Displaying 6221 to 6240 of 6849

  • Varroa Management

    https://honeybeehealthcoalition.org/resources/varroa-management/

    Honey Bee Health Coalition.

  • Vector-Borne Diseases (VBD) National Strategy to Protect People

    Feb 2024
    https://www.cdc.gov/vector-borne-diseases/php/data-research/national-strategy/i…

    DHHS. CDC. Division of Vector-Borne Diseases (DVBD).

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released the National Public Health Strategy to Prevent and Control Vector-Borne Diseases in People (VBD National Strategy). As directed by the 2019 Kay Hagan Tick Act—named after the U.S. Senator who died due to complications from a tickborne illness—HHS led a four-year process with civilian agencies and defense departments to deliver this strategy. Co-led by the HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the strategy identifies and describes federal priorities to detect, prevent, respond to, and control diseases and conditions caused by vectors in the United States. This VBD National Strategy represents the largest formal federal coordination effort focused on vector-borne disease prevention and control with contributions by over 50 representatives across 17 federal agencies.
    See also: U.S. Health and Human Services Press Release on VBD National Strategy (Feb 6, 2024)

  • Vegetation Management

    https://www.dot.nm.gov/highway-operations-program/operations-support-division-d…

    New Mexico Department of Transportation.

    Vegetation control is necessary to slow and/or prevent the spread of noxious weeds. Federal and State Executive orders require the Department to take steps to prevent the spread of invasive or noxious plants.

  • Vermont Announces Quarantine of Invasive Emerald Ash Borer

    May 7, 2018
    https://anr.vermont.gov/node/1180

    Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation.

    As part of the ongoing response to the recent discovery of the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) within the state, Vermont has joined the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)'s 31-state quarantine boundary. The quarantine will help reduce the movement of infested ash wood to un-infested regions outside of Vermont's borders. Ash wood may not be moved from Vermont to Maine, Rhode Island, or 7 counties in New Hampshire because the pest has not been identified in these states and counties. Vermont is also developing a series of slow-the-spread recommendations, initially including recommendations for handling logs, firewood, and other ash materials. To learn more about these recommendations, to see a map indicating where EAB is known to occur in Vermont, and to report suspected invasive species like EAB, visit vtinvasives.org

  • Vermont Forest Invasive Pest Status Map

    Mar 19, 2024
    https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/4a3efe4febd24254947e600372793632

    Vermont Forests, Parks & Recreation. Forest Health Program

    The newly launched Vermont Forest Invasive Pest Status Map offers an interactive platform to track the spread of invasive species such as beech leaf disease, elm zigzag sawfly, elongate hemlock scale, emerald ash borer, and hemlock woolly adelgid across the state. The application provides users with a comprehensive overview of town infestations and detection years for each invasive pest.
    See also: Vermont Forest Health Program Launches Interactive Invasive Pest Status Map

  • Vermont Invasive Patrollers

    https://dec.vermont.gov/watershed/lakes-ponds/aquatic-invasives/spread-preventi…

    Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Environmental Conservation. Watershed Management Division.

    Early detection is vital to protecting Vermont's water bodies from harmful invasive plants and animals. With more than 800 lakes and ponds throughout the state, volunteers play a key role in our surveying efforts. Vermont Invasive Patrollers (VIPs) monitor water bodies for new introductions of invasive species and report their findings to the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC).

  • Vermont Officials Report Second Year of Spongy Moth Outbreak

    Jun 14, 2022
    https://agriculture.vermont.gov/agency-agriculture-food-markets-news/vermont-of…

    Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets.

    In some parts of the state, Vermonters are noticing the return of a disturbing sight in our forests and backyards: masses of spongy moth caterpillars. The Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets (VAAFM) and Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation (FPR) have received numerous inquiries from concerned citizens regarding large numbers of spongy moth caterpillars, Lymantria dispar dispar, (also known as LDD, formerly gypsy moth). While the spongy moth can emerge anywhere in the state, unusually high populations observed last year and again this spring are localized in western areas of Vermont. More information regarding the impacts of spongy moths on trees and forests can be found at https://fpr.vermont.gov/spongy-moth.

  • Vinegar Fly’s Lethal Sweet Tooth

    Feb 2017
    https://agresearchmag.ars.usda.gov/2017/feb/fly/

    USDAARS. Agricultural Research Magazine.

    A novel control strategy could be in store for spotted wing drosophila, an invasive vinegar fly species from Asia that attacks more than 100 fruit crops, including blueberry, cherry, blackberry, and grape. Two- to three-millimeters long, the spotted wing drosophila fly first drew attention in 2008 in California. Before long, it had spread to other western states, inflicting losses of 50 to 100 percent in berry crops there. Two years later, it had spread to the eastern United States, wreaking similar havoc and forcing growers to retaliate with intensive insecticide spraying. Researchers, meanwhile, began learning all they could about the invader. One such scientist is Blair Sampson, an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist who specializes in integrated pest management approaches for small-fruit crops. Sampson is with the ARS Thad Cochran Southern Horticultural Laboratory in Poplarville, Mississippi.

  • Viral Hemorrhagic Septicemia (VHS)

    https://www.ontario.ca/page/viral-hemorrhagic-septicemia-vhs

    Ontario Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry (Canada).