Displaying 5341 to 5360 of 6851

  • Requesting Wildlife Services Support

    https://www.aphis.usda.gov/wildlife-state-offices

    USDA. APHIS. Wildlife Services.

    Wildlife Services has offices in every State ready to support you in resolving your wildlife damage concerns. Contact your local office for information on wildlife damage management, technical assistance, and support for your management efforts.

  • Researchers Discover Undocumented Crayfish Species in Kansas

    Jul 21, 2021
    https://ksoutdoors.com/KDWP-Info/News/Weekly-News/7-21-21-Researchers-Discover-…

    Kansas Department of Wildlife & Parks.

    Widespread sampling for invasive crayfish had never occurred in Kansas lakes – that is, until the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (KDWP) recently funded a university project focused on the freshwater crustacean. KDWP's Aquatic Nuisance Species Program and Ecological Services section funded the project with the overarching goal of establishing sampling protocols that could then be used for long-term monitoring of both native and invasive crayfish in Kansas. During capturing efforts at McPherson State Fishing Lake – one of several small waterbodies slated to be inspected in the state – university researchers collected multiple Rusty Crayfish. Rusty Crayfish have not previously been documented in the wild in Kansas, making this official "discovery" the first of its kind.

    Anglers, boaters and watersport enthusiasts are encouraged to keep their eyes open for this invasive species, which can be identified by its trademark large, black-tipped claws and rust-colored spots on its upper shell. If one is discovered, freeze it in a sealed plastic bag, note the date and location of capture, and contact KDWP's Emporia Research and Survey Office at (620) 342-0658.

  • Researchers Help Design Incentive Programs to Rid South America of Invasive Beaver

    Jan 11, 2016
    https://news.vt.edu/articles/2016/01/011116-cnre-beavereradication.html

    Virginia Tech.

    North American beavers have wiped out 30 percent of forests along rivers and streams in Tierra del Fuego, a remote archipelago at the southern tip of South America, causing the greatest landscape change to these fragile forests in the last 10,000 years. It’s no surprise, then, that the governments of Chile and Argentina want the invasive beavers gone. But eradicating them has proven to be difficult, researchers found, because it requires the participation of every single landowner in the area.

  • Researchers Receive USDA Funding to Combat Devilishly Invasive Tree-of-Heaven

    Oct 21, 2024
    https://news.vt.edu/articles/2024/10/cnre-research-tree-of-heaven.html

    Virginia Tech. News.

    The $900,000 grant will help Virginia Tech researchers see if the spotted lanternfly can help spread a fungus that kills the tree-of-heaven. The goal of the grant is to develop a native fungus as a biocontrol for the tree-of-heaven. Researchers are investigating whether the spotted lanternfly could help transmit the fungus from tree to tree, reducing the need for human intervention.

  • Restoring Native Plants

    https://www.tn.gov/agriculture/department/ellington-ag-center/about-ellington-a…

    Tennessee Department of Agriculture. Ellington Agricultural Center.

  • Results of the 2022 Lionfish Challenge: A record-breaking year!

    Sep 16, 2022
    https://myfwc.com/news/all-news/lionfish-results-922/

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    The Lionfish Challenge 2022, the seventh annual, is a summer-long tournament that rewards divers for their lionfish harvests. The tournament boasted a total of 707 registered participants, the most in the program’s history. 196 divers conducted a total of 676 trips throughout the state during the 3-month tournament and brought in a whopping 25,299 lionfish.

  • Revisiting the “Tens Rule”: Vulnerability to Plant Invasions Worldwide Is Higher Than Previously Estimated

    Oct 20, 2024
    https://necasc.umass.edu/news/revisiting-tens-rule-vulnerability-plant-invasion…

    University of Massachusetts Amherst. Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center.

    The widely cited “tens rule” in invasion ecology suggests that approximately 10% of established, non-native species will become invasive–or display negative impacts—when introduced to new environments. This study demonstrates that the tens rule is a poor estimate of invasion rates on a global scale. Instead, a ‘twenties rule’ is a better rule of thumb, meaning that roughly 20% of all established, non-native species eventually become invasive

  • Rhode Island DEM Amends Freshwater Fishing Rules To Better Battle Invasive Plants That are Choking RI Waterways

    Feb 26, 2020
    https://www.ri.gov/press/view/37791

    Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management.

    Trying to reduce the spread of invasive species in Rhode Island waters, the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) has amended the state's Freshwater Fisheries Regulations to prohibit the transport of any plant or plant part into or out of any Rhode Island waterbody on any type of boat, motor, trailer, fishing supplies, or gear. The new regulation carries a $100 fine for each violation. "Many of the aquatic invasive plants in Rhode Island can reproduce from just one small plant fragment and do not need entire root systems to successfully establish in a new spot," said Katie DeGoosh-DiMarzio, Environmental Analyst with DEM's Office of Water Resources. "Cleaning off every bit of plant from recreational gear used at one pond is essential before visiting another — this includes boats, kayaks, canoes, motors, trailers, paddles, jet skis, fishing gear, waders, water tubes, and anchors. These efforts help combat the spread of aquatic invasive species in Rhode Island waterbodies."

  • Rhode Island DEM Asks Public to be Aware of Beech Leaf Disease

    Jul 13, 2020
    https://www.ri.gov/press/view/38824

    Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management.

    The Department of Environmental Management (DEM) is asking Rhode Islanders to monitor their beech trees for signs of leaf damage from Beach Leaf Disease (BLD). Early symptoms of BLD include dark striping on the tree's leaves parallel to the leaf veins and are best seen by looking upward into the backlit canopy. Drastic leaf loss occurs for heavily symptomatic leaves during the growing season and may appear as early as June, while asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic leaves show no or minimal leaf loss. BLD was detected in the Ashaway area of Hopkinton, Rhode Island, in 2020 and in coastal Massachusetts. Before these findings, the disease was only known to be in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, and Connecticut.

    Because of the seemingly random nature of disease in Rhode Island, DEM encourages homeowners and forest landowners to monitor their beech trees and report any suspected cases of BLD on DEM's Invasive Species Sighting Report webpage. Although BLD is relatively new in the U.S. and information is limited, links to additional information about the disease and photos are posted on the Division of Forest Environment's Current Threats page. If people have further questions, they should contact a licensed arborist or email Nancy Stairs, forestry program supervisor in DEM's Division of Forest Environment, via Nancy.Stairs@dem.ri.gov.

  • Rhode Island Invasive Species Council

    https://rinhs.org/species/invasive-species/

    Rhode Island Invasive Species Council.

    The Rhode Island Invasive Species Council is an outreach program of the Rhode Island Natural History Survey, The Rhode Island Agricultural Experiment Station, and The University of Rhode Island Cooperative Extension.