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Displaying 1 to 20 of 55

  • AIM - Choosing Non-Invaders

    • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace.

    • Find non-invasive plant alternatives that may be appropriate in your region.

  • AIM - How Invasions Happen

    • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace.

    • The AIM campaign that focuses on providing information and best practices to manage The Organisms in Trade (OIT) pathway. The OIT pathway is one of the main avenues by which non-native aquatic species become established in waterways. Many of the aquatic plants and animals available in the marketplace can negatively impact ecosystems, economies, and public health when introduced to new freshwater habitats. AIM was developed by a collaboration of researchers and outreach specialists led by Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant and the Illinois Natural History Survey.

  • AIM - Outreach Resources

    • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace.

    • A variety of organizations have developed educational materials on AIM. They can be used to learn more and teach others about these harmful plants and animals.

  • AIM - Predicting Invaders

    • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace.

    • Predicting the next invasive species allows us to take action before they reach our waterways—an economically and environmentally smarter approach than responding after they’ve arrived. To get a jump on potential invaders, scientists have developed methods that pinpoint the risk a species poses to specific environments based on factors like history of invasion, its ability to survive in similar habitats, and how difficult it is to control. Using these tools and the information they provide, natural resource managers, environmental educators, and individuals who buy and sell live aquatic organisms can make more informed decisions on how to protect their waterways from potential AIM.

  • American Chestnut Restoration Research

    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

  • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace (AIM)

    • Aquatic Invaders in the Marketplace.

    • Provides individuals with the information and tools they need to help prevent the spread of aquatic invasive species commonly found in trade. Water gardeners, aquarium hobbyists, retailers, anglers, teachers, wholesalers and more can use these resources to learn about invasive species and identify alternative organisms that are safe to buy and sell.

  • Bats on the Brink

    • Oct 27, 2022
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • USDA Forest Service researchers are monitoring the effects of white-nose syndrome, a fungal disease from Eurasia that has decimated cave-hibernating bats across the U.S. since its arrival in 2006. "The fungus that causes white-nose syndrome grows on bats in the wintertime. It causes them to wake up during their hibernation and burn their fat reserves," says Phillip Jordan, wildlife biologist. Jordan is among the experts featured in a new video, Bats on the Brink. Forestry technician Virginia McDaniel created and produced the video.

  • Bipartisan Infrastructure Law & Forest Research in the South

    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

    • Provides information about South Research Station projects funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law This collection of project pages highlights SRS-led research - including science supporting the Wildfire Crisis Strategy - and features project goals, collaborators, and more.

  • Chinese Privet, Arthropods, and Bees

    • Apr 8, 2021
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Chinese privet (Ligustrum sinense) is one of the worst invasive plants in the South. It dominates the shrub layer and often becomes the only shrub underneath trees, especially in streamside areas. But insects and spiders living in fallen leaves and leaf litter were not affected by a privet invasion in Georgia, as a recent study shows.

  • Chinese Tallow Leaf Litter Negatively Affects Frogs

    • May 12, 2022
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Chinese tallow tree (Triadica sebifera) is a nonnative, invasive tree whose decaying leaf litter alters water quality and the microbial community in the wetland habitats. This negatively impacts the lifecycle of semi-aquatic species like frogs.

  • CompassLive

    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

    • CompassLive provides latest updates and is an online science magazine of the USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station.
      See also: Exotic and Invasive Species articles and Plant Diseases articles.

  • Controlling the Spread of Callery Pear

    • Apr 6, 2021
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Callery pear (Pyrus calleryana) can be found across most of the eastern U.S. and in a few western states as well. The nonnative tree was brought to the U.S. in 1917 by a USDA employee searching for a blight-resistant species that could be bred with European pear to increase fruit production.

      The most common Callery pear cultivar is the Bradford pear. In the last two decades, this near-ubiquitous landscaping tree has been identified as a serious invasive pest. A new publication examines herbicide treatments to control the spread of Callery pear. Lead author J.T. Vogt is a research scientist with the USDA Forest Service.

  • Deeper Connection Between Forests and Pollinators

    • Jun 22, 2023
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Forests are incredibly important to pollinators. Forest pollinators can also provide substantial economic benefits to neighboring agricultural areas, as a new global review paper discusses. Forest pollinators are easy to overlook – they are often highly seasonal, especially in temperate regions, and many are active far above our heads in the forest canopy.

  • Distribution of Counties with Laurel Wilt Disease by Year of Initial Detection [PDF, 1.34 MB]

    • USDA. FS. Forest Health Protection. Southern Region.

    • View the updated regional infestation map for Laurel Wilt Disease (for initial detection in May 2002. Map is updated periodically (USDA,FS - Forest & Grassland Health).

  • Earthworms Can Jump: Invasive Jumping Worms are also Ecosystem Engineers

    • May 3, 2022
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • A worm is a worm is a worm, right? Except that there are more than 7,000 species of worms, and the longer you look, the more complex their world becomes. Earthworms compete. Earthworms invade. Earthworms… jump?

  • Even the Most Promising New Management Tools Struggle to Keep up with Invasive Wild Pigs

    • Feb 2, 2024
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Whether called wild pigs, feral hogs, or wild boars, these opportunistic and invasive omnivores live in groups called sounders. Removing whole sounders is the most effective management method, but requires follow-up trapping and hunting due to their incredible reproductive potential.

  • Field Notes

    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

    • Provides field notes on forest pest research, including invasive pests.
      Note: Content is also available by email subscription.

  • Fire Ant Week: Stamping Out Fire Ants

    • Google. YouTube; USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

    • Fire ants cause significant harm not only to humans, but to the food we grow? Imported fire ants have invaded about 350 million acres in the U.S., and they cause approximately $8 billion in economic damages per year.

      Learn more about what’s happening with this invasive species that has spread throughout the southern U.S., and what ARS is doing about it, as the Office of Communications launches a week-long fire ant campaign (June 22-28, 2024). ARS will feature videos, articles, and interviews with our scientists who are leading the fight against these tiny invaders.
      See also: Fire ant articles in Tellus

  • Invasive Clams (Asian) are Associated with Reduced Growth of Native Musselsive Mussel Growth

    • Apr 22, 2021
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station.

    • Native freshwater mussels grew more slowly when invasive Asian clams (Corbicula fluminea) were abundant. The study was led by Wendell Haag, a USDA Forest Service research fisheries biologist. The study, "Abundance of an invasive bivalve, Corbicula fluminea, is negatively related to growth of freshwater mussels in the wild" was published in the journal Freshwater Biology. Mussels live out of sight – buried in the river bottom, eating algae and other small particles of organic material. Mussels are filter feeders and key members of aquatic ecosystems. Unfortunately, mussels are disappearing worldwide, and about 70 percent of the 300 mussel species native to the U.S. are in danger of extinction. Addressing mussel declines is difficult because their causes are mostly unknown.