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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 541 to 560 of 831

  • The Silent Invasion

    • Apr 2008
    • Oregon Public Broadcasting.

    • Something troubling is taking hold in Oregon. Strange, exotic plants and animals are showing up in places where they don't belong. They are invasive species, and they're taking over landscapes, driving native wildlife away, and making everyone from ranchers to fishermen to wildlife managers nervous. What are these invaders? Where do they come from? And what can we do to stop them?

  • The Wisconsin Gardener - New Weeds from the South

    • 2013
    • Wisconsin Public Television.

    • Climate change means new and stronger weeds. In this video, University of Wisconsin-Extension weed specialist Mark Renz shows how climate change will turn some of our existing weeds such as Canada thistle into super weeds. Plus, a look at some new weed threats from the south.

  • USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Images

    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service; Flickr.

  • USDA Radio News: Protecting Dairy Cattle from H5N1 High Path Avian Flu

    • Apr 30, 2024
    • United States Department of Agriculture.

    • With cases of a strain of what is known as bird flu recently found in dairy cattle, USDA and other stakeholders have been busy monitoring the situation and implementing measures to protect our nation’s dairy cattle. Rod Bain and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack looks at what has so far transpired in this edition of “Agriculture USA”.
      See related resource: Avian Influenza

  • USDA Researchers Help Honeybees Keep Pollinating Our Food Crops

    • Jun 17, 2019
    • USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    • Scientists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture are studying ways to keep honeybees stress-free and healthy. These pollinators are important to American agriculture and our nation’s food crops.

  • USDA-ARS Entomologists "Turn up the Bass" on Vineyard Pests

    • Google. YouTube; USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

    • Scientists with the USDA's Agricultural Research Service in central California are using sound to control insects that spread disease in grape vineyards.

  • USDA’s Climate, Agriculture, and Forest Science Webinar Series

    • United States Department of Agriculture. USDA Climate Hubs.

    • The USDA Agriculture, Forestry, and Climate Science Working Group and USDA’s Office of Energy and Environmental Policy have launched a year-long monthly webinar series that aims to equip USDA employees and key Cooperative Extension personnel with the scientific foundations of climate change as they apply to USDA’s mission and daily work. The series features leading scientists from within and outside USDA, who provide the latest scientific information and respond to questions about climate change and the application of science to decision-making on working lands. This series is designed to be of use to USDA conservation, resource management, commodity, and service staff. The material is accessible to those not already familiar with climate science, but also includes information that is of use to technical experts.

  • Varroa Public Service Announcement

  • Video on the Asian Citrus Psyllid (ACP) Threat to California Citrus

    • California Department of Food and Agriculture. Plant Health Division.

    • Includes public service announcements and related videos.

  • Virulent Newcastle Disease

    • California Department of Food and Agriculture. Animal Health Branch.

    • After 2 years, California has been declared free of virulent Newcastle Disease. Effective June 1, 2020 the CDFA and the USDA have announced an end to the vND quarantine in southern California. You can read the CDFA press release here.

  • War of the Weeds - Outdoor Idaho

    • Sep 2004
    • Idaho Public Television.

    • Invaders with strange sounding names are costing Americans billions of dollars each year. These invasive species will change the way we work and play in the outdoors.

  • Washington Invasive Species Awareness Week

    • Washington Invasive Species Council.

    • In conjunction with National Invasive Species Awareness Week, Governor Jay Inslee proclaimed the same week (February 26-March 3, 2024) as Washington Invasive Species Awareness Week to raise awareness and find preventative solutions for invasive species.

  • Water Chestnut: An Aquatic Invasive Plant

    • Google. YouTube; Bucks County Conservation District (Pennsylvania).

  • Webinar Series: Invasive Species Monitoring with Remote Sensing

    • NASA. Applied Remote Sensing Training (ARSET) Program.

    • This three-part webinar series will highlight project-based applications of remote sensing for plant species of interest especially those affecting grasslands and aquatic inland lakes and waterbodies, and more with a lens towards innovative uses of hyperspectral data for additional invasive species detection.

      Register to attend: Aug 14, Aug 21, Aug 28, 2024 -- Three 90 min sessions (12-1:30 pm EDT)

  • WEBINAR: WGA Launches Invasive Species Data Mobilization Campaign

  • Weed Science Webinar Series

  • Western Aquatic Invasive Species Photo and Video Gallery

    • Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission.

    • See the photo gallery for images and video to better understand all the places invasive species can hitch a ride on your boat or trailer.

  • What the “Lacey Act” is and isn’t and how we use it to prevent invasions of Injurious Wildlife

    • Mar 24, 2022
    • Google. YouTube; The Wildlife Society. Invasive Species Working Group.

    • Most conservation professionals know what the “Lacey Act” is. Or do you? Since 1900, the “Lacey Act” has been the most widely known conservation law in the United States. It protects native wildlife and plants from trafficking and supports State conservation laws. And you may be surprised that it also protects against the importation of invasive or injurious species. But did you know that there was no law named “the Lacey Act”? Hence, there is a lot of confusion over what the “Lacey Act” is and isn’t. This webinar, presented by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Injurious Wildlife Listing Coordinator, aims to clear that up. By summarizing the history from 1900, you will see how the two provisions diverged. That will segue into showing how the lesser known provision of the law is effective at preventing harmful wildlife species from being imported and causing invasions.
      See also: Explore other webinars related to wildlife conservation sponsored by the The Wildlife Society

  • When Climate Change and Invasive Species Intersect: Identifying Fire-Promoting Invasive Plants and Their Potential to Impact Hawai`i’s Natural & Cultural Resources

    • Mar 22, 2022
    • Pacific Islands Climate Adaption Science Center.

    • Across the Pacific, wildfire poses a major threat to biological and cultural resources, and the threat is only predicted to become larger with climate change. In this talk, graduate students Kevin Faccenda and Kelsey Brock discuss a new tool and methodology for predicting the fire risk of invasive species before they enter a region so that management efforts can be focused on the highest risk incipient species.

      This tool uses data collected from the primary literature as well as a machine learning model trained on expert survey data to predict fire risk. Their team examined this risk in a spatial context by modeling the distribution of multiple invasive plants and climatic conditions that promote wildfire across the main Hawaiian Islands. Models were created based on current-day climate conditions as well potential conditions at the end of the century to under climate change.