Animal Health - Foot-and-Mouth Disease
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
North Dakota Game and Fish Department.
North Dakota Game and Fish Department.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
Feral swine are an invasive species which cause extensive damage to crops, property, and the environment. They are also known to carry over 30 diseases and 37 parasites that can be transmitted to livestock, people, pets, and wildlife. When feral swine are sighted in North Dakota, the State Board of Animal Health should be notified immediately. Attempts will be made to identify whether the swine are truly feral or if they are escaped domestic swine which are private property. Individuals who encounter feral swine should not destroy them unless they encounter feral swine on their own property and there is a threat of harm or destruction of property. As soon as possible following destruction of the animal, but always within 24 hours, the individual must notify the State Board of Animal Health (BoAH) at 701-328-2655.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
North Dakota State University Agriculture and University Extension.
North Dakota State University. Extension Service.
Publication W1132
North Dakota Game and Fish Department.
View current information on the locations of curlyleaf pondweed, Eurasian watermilfoil, and zebra mussels in North Dakota waters.
North Dakota State University. Extension Service.
North Dakota State University.
North Dakota State University.
North Dakota State University.
North Dakota Weed Control Association.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
See also: Pest Survey and Outreach for more pests.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
DOD. USACE. Omaha District.
A draft integrated letter report and programmatic environmental assessment has been developed to determine the economic and environmental impacts of federal participation in state-managed watercraft inspection programs along the Upper Missouri River Basin in Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. Public comments on the draft EA were accepted until March 2, 2021.
The existing watercraft inspection programs are managed collaboratively by the states of Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska, where watercraft transported along highways are inspected for the presence of aquatic invasive species and decontaminated when detected. If approved, federal participation in the program would be cost-shared (50 percent) with each of the states, and would employ a regional strategy to identify locations that would provide the greatest likelihood of preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species to reservoirs operated and maintained by the Corps in the Upper Missouri River Basin.
North Dakota State University. Extension Service.
DOI. National Park Service.