Invasive Species Guide - Eurasian Watermilfoil
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
University of Wisconsin Sea Grant.
DOI. United States Geological Survey.
A web application displaying visual and statistical summaries of nationwide habitat suitability models for manager identified invasive plant species. INHABIT is a dataset containing the potential distribution of 259 invasive terrestrial plant species across the contiguous U.S.
This project is one among a set of coordinated projects funded (wholly or partially) by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law through the US Department of the Interior to advance a nationally coordinated Early Detection and Rapid Response Framework.
Citation: Jarnevich, C.S., Engelstad, P., Williams, D.A., Shadwell, K.S., Reimer, C.J., Henderson, G.C., Prevéy, J.S., and Pearse, I.S., 2024, INHABIT species potential distribution across the contiguous United States (ver. 4.0, June 2024): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P14HNEJF.
Utah State University Extension; United States Department of Agriculture.
This handbook includes six chapters that discuss invasive species and their environmental, economic, and health impacts. It also reviews pathways of invasive species spread and prevention, monitoring, and control. The handbook is a resource for educators teaching children in grades 3 through 8. Learning objectives, activities, and vocabulary are also included.
National Invasive Species Council.
To better understand the impacts of invasive species on infrastructure managed by the federal government an effort was undertaken by the National Invasive Species Council Secretariat to solicit feedback from those agencies. A questionnaire was sent out to the federal agencies that manage infrastructure to identify the impacts they have observed, how they are managing them, issues they have identified and resource needs. The research demonstrated that impacts from invasive species on federally managed infrastructure range from non-existent to significant. Identified gaps needing improvement include awareness and education of invasive species impacts, limited resources, insufficient policy, and lack of agency support.
See also: NISC and NISC Staff Products for more resources.
National Invasive Species Council.
Invasive Species Centre (Ontario).