHSU-TB-1511) Education and Outreach on Asian Carp [2017; PDF, 5.6 MB].

  • Halting the Invasion in the Chesapeake Bay: Preventing Aquatic Invasive Species Introduction through Regional Cooperation

    Dec 2007
    https://www.eli.org/research-report/halting-invasion-chesapeake-bay-preventing-…

    Environmental Law Institute.

    A report by attorney Read D. Porter that examines coordination on aquatic invasive species (AIS) prevention among the Chesapeake Bay states. The report focuses on prevention-related legal authorities in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania in particular, and recommends actions to improve regional cooperation both within the existing regulatory frameworks and through potential amendments to state laws and regulations to enhance prevention.

  • Harmonization of Species Regulations

    https://www.blueaccounting.org/metric/species-harmonization/

    Blue Accounting.

    Blue Accounting is tracking regional consistency in restrictions against the list of Least Wanted AIS [PDF, 1.5 MB] developed by the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors and Premiers, as well as against species regulated at a federal level in Canada (Fisheries and Oceans Canada) and the U.S. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; U.S. Department of Agriculture). This data is paired with information on the activities that each jurisdiction regulates for these species.

  • High-Impact Invasive Plants Expanding into Mid-Atlantic States

    Jan 19, 2024
    https://necasc.umass.edu/news/high-impact-invasive-plants-expanding-mid-atlanti…

    University of Massachusetts Amherst. Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center.

    With climate change, many invasive plants are projected to shift their ranges, creating hotspots of future invasions across the U.S. Knowing the identities of new invasive plants headed to a nearby state creates an opportunity for proactive prevention and management. Unfortunately, monitoring for and managing all range-shifting invasive plants is untenable. To help prioritize range-shifting species, Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center researchers performed impact assessments on 104 plants projected to expand into one or more mid-Atlantic states by 2040 with climate change. Their study was recently published (Oct 6, 2023) in Invasive Plant Science and Management "High-impact invasive plants expanding into mid-Atlantic states: identifying priority range-shifting species for monitoring in light of climate change."