Displaying 5381 to 5400 of 6835

  • Sawfly GenUS is Now Complete

    Apr 5, 2022
    https://idtools.org/news.cfm?title=56

    USDA. APHIS. PPQ. CPHST. Identification Technology Program.

    ITP is pleased to announce that Sawfly GenUS is now complete. Developed in cooperation with the Washington State Department of Agriculture, Sawfly GenUS is an interactive identification tool for all sawfly genera found in the United States and Canada. This tool is intended to help recognize exotic sawfly introductions and provide access to general information on affected plants, range, and diversity of these insects. This tool should be useful for port identifiers and screeners, provincial and state departments of agriculture, university extension professionals, and any non-expert with an interest in sawflies.

  • Science and Innovation for Battling Invasive Carp

    Mar 2022
    https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/fs20223012

    DOI. USGS. Publications Warehouse.

    The U.S. Geological Survey provides natural-resource managers with scientific information, risk assessment, and tools that can help to improve surveillance, prevention, and control strategies for managing invasive carp.
    Fact Sheet 2022–3012

  • Science and Serendipity Defeat Invasion of the Air Potato

    Jun 29, 2020
    https://tellus.ars.usda.gov/stories/articles/science-and-serendipity-defeat-inv…

    USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    The plot could have come from Hollywood — an insidious alien invader threatens to overrun the land, but intrepid scientists discover a secret weapon in the far-off, exotic land of Nepal and bring the pestilence to heel. But this is not fiction; it's true. The air potato plant (Dioscorea bulbifera) is an exotic vine from Asia that was introduced to Florida about 115 years ago to make medicine. After escaping from the lab, it multiplied and smothered native plant communities in all of Florida's 67 counties. It spread beyond to large swaths of land in the southeastern United States. All attempts to manage the air potato – mechanical, chemical, or physically gathering the bulbils — were unsuccessful; they were either too labor intensive and costly or caused collateral damage to native and endangered species. According to Min Rayamajhi, a plant pathologist at the Agricultural Research Service's (ARS) Invasive Plant Research Laboratory (IPRL) in Fort Lauderdale, FL, the vines return every season, repeating the growth cycle and expanding the invasion at a rate of about 6 inches per day. Rayamajhi and retired ARS scientist Bob Pemberton traveled to Nepal and accidentally discovered the air potato beetle.

  • SCIENCEx Climate Change Webinars

    https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/products/multimedia/webinars/sciencexarchive

    USDA. FS. Research and Development.

    The SCIENCEx webinar series brings together scientists and land management experts from across U.S. Forest Service research stations and beyond to explore the latest science and best practices for addressing large natural resource challenges across the country. These webinars are primarily management-focused, but with applicability for participants from across sectors.

    SCIENCEx Climate Change -- October 25-29, 2021 (archived)

  • Scientists Bite Back at Invasive Mosquitos, Work for Hawaiian Honeycreeper Conservation

    Feb 28, 2024
    https://www.usgs.gov/news/featured-story/scientists-bite-back-invasive-mosquito…

    DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    Biologists from the U.S. Geological Survey are racing the clock to pull four species of native Hawaiian Honeycreeper forest birds back from the brink of extinction. Factors such as habitat loss, invasive species, and non-native predators have been fueling the birds' decline for centuries. However, introduced diseases, particularly avian malaria spread through mosquitos, which are not native to the Hawaiian Islands, coupled with climate change, are the greatest threat facing Hawaiian forest birds today. 

    "As the climate warms and more mosquitoes move into the once malaria-free regions of the mountains, healthy birds are running out of places to escape the cycle of infection," said Eben Paxton, a research ecologist with the USGS Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center (PIERC) in Hawai'i. Now, PIERC biologists are working with a range of partners, including other Interior Department bureaus and the Birds Not Mosquitos Coalition, to intercept the disease cycle using a novel conservation tool.

  • Scientists Develop a Plan to Manage Lionfish Populations in the Mediterranean

    Apr 11, 2022
    https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/news/scientists-develop-a-plan-to-manage-lionfish-po…

    University of Plymouth (United Kingdom).

    Scientists have published a series of recommendations to enable communities and managers to minimise the impact of lionfish in the Mediterranean Sea. The invasive species was first noticed off the coast of the Lebanon in 2012, with sightings since recorded as far west as Sicily, and north into the Adriatic Sea off Croatia. More entered in 2015 due to the enlargement and deepening of the Suez Canal, with their spread unimpeded due to a lack of common predators. Researchers in the UK and Cyprus have said increasing lionfish densities – combined with the species' generalist diet and consumption of ecologically and socio-economically important fish – has the potential to result in further disruption of an already stressed marine environment. They have now published a Guide to Lionfish Management in the Mediterranean [PDF, 8.0 MB], which features a series of recommendations through which they hope lionfish populations can be managed.

  • Scientists Identify 66 Alien Species that Pose the Greatest Threat to European Biodiversity

    Dec 13, 2018
    https://www.ceh.ac.uk/news-and-media/news/scientists-identify-66-alien-species-…

    Natural Environment Research Council (United Kingdom). Centre for Ecology and Hydrology.

    Scientists have identified 66 alien plant and animal species, not yet established in the European Union, that pose the greatest potential threat to biodiversity and ecosystems in the region. From an initial working list of 329 alien species considered to pose threats to biodiversity recently published by the EU, scientists have derived and agreed a list of eight species considered to be very high risk, 40 considered to be high risk, and 18 considered to be medium risk.

  • Scientists Identify Biological Invasion Hotspots for Promoting the Green Development of the Belt and Road Initiative

    Jan 25, 2019
    https://english.cas.cn/newsroom/research_news/201901/t20190125_204989.shtml

    Chinese Academy of Sciences.

    Recently, a team led by Prof. LI Yiming from the Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, conducted a comprehensive study evaluating the invasion risk of global alien vertebrates, to help facilitate the balance between development and conservation for the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). This study, published with the title of "Risks of biological invasion on the Belt and Road" in Current Biology, was online on January 24, 2019. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) proposed by China is regarded as the biggest global development program ever to occur on earth. It involves nearly half of our planet across Asia, Europe, Africa, Oceania and America, covering 77% (27/35) global biodiversity hotspots. Its high expenditure into infrastructure constructions may accelerate trade and transportation and thus promote alien species invasions, which is one primary anthropogenic threat to global biodiversity. 

  • Scientists Release First Map of Areas Suitable for Spotted Lanternfly's Establishment in U.S. and World

    Oct 3, 2019
    https://www.ars.usda.gov/news-events/news/research-news/2019/scientists-release…

    USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

    A map identifying the areas suitable for establishment of the spotted lanternfly (SLF) in the United States and other countries has been published in the Journal of Economic Entomology by Agricultural Research Service scientists. The SLF, originally from China, has spread to Korea and Japan, and has been found most recently in the United States in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia and Delaware. These insects are pests of many agricultural crops including almonds, apples, blueberries, cherries, peaches, grapes and hops as well as hardwoods such as oak, walnut and poplar, among others. USDA and State partners have been working to contain SLF populations since 2014. There is the potential for far reaching economic damage if the SLF becomes widely established in the United States.

  • Scientists Uncover How Invasive Plants Gain a Head Start After Fire

    Mar 12, 2020
    https://www.news.uwa.edu.au/archive/2020031211904/science/scientists-uncover-ho…

    University of Western Australia.

    New research from The University of Western Australia has shed light on why some invasive plants make a better comeback after a fire, outstripping native species in the race for resources.

  • Scotch Thistle - PNW 569

    Sep 2003
    https://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/pub/pnw-569-scotch-thistle

    University of Idaho; Oregon State University; Washington State University. Pacific Northwest Extension.

  • Screen and Evaluate Invasive and Non-native Data (SEINeD)

    https://nas.er.usgs.gov/SEINED/

    DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    Identifying the leading edge of an invasion can be difficult, especially when the invader is a native transplant, or if the invader is not well-known. This tool allows a user to upload a biological dataset collected anywhere in the conterminous U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, or Island Territories to screen for occurrences of non-native and invasive aquatic species tracked by the NAS Database.