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Displaying 5821 to 5840 of 6849

  • The Dirty Dozen - Burmese Python

    • Everglades Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area.

  • The Dirty Dozen - Giant African Snail

    • Everglades Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area.

  • The Dirty Dozen - Old World Climbing Fern

    • Everglades Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area.

  • The Dirty Dozen - Tegu Lizards

    • Everglades Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area.

  • The Economic Cost of Invasive Non-Native Species on Great Britain [PDF, 1.4 MB]

    • Nov 2010
    • CABI; Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat; Scottish Government.

    • The financial cost of non-native species has been published in a new report. "The Economic Cost of Invasive Non-Native Species (INNS) to the British Economy" suggests that invasive species cost 1.7 billion pounds every year. The research was conducted by the international scientific organization CABI for the Scottish Government, Defra and the Welsh Assembly Government and breaks down the effect on each country. It indicates that the economic cost of INNS can be wide ranging and can result in the loss of crops, ecosystems and livelihoods. The cost to the agriculture and horticulture sector alone is estimated to be 1 billion pounds across Britain.
      See also: Publications - Non-native species impacts for related information.

  • The Economics of Invasive Species

    • 2009
    • Oregon Sea Grant; Oregon State University; DOC. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association.

    • Prepared for the Oregon Invasive Species Council.

  • The Electonic-Nose, an Early Detection Tool for Emerald Ash Borer Larvae

    • Aug 6, 2020
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

    • Electronic noses are sensitive to a vast suite of volatile organic compounds that every living organism emits. A new USDA Forest Service study shows that e-noses can detect emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) larvae lurking under the bark – an early, noninvasive detection method. 

  • The Emerald Ash Borer Story Map

    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

    • An interactive story map of the USDA’s history of combating the infestation and the continuing efforts to protect ash trees in the U.S.
      See related resource: Data Visualization Tools to explore plant and animal health management data and interactive story maps

  • The Exotic Bee ID Website Delivers Spectacular Images of the World's Bees

    • May 8, 2023
    • USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    • New website delivers spectacular images and details of some of the world's bees. ARS scientists need your help in monitoring and protecting our important pollinators. The Exotic Bee ID website, designed and developed as a screening aid to support identification of non-native bees, offers spectacular views of some of our most important and not so important pollinators with stunning clarity. Watch the  video to learn more about this new tool.

      Exotic Bee ID was designed and developed as an interactive screening aid to help those that monitor and intercept non-native bees in the U.S. Theintention is to help reduce the loss of valuable native pollinators through early detection of possible invasives.

  • The Exotics Guide: Non-native Marine Species of the North American Pacific Coast - Carcinus maenas

    • Sep 2011
    • San Francisco Estuary Institute; Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions.

  • The Exotics Guide: Non-native Marine Species of the North American Pacific Coast - Didemnum sp. A

    • Sep 2011
    • San Francisco Estuary Institute; Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions.

  • The Exotics Guide: Non-native Marine Species of the North American Pacific Coast - Styla clava

    • Sep 2011
    • San Francisco Estuary Institute; Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions.

  • The Feral Hog in Oklahoma

    • 2010
    • Noble Research Institute.

    • Publication NF-WF-10-01, 2nd Edition

  • The Five Drivers of Extinction: Invasive Species

    • Dec 6, 2022
    • Defenders of Wildlife.

    • Over recent decades, globalization has led to an increase in the international flow of people and goods, bringing people together but also bringing together species that have never coexisted before. Species that are introduced and successfully colonize areas outside their natural ranges are considered ‘invasive’ and can have devastating impacts on species native to the region. Invasive species can cause the decline or extinction of native species, outcompeting them for food, water and space, preying upon them or introducing them to new diseases.

  • The Formosan Subterranean Termite

    • University of Georgia. BugwoodWiki.

  • The Future of Ash Trees

    • Feb 28, 2024
    • USDA. Forest Service.

    • How can an insect that is smaller than a penny cause so much ecological, economic, and cultural devastation? The emerald ash borer, an invasive beetle native to Asia, is one of the most destructive invasive species in North America. These tiny pests killed tens of millions of ash trees in the northeast – and continue to this day.

      In Maine, a coalition of Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers, tribal members, state and federal foresters, conservation groups, and local communities have been working for the past twenty years to prepare for the onset of emerald ash borer in northeastern forests. The group, called the Ash Protection Collaboration Across Wabanakik, is focused on identifying research-informed strategies to protect the future of ash trees.

  • The Giant African Snail: A Problem in Economic Malacology

    • 1961
    • Hawaiian Ecosystems at Risk.

    • Note: Complete text of the book by Albert R. Mead (1961. Albert R. Mead. The University of Chicago Press. Chicago. 257 pp.)

  • The Great Chesapeake Invasives Count

    • Coastal Conservation Association Maryland.

    • Report your catch of invasive fish species (northern snakehead, blue catfish, flathead catfish) in the Chesapeake Watershed for a chance to win great prizes! The Great Chesapeake Invasives Count is an annual angling-based effort (April 1, 2024-March 31, 2025)  to provide important data to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, USFWS, and other management agencies on what you're seeing on the water. Information related to the number of fish you catch during a given time, as well as the length and weight of the fish you catch is important to fishery managers. It is also vital to investigate the feeding habits of invasive fish to help understand the short and long-term impacts that their existence may cause on native species. It is important that the public recognizes the impacts that these species can have on our natural ecosystems, and does not continue the spread of these fish.

  • The Greening of the Great Basin

    • Dec 28, 2022
    • JSTOR Daily.

    • The arid and semiarid Great Basin of the western United States comprises parts of California, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, and Oregon and can variously be described by its hydrology, topography, or biology. Biologically, the area has been defined historically by the native sagebrush and shrubs that thrive in the dry valleys of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains. But, as a recent study undertaken by researchers at the University of Montana and the Department of Agriculture notes, these native plant communities are rapidly being colonized by nonnative annual grasses like cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), red brome (B. rubens), and medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae) to the detriment of wildlife and humans.