Displaying 6441 to 6460 of 6835

  • 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
    https://pi-casc.soest.hawaii.edu/news/when-climate-change-and-invasive-species-…

    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.

  • Where Are They Now? Monitoring Firewood-Vectored Invasive Forest Pests in North Carolina

    PDF
    875 KB
    https://www.ncforestservice.gov/forest_health/pdf/Map_Invasives_NCTracking.pdf

    North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. North Carolina Forest Service.

    Emerald ash borer, laurel wilt disease, thousand cankers disease, and the European gypsy moth are likely to be brought into North Carolina in or on firewood. The use of local firewood is an important factor in preventing the spread of potentially devastating invasive species to our state's forests. Please keep this in mind as you prepare for your outdoor recreation activities. See Forest Health Invasive Pest Maps for more information about pest monitoring.

  • Whirling Disease in Utah

    https://wildlife.utah.gov/index.php/whirling-disease.html

    Utah Department of Natural Resources. Division of Wildlife Resources. 

  • WHISPers (Wildlife Health Information Sharing Partnership - Event Reporting System)

    https://whispers.usgs.gov/home

    DOI. USGS. National Wildlife Health Center.

    WHISPers, a Wildlife Health Information Sharing Partnership event reporting system with current and historic information on wildlife morbidity or mortality events in North America. Events typically involve five or more sick or dead wild animals observed in the same general location and time period. This information is collected opportunistically and provided here by multiple State, Federal, and other agencies to enhance collective understanding of disease in wildlife populations.

  • White Nose Syndrome in Bats

    https://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/public/publications/pubhealth/whitenose.aspx

    Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (Canada). Wildlife Management.

  • White Pine Blister Rust

    Sep 2001
    https://www.plantmanagementnetwork.org/pub/php/management/whitepine/

    Plant Management Network. Plant Health Progress.

  • White-Nose Syndrome

    https://www.usgs.gov/centers/nwhc/science/white-nose-syndrome?qt-science_center…

    DOI. USGS. National Wildlife Health Center.

  • White-Nose Syndrome Confirmed in Bat in Texas

    Mar 5, 2020
    https://tpwd.texas.gov/newsmedia/releases/?req=20200305a

    Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

    For the first time, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) biologists have confirmed the disease white-nose syndrome (WNS) in a Texas bat. Up until this point, while the fungus that causes the disease was previously detected in Texas in 2017, there were no signs of the disease it can cause. WNS has killed millions of hibernating bats in the eastern parts of the United States, raising national concern. WNS is a fungal disease only known to occur in bats and is not a risk to people. However, bats are wild animals and should not be handled by untrained individuals. The public is encouraged to report dead or sick bats to TPWD at nathan.fuller@tpwd.texas.gov for possible testing.

  • White-nose Syndrome Detected in Bats at Devils Tower National Monument, Wyoming: Two Bats Are State's First Confirmed Cases

    Jun 15, 2021
    https://www.nps.gov/deto/learn/news/2021-06-16.htm

    DOI. NPS. Devils Tower National Monument.

    Wildlife researchers have confirmed the presence of white-nose syndrome (WNS) in bats at Devils Tower National Monument. While this is the first confirmation of WNS in the state, the fungus that causes WNS, Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd), was potentially detected in southeast Wyoming as early as 2018. Biologists from the University of Wyoming discovered evidence of WNS during surveys completed in early May 2021, when they captured and sampled bats to test for the fungus.

    The NPS will be working closely with the climbing community at Devils Tower to better understand and develop guidance for climbers to help care for and protect Wyoming’s bat populations – including how to safely clean and disinfect climbing gear. Climbers and cavers who have used gear or clothing in WNS-infected areas should not re-use them in areas not already known to have Pd fungus. If you see a sick or dead bat, report it to park rangers or Game and Fish biologists, but do not touch or pick up the bat.

  • White-Nose Syndrome in Bats

    https://idfg.idaho.gov/wildlife/disease/white-nose-syndrome

    Idaho Department of Fish and Game.

    White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a disease that is identified by the telltale white fungus growing on the noses of some infected bats while they hibernate. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game is asking the public to report the sighting of any active or dead bats during winter. Please call 208-454-7638 to report sightings. Idaho Fish and Game would also like to know of any sites that have hibernating bats so biologists can include them in the monitoring effort. Finally, the public is asked to not disturb hibernating bats and to respect cave closures.

  • White-Nose Syndrome in Bats

    https://www.in.gov/dnr/fish-and-wildlife/wildlife-resources/wildlife-diseases-i…

    Indiana Department of Natural Resources.

    White-nose syndrome (WNS) is an infectious disease responsible for unprecedented levels of mortality among hibernating bats in North America. WNS was first detected in Indiana in January 2011 during routine winter hibernacula surveys conducted by Division of Fish and Wildlife bat biologists. WNS is widely distributed throughout much of the karst region in south-central Indiana and locally established within most of the state's major concentrations of important bat hibernacula.

  • White-Nose Syndrome in North American Bats

    May 24, 2024
    https://geonarrative.usgs.gov/whitenosesyndromeinnorthamericanbats/

    DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    Science conducted by the USGS and the White-nose Syndrome (WNS) Response Team. Our scientists are tracking the fungus as it spreads and characterizing the effects of WNS on hibernating bat populations in North America.

  • White-Nose Syndrome Killed Over 90% of Three North American Bat Species

    Apr 21, 2021
    https://www.usgs.gov/news/national-news-release/white-nose-syndrome-killed-over…

    DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    White-nose syndrome has killed over 90% of northern long-eared, little brown and tri-colored bat populations in fewer than 10 years, according to a new study published in Conservation Biology. Researchers also noted declines in Indiana bat and big brown bat populations. The findings, detailed in "The scope and severity of white-nose syndrome on hibernating bats in North America," underscore the devastating impacts of the deadly fungal disease. The research tapped into the most comprehensive data set on North American bat populations to date, which includes data from over 200 locations in 27 states and two Canadian provinces.