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Provides access to all site resources, with the option to search by species common and scientific names. Resources can be filtered by Subject, Resource Type, Location, or Source. Search Help

Displaying 341 to 360 of 421

  • Southern IPM Center

    • Southern IPM Center.

    • The annual competitive grants program, Southern IPM Grants, (formerly Enhancement Grants) regionally address Global Food Security challenges including invasive species, endangered species, pest resistance, and impacts resulting from regulatory actions. All projects must further their mission, which is to foster the development and adoption of Integrated Pest Management (IPM), a science-based approach to managing pests in ways that generate economic, environmental, and human health benefits. Funding is outcome-based.

  • Soybean Cyst Nematode - Distribution

    • North Central Soybean Research Program. Soybean Research and Information Initiative.

    • Scroll and select Distribution to view known distribution of the soybean cyst nematode, Heterodera glycines, in counties in the United States and Canada in selected years from 1957 to 2014.

  • Soybean Rust Management in the Mid-Atlantic Region [PDF, 2.39 MB]

    • 2008
    • Clemson University. Extension Service.

    • Published by: North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension; University of Georgia Cooperative Extension; Clemson University Cooperative Extension; Virginia Cooperative Extension; South Carolina Soybean Board.

  • Species Information Sheets - Alewife

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Information Sheets - Asian Clam

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Information Sheets - Curly Pondweed

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Information Sheets - Khapra Beetle

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Information Sheets - Palmer Amaranth

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Information Sheets - Spotted Lanternfly

    • Michigan State University. Midwest Invasive Species Information Network.

  • Species Spotlight - Crazy Snake-Worm [PDF, 1.12 MB]

    • Sep 2017
    • DOI. NPS. Northeast Temperate Inventory & Monitoring Network.

    • See also: Science Stories for more resources

  • Spotted Lanternfly - Introduction, Native Range, and Current US Range

    • Cornell University. New York State Integrated Pest Management Program (NYSIPM).

    • Contains regularly updated map and list of counties of confirmed Spotted Lanternfly infestations and quarantines (Northeast).
      See also: Filter by state and status using the NYSIPM interactive Spotted Lanternfly Map (Google Data Studio).

  • SRS (Southern Research Station) Researcher Receives Grant to Study White-Nose Syndrome

    • Sep 27, 2017
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • White-nose syndrome (WNS) has killed more than six million bats over the past decade. WNS is caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd). Studies show that bats eat enough insect pests to save the U.S. corn industry more than $1 billion a year in crop damage and pesticide costs, and more than $3 billion per year to all agricultural production including forests.
       

      To help fund the research needed to combat this deadly disease, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced $2.5 million in grants for research of high priority questions about WNS that will improve our ability to manage the disease and conserve affected bats.

  • State and Federal Rapid Response Plans and Exercises

    • Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission. Western Aquatic Invasive Species Resource Center.

    • Provides state rapid response plans and guidelines, state rapid response exercises, federal rapid response plans, provincial rapid response plans/guidelines, after-response action reports, and examples of quagga/zebra mussel eradication projects.

  • State Management Plans and Programs

    • Mid-Atlantic Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species.

    • me of the Mid-Atlantic Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species’ participant states have created management plans and programs for invasive species. These plans have been developed at different times and are customized to address each state’s needs.

  • Strategies to Manage the Loss of Ash and Elm Trees

    • USDA. FS. Northern Research Station.

    • Ash and elm trees play important roles in the U.S. economy, culture, and environment. In the eastern United States, elm (especially American elm) and ash trees are in trouble because of two threats: the emerald ash borer (an insect that attacks ash) and Dutch elm disease (caused by a fungus that sickens elms). These pests are causing ash and elm trees to die off quickly. Because elm and ash trees serve important ecological roles where they are found, the loss of these trees can lead to profound changes across urban and rural environments.

  • Study Supports Single Introduction of Laurel Wilt Pathogen in the U.S.

    • Mar 2019
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Laurel wilt has devastated plants in the Lauraceae family – redbay, sassafras, pondberry, avocado, and others – since it was first detected in the southeastern U.S. around 2002. There is no widespread, effective treatment for laurel wilt. Genetics research is focused on learning more about the pathogen's genetic structure in order to improve detection methods and screening for possible resistance in Lauraceae host species. "We have developed genetic markers to describe the population of the pathogen in the U.S.," says USDA Forest Service plant pathologist Tyler Dreaden. "Knowing which genotypes to use contributes to a quicker, more cost-effective resistance screening process." Dreaden led a new study to shed light on the genetic structure of the pathogen and its reproductive strategy. The research team included Marc Hughes at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, Randy Ploetz and Jason Smith at the University of Florida, and Adam Black, horticulture director of the Peckerwood Garden Conservation Foundation in Texas. Their findings were published in Forests.

  • 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.