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Provides access to all site resources, with the option to search by species common and scientific names. Resources can be filtered by Subject, Resource Type, Location, or Source. Search Help

Displaying 1 to 20 of 419

  • GLANSIS - Asian Clam

    • DOCNOAA. Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory; DOIUSGS. Wetland and Aquatic Research Center.

  • GLANSIS - Rock Snot

    • DOCNOAA. Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory; DOIUSGS. Wetland and Aquatic Research Center.

  • GLANSIS - Purple Lythrum

    • DOCNOAA. Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory; DOIUSGS. Wetland and Aquatic Research Center.

  • Invasive Plants of the Southeast

    • Southeast Exotic Pest Plant Council.

  • Southern Forest Health - Spongy Moth

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

    • Includes species related publications, webinars and other resources.

  • Southern Forest Health - Sirex Woodwasp

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

    • Includes species related publications, webinars and other resources.

  • Southern Forest Health - Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

    • Includes species related publications, webinars and other resources.

  • Southern Forest Health - Laurel Wilt

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

    • Includes species related publications, webinars and other resources.

  • Southern Forest Health - Cogongrass

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

    • Includes species related publications, webinars and other resources.

  • Southern Forest Health - Directory of State Pest Specialists

    • USDA. Forest Service; Southern Regional Extension Forestry. Forest Health Program.

  • U.S. Department of Interior Awards $4.5 Million to Renew Support for Climate Science Center at UMass Amherst

    • Sep 17, 2019
    • University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    • The U.S. Department of the Interior has renewed its support for the Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center (NE CASC) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst with a five-year, $4.5 million commitment as the host campus for its six-member consortium of universities, says center co-director professor Richard Palmer. Scientists affiliated with the center provide federal, state and other agencies with region-specific results of targeted research on the effects of climate change on ecosystems, wildlife, water and other resources. The new agreement continues Interior’s original seven-year, $11 million grant to the NE CASC at UMass Amherst that began in 2011. One of the web-based tools created by the NE CASC is the Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change (RISCC) Management project, which helps invasive species managers through working groups, information-sharing and targeted research.

  • Sea Lamprey Abundances Below Target In Lakes Michigan And Ontario And Are Decreasing In Lakes Superior, Huron, And Erie [PDF, 243 KB]

    • Nov 12, 2019
    • Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

    • The Great Lakes Fishery Commission today reported that populations of the invasive, parasitic sea lamprey remain at near-historic lows, below targets, in Lakes Michigan and Ontario, and above target, but holding steady, in Lakes Huron, Superior and Erie. Sea lamprey populations in Lake Huron are close to target levels and have been holding steady for the past five years. Abundances in Lakes Superior and Erie remain above target but have also decreased significantly since the near-record highs observed in 2017. Sea lampreys are the worst of the alien species to invade the Great Lakes. Before control, sea lampreys destroyed many times the human fish catch. Today, sea lamprey control is the foundation of the $7 billion Great Lakes fishery. The Commission and its partners are encouraged by the overall decrease in abundance of sea lampreys throughout the Great Lakes basin during 2019, but caution that environmental conditions, such as a prolonged spring and high precipitation events, contributed to the decrease.

  • RiversEdge West - Riparian Restoration Planning: Funding

    • RiversEdge West.

    • The mission of RiversEdge West (formerly the Tamarisk Coalition) is to advance the restoration of riparian lands through collaboration, education, and technical assistance. One of the most challenging aspects of conducting restoration work can be acquiring and maintaining adequate funding to support the full spectrum of restoration efforts. To that end, RiversEdge West has developed a variety of tools intended to help practitioners secure funding to support this work.

  • Mid-Atlantic Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species - Funding Opportunities

    • Mid-Atlantic Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species.

    • The Mid-Atlantic Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species (MAPAIS) is offering a small grants competition to encourage interested groups and individuals to submit proposals for possible funding.

  • Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Applying for Funding

    • Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

    • The commission funds projects submitted to the Fishery Research and Sea Lamprey Research Programs ranging from U.S.$20,000 to U.S.$100,000 per year (average approximately U.S.$55,000) that generally run for 3-4 years. For more information, review the current call for proposals. Projects that meet particular criteria can also be funded as pilot projects or through the Technical Assistance Program or Technical Assistance for Fisheries Research.

  • Pest Alerts

    • North Central Integrated Pest Management Center.

    • Pest Alerts are a signature program of the North Central IPM Center to help support initiatives to track, report and manage invasive pests.

  • Pest Alert: Laurel Wilt [PDF, 975 KB]

    • Oct 2019
    • USDA. FS. Southern Region. State and Private Forestry.

    • Laurel wilt is a disease of woody plants in the laurel family (Lauraceae). Hundreds of millions of redbay (Persea borbonia) trees have been killed by laurel wilt in the southeastern Atlantic Coastal Plain region of the United States (US). The disease has also killed large numbers of sassafras (Sassafras albidum) trees in forests and landscapes, and avocado (Persea americana) trees in commercial production. As of October 2019, laurel wilt was known to occur from Texas to North Carolina, south through Florida and north to Kentucky. Laurel wilt is expected to continue spreading through sassafras in the eastern US, and is a potential threat to California bay laurel (Umbellularia californica) in the western US and to lauraceous species elsewhere in the world.
      See also: Region 8 - Forest & Grassland Health for more information.

  • Great Lakes Calendar

    • Great Lakes Commission.

    • The Great Lakes Calendar features events from around the region that may be of interest to Great Lakes stakeholders, with a focus on professional conferences and events relevant to research, science, policy, and education.

  • RiversEdge West Events

    • RiversEdge West.

    • Since 2001, RiversEdge West (formerly known as the Tamarisk Coalition) has been conducting riparian restoration research conferences and symposiums with a focus on impacts to riverside habitat in the arid western U.S. These gatherings are driven by RiversEdge West's commitment to advance the knowledge and practice of riparian restoration.

  • Study Supports Single Introduction of Laurel Wilt Pathogen in the U.S.

    • Mar 2019
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Laurel wilt has devastated plants in the Lauraceae family – redbay, sassafras, pondberry, avocado, and others – since it was first detected in the southeastern U.S. around 2002. There is no widespread, effective treatment for laurel wilt. Genetics research is focused on learning more about the pathogen's genetic structure in order to improve detection methods and screening for possible resistance in Lauraceae host species. "We have developed genetic markers to describe the population of the pathogen in the U.S.," says USDA Forest Service plant pathologist Tyler Dreaden. "Knowing which genotypes to use contributes to a quicker, more cost-effective resistance screening process." Dreaden led a new study to shed light on the genetic structure of the pathogen and its reproductive strategy. The research team included Marc Hughes at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, Randy Ploetz and Jason Smith at the University of Florida, and Adam Black, horticulture director of the Peckerwood Garden Conservation Foundation in Texas. Their findings were published in Forests.