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Displaying 561 to 580 of 3531

  • Dutch Elm Disease and Disease-Resistant Elms

    • Feb 2017
    • Iowa State University. Extension and Outreach.

  • Dutch Elm Disease and Its Control

    • Oklahoma State University. Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service.

  • Dutch Elm Disease in North Dakota: A New Look

    • Jan 2013
    • North Dakota State University Agriculture and University Extension.

  • Early Detection and Rapid Response

    • National Invasive Species Council.

    • Early detection and rapid response (EDRR) is a key tenet of invasive species management, where “detection” is the process of observing and documenting an invasive species, and “response” is the process of reacting to the detection once the organism has been authoritatively identified and response options have been assessed.

      The NISC FY 2020 - FY 2022 Work Plans identified priority activities in the area of rapid response, including:

       

  • Early Detection is Key: University of Guam Keeps an Eye Out for Deadly Tomato Pests

    • Oct 8, 2020
    • University of Guam.

    • The University of Guam received another round of funding in September under the U.S. Department of Agriculture Plant Protection Act for the surveying and monitoring of invasive pests of solanaceous crops that are on USDA’s Priority Pest List for 2021. Solanaceae, or nightshades, are a family of flowering plants that include tomato, eggplant, and chili pepper. As part of the national effort this year, UOG was awarded $38,000 to survey and monitor for two pests: Tuta absoluta, which is a moth and type of leafminer capable of destroying an entire crop, and Ralstonia solanacearum race 3 biovar 2, which is a bacterium, known as a bacterial wilt, that infects through the roots and is deadly to plants.

      The work through UOG better prepares the island to manage these invasive species if or when they arrive. "There are certain pathogens and insects that have a reputation of being really bad. These are two of them," said project lead Robert L. Schlub, a researcher and faculty member of UOG Cooperative Extension and Outreach with a doctorate in plant pathology. "They aren’t on Guam, but if they show up, we want to know so we can help get them under control."

  • Early Detection of Invasive Plants—Principles and Practices

    • DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    • U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2012–5162. The NPS I&M Program, in collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Status and Trends Program, compiled this document to provide guidance and insight to parks and other natural areas engaged in developing early-detection monitoring protocols for invasive plants. While several rapid response frameworks exist, there is no consistent or comprehensive guidance informing the active detection of nonnative plants early in the invasion process. Early-detection was selected as a primary focus for invasive-species monitoring because, along with rapid response, it is a key strategy for successful management of invasive species.

  • Earth Day 2021: USDA Building in DC Illuminated by Green Lights to Signal the Importance of Preserving the Environment

    • Apr 22, 2021
    • Federal News Network.

    • USDA Whitten building in DC

      The lighting of USDA's Jamie L. Whitten Building is part of Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month and United Nations International Year of the Plant Health Celebrations.

  • Earthworms Can Jump: Invasive Jumping Worms are also Ecosystem Engineers

    • May 3, 2022
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • A worm is a worm is a worm, right? Except that there are more than 7,000 species of worms, and the longer you look, the more complex their world becomes. Earthworms compete. Earthworms invade. Earthworms… jump?

  • Eat Your Invasives

    • Dec 23, 2014
    • Michigan State University Extension.

    • Harvesting and eating invasive plants may add a new dimension to “local foods.” Many invasive plants and animals started out as old world food that escaped from colonial gardens.

  • Ecological Risk Screening Summaries

    • Aug 3, 2021
    • DOI. Fish and Wildlife Service.

    • An Ecological Risk Screening Summary, or Risk Summary, provides a rapid evaluation of a species’ potential invasiveness. These evaluations give us, as well as our natural resource stakeholders and the public, a quick way to determine which species are most likely (high risk) and least likely (low risk) to cause damage if they spread outside of their natural range, and which ones have insufficient information to make such a determination (uncertain risk).
      See also: Search the Ecological Risk Screening Summary (ERSS) Database

  • Economic Costs of Biological Invasions within North America

  • Economics of Invasive Species Damage and Damage Management

    • 2018
    • USDA. APHIS. National Wildlife Research Center.

    • Managers often struggle to calculate the ecological and economic costs associated with invasive species. Yet, knowing these impacts can boost support and understanding for invasive species management. In a new book chapter, NWRC economist Dr. Stephanie Shwiff and colleagues describe how economists determine costs of both primary and secondary impacts from invasive species and how these translate into jobs and revenue in regional economies.

  • EDIS - Applesnails of Florida

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #ENY323

  • EDIS - Asian Giant Hornet

    • May 2020
    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #EENHY-754

  • EDIS - Asian Longhorned Tick Haemaphysalis longicornis Neumann

    • Aug 2019
    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #EENY-739

  • EDIS - Asian Tiger Mosquito

    • Sep 2021
    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #EENY319

  • EDIS - Avian Influenza in Poultry

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #PS38

  • EDIS - Bean Plataspid

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #ENY527

  • EDIS - Biology and Management of Johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense) in Ornamental Crop Production and Landscapes

    • Apr 2022
    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #ENH-1356

  • EDIS - Cactus Moth

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

    • Electronic Data Information Source Publication #ENY056