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Displaying 4561 to 4580 of 6003

  • Public Comments Sought on Draft Integrated Letter Report, Programmatic Environmental Assessment for Inspection Stations in Upper Missouri River Basin

    • Feb 16, 2021
    • DOD. USACE. Omaha District.

    • A draft integrated letter report and programmatic environmental assessment has been developed to determine the economic and environmental impacts of federal participation in state-managed watercraft inspection programs along the Upper Missouri River Basin in Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. Public comments on the draft EA were accepted until March 2, 2021.

      The existing watercraft inspection programs are managed collaboratively by the states of Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska, where watercraft transported along highways are inspected for the presence of aquatic invasive species and decontaminated when detected. If approved, federal participation in the program would be cost-shared (50 percent) with each of the states, and would employ a regional strategy to identify locations that would provide the greatest likelihood of preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species to reservoirs operated and maintained by the Corps in the Upper Missouri River Basin.

  • Public Input Sought on Proposed Measures to Stop the Spread of Aquatic Invasive Species Into Yellowstone National Park

  • Public Invited to Become a First Detector and Report Invasive Species

    • Sep 10, 2018
    • Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office. Washington Invasive Species Council.

    • To help combat the $1.3 billion threat invasive species pose to Washington's economy every year, the Washington Invasive Species Council is inviting the public to the frontlines of its work by detecting invasive species and reporting them on its newly improved WA Invasives app. The free app enables anyone to report a plant or animal by collecting photographs, geographic coordinates, and sighting information. Users recreating in the backcountry also can collect data offline, when cellular service isn't available. The app also acts as digital field guide.

  • Public Pest and Recycling Assistance

    • Kentucky Department of Agriculture. Pest and Weed.

  • Purdue Experts Encourage ‘Citizen Scientists’ to Report Invasive Species

    • Feb 2019
    • Purdue University.

    • A major tool in the fight against invasive species is the Report INvasive website, hosted by Purdue College of Agriculture and the Indiana Invasive Species Council. The website includes several ways that people can report invasive species, including a smartphone app from the Great Lakes Early Detection Network. “There are not that many specialists and experts covering the state,” Sadof said. “When there are concerned citizens reporting, however, we have many more eyes and a better chance of detecting and eradicating a harmful species early.”

  • Purdue Weed Science

    • Purdue University. Botany and Plant Pathology.

  • Purple Loosestrife

    • Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

  • Purple Star-thistle Control [PDF, 147 KB]

    • Apr 2012
    • Marin Agricultural Land Trust (California).

  • Python Elimination Program

    • South Florida Water Management District.

    • The South Florida Water Management District Governing Board is taking aggressive action to protect the Everglades and eliminate invasive pythons from its public lands. Starting in March 2017, the Python Elimination Program incentivizes a limited number of public-spirited individuals to humanely euthanize these destructive snakes, which have become an apex predator in the Everglades. The program provides access to python removal agents on designated SFWMD lands in Miami-Dade, Broward, Collier, Hendry and Palm Beach counties.

  • Python Patrol

    • Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    • Python Patrol is a no-cost training program that aims to create a network of trained individuals throughout south Florida who know how to identify Burmese pythons, report sightings, and in some cases, capture and humanely kill the snakes. Python Patrol training is offered throughout south and southwest Florida.

  • Python Patrol - Stopping a Burmese Python Invasion

    • Oct 14, 2019
    • Nature Conservancy.

  • Quackgrass (Elytrigia repens) Control Methods in Organic Agriculture [PDF, 1.28 MB]

    • Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry.

    • See also: Weeds - Quackgrass for more species resources

  • Quackgrass Management on Organic Farms [PDF, 347 KB]

    • University of Maine. Sustainable Agriculture Program.

    • See also: For Farmers for more resources

  • Quagga & Zebra Mussels

    • University of California - Riverside. Center for Invasive Species Research.

  • Quagga and Zebra Mussels

    • DOI. Bureau of Reclamation. 

  • Quagga and Zebra Mussels

    • California Department of Parks and Recreation. Division of Boating and Waterways.

    • California registered vessels using fresh water bodies within the state are required to display a “Mussel Fee Paid” sticker on the hull next to the current registration sticker. Paying the Mussel Fee does not entitle vessels to bypass inspections or fees for inspections conducted by individual reservoir owners or managers.

  • Quagga and Zebra Mussels

    • California Department of Fish and Game.

  • Quagga and Zebra Mussels Infestation Prevention Grant Program

    • California Department of Parks and Recreation. Division of Boating and Waterways.

    • As part of its mission, the Division of Boating and Waterways manages the Quagga and Zebra Mussel Infestation Prevention Grant Program, which supports preventative plans that help protect California’s reservoirs from a dreissenid mussel infestation. California State Parks Division of Boating and Waterways (DBW) will accept applications for the 2025 Quagga and Zebra Mussel Infestation Prevention Grant Program: March 10, 2025 - April 18, 2025, subject to available funds.

      Minimum Eligibility Requirements:
      Grant applicant must own/manage any aspect of the water in a reservoir where recreational activities are permitted; Grant applicant must demonstrate that the reservoir is uninfested with dreissenid mussels; and the reservoir must be open to the public.