Displaying 5321 to 5340 of 6851

  • Regulatory Information

    https://woodyinvasives.org/regulatory-information/

    Woody Invasives of the Great Lakes Collaborative.

    One of the WIGL Collaborative’s major initial projects was to research and summarize the existing federal, state and provincial laws and regulations that relate to invasive woody plants. You can use this page to find information about the laws of states or provinces in the Great Lakes Region. You can also use our map tool for an at-a-glance comparison of how the Woody Invasives of the Great Lakes are regulated in the region.

  • Reinforcing Europe's Resilience: Halting Biodiversity Loss and Building a Healthy and Sustainable Food System

    May 2020
    https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_884

    European Commission.

    The European Commission has adopted a comprehensive new Biodiversity Strategy to bring nature back into our lives and a Farm to Fork Strategy for a fair, healthy and environmentally friendly food system. The two strategies are mutually reinforcing, bringing together nature, farmers, business and consumers for jointly working towards a competitively sustainable future. The new Biodiversity Strategy tackles the key drivers of biodiversity loss, such as unsustainable use of land and sea, overexploitation of natural resources, pollution, and invasive alien species. The strategy proposes to, among others, establish binding targets to restore damaged ecosystems and rivers, improve the health of EU protected habitats and species, bring back pollinators to agricultural land, reduce pollution, green our cities, enhance organic farming and other biodiversity-friendly farming practices, and improve the health of European forests. The strategy brings forward concrete steps to put Europe's biodiversity on the path to recovery by 2030, including transforming at least 30% of Europe's lands and seas into effectively managed protected areas and bringing back at least 10% of agricultural area under high-diversity landscape features.

  • ReLionMed

    https://relionmed.eu/

    University of Cyprus; Cyprus Department of Fisheries and Marine Research; University of Plymouth (United Kingdom); Enalia Physis Environmental Research Centre (Cyprus); Marine and Environmental Research Lab Ltd (Cyprus).

    Preventing a LIONfish invasion in the MEDiterranean through early response and targeted REmoval.

  • Renaming Species: The Quest to Decolonize Animal Names

    Aug 25, 2023
    https://www.nature.org/en-us/magazine/magazine-articles/new-common-names/

    The Nature Conservancy.

    The Movement to Rename Species. The common names of some species have not aged well. These scientists want to change them. The impact of a name that offends can be far-reaching.

  • Report a Sighting

    https://invasivespecies.wa.gov/report-a-sighting/

    Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office. Washington Invasive Species Council.

    We need your help! If you think you have found an invasive species in Washington, please let us know by reporting it by using the reporting forms or mobile applications (Washington Invasives). Includes reporting forms for: invasive plants, invasive animals, invasive insects, and wildlife infectious diseases.
    See related resource: Public Invited to Become a First Detector and Report Invasive Species

  • Report a Sighting

    https://neinvasives.com/report-invasive-species/report-sighting/

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Nebraska Invasive Species Program.

    Please complete this form to report a sighting of an invasive species. If you're not sure how to answer a question, do your best and we will contact you with any questions. If you have any questions for us, please feel free to contact us.

  • Report an Invasive Species in Alaska

    https://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=invasive.report

    Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

    Your vigilance could help us intercept and prevent the spread of an unwanted biological invader – an invasive species that shouldn’t be here and which could cause serious harm to Alaska’s native fish and wildlife species, and their habitats.

  • Report Bee Kills

    https://www.epa.gov/pollinator-protection/report-bee-kills

    Environmental Protection Agency.

    EPA considers incident report data to help inform our pesticide regulatory decisions. Information from these reports will help us identify patterns of bee kills associated with the use of specific pesticides or active ingredients.

  • Report Highlights Aquatic Invasive Species Solutions

    Apr 5, 2023
    https://www.trcp.org/2023/04/05/report-highlights-aquatic-invasive-species-solu…

    Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.

    The Aquatic Invasive Species Commission and key partners received input from and engaged in dialogue with key stakeholders, federal and state decision makers, and leading experts. Recommendations focus on modernizing marine fisheries laws, making strategic investments, and improving collaboration among federal, state, local, and tribal agencies. The purpose of this collaborative process was intended to assess the current threat from aquatic invasive species (AIS), explore gaps in public policy and funding, and offer recommendations for how AIS can be addressed more effectively at the federal, state, tribal and regional levels.
    See also: The new report Report and Recommendations: Improving the Prevention, Eradication, Control and Mitigation of Aquatic Invasive Species (Feb 2023) [PDF, 908 KB]

  • Report Lifts Lid on Australia's International Bug Superhighway

    Apr 15, 2020
    https://invasives.org.au/media-releases/invasive-insects-report/

    Australian Invasive Species Council.

    A new report has identified an international 'bug superhighway' capable of carrying a large variety of environmentally destructive overseas insects into Australia. The study, led by Monash University, rated the environmental harm being caused by 100 of the worst overseas insect species and recommends a string of actions to keep them out of Australia. The most dominant group of invasive insects by far are the hymenopteran insects – ants, bees and wasps – making them the world's most environmentally harmful invasive insect species.

    "Our report found that environmentally harmful bugs, beetles, ants and moths are most likely to hitch a ride into Australia along an international bug superhighway made up of imported plants, nursery material and the timber trade," said report author Professor Melodie McGeoch from Monash University. The report identifies the international trade in cut flowers and foliage as a high-risk pathway for more than 70 of the species studied. Invasive Species Council CEO Andrew Cox said this is the first time Australian and international scientists have comprehensively analysed which invasive insects overseas are doing the most environmental harm and could therefore threaten Australia's natural environment if they breach the nation's borders.

  • Report Pest Sightings

    https://massnrc.org/pests/report.aspx

    Massachusetts Introduced Pests Outreach Project.

    Report sightings of insect pests, pathogens, and invasive plants in Massachusetts

  • Report to the Congress: Control of the Brown Tree Snake (BTS)

    Aug 2008
    PDF
    60 KB
    https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/ADA609424

    DOD. Defense Technical Information Center.

    This report provides information on specific aspects of the Department’s BTS control program as required by Section 314 of Public Law 110-181. Submitted by The Office of the Secretary of Defense, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Installations and Environment).