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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 5001 to 5020 of 6017

  • Taking on Emerging Animal Diseases at the Source

    • Dec 13, 2023
    • USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    • ARS works with foreign scientists to prevent overseas diseases from spreading to the United States. This collaboration specifically targets research that cannot be conducted in the U.S., either because a disease does not exist here or the expertise in a pathogen resides overseas. Of particular concern are emerging diseases that may spread from animals to infect humans.

  • TAME Brazilian Pepper Tree

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension. TAME Invasives Portal.

  • TAME Invasives Portal

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

  • TAME Lygodium (Old World Climbing Fern)

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension. TAME Invasives Portal.

  • TAME Melaleuca

    • University of Florida. IFAS. TAME Melaleuca.

    • TAME Melaleuca (collaborative effort between U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service and University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, South Florida Water Management District, and others)

  • TAME Tropical Soda Apple

    • University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension. TAME Invasives Portal.

  • Target Pest Profiles - Sweet Orange Scab

    • California Department of Food and Agriculture.

  • Targeted Grazing: A Natural Approach to Vegetation Management and Landscape Enhancement

    • Dec 2006
    • University of Idaho. Rangeland Ecology and Management.

    • Prepared by: American Sheep Industry Association

  • TCD Programs - Invasive Species

    • Teton Conservation District (Wyoming).

  • Technical Guides

    • DOD. Armed Forces Pest Management Board.

    • Provides listing of Technical Guides (TGs). Various guides are relevant to pest managment and invasive species issues.

  • Tellus

    • USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

    • Tellus, is the new digital platform to showcase USDA, ARS's revolutionary research, which was publicly launched February 11, 2019. Tellus is Latin for earth, and its content is designed to reach our customers wherever they are—whether in the United States or across the globe, on desktop or mobile. Tellus is replacing its legacy AgResearch online magazine (includes archives from 1995-2018).

      Tellus includes content covering a variety of topics from field to fork, ranging from human nutrition and food safety, to crop and animal production. In addition to informative stories about ARS research, Tellus includes new products like featured photos, infographics, photo essays and videos.

  • Tennessee Aquatic Invasive Species

    • Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

  • Tennessee Invasive Aquatic Species - Whirling Disease

    • Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

  • Tennessee Invasive Plant Council

    • Tennessee Invasive Plant Council.

  • Tennessee's Birds: European Starling

    • Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

  • Termite Distribution in Florida

    • University of Florida. IFAS Extension. Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center.

  • Terrestrial Invasive Species

    • Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

  • Terrestrial Mollusc Tool - Lissachatina fulica

    • USDA. APHIS. PPQ. CPHST. Identification Technology Program.

  • Testing Blight Resistance in American Chestnuts

    • Apr 4, 2019
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • The American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was a keystone tree species in the eastern U.S., once found in the forest overstory from Maine to Georgia. The loss of the "mighty giant" to chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica), a fungal disease accidentally imported from Asia in the early 1900s, reduced the once dominant chestnuts to remnant understory sprouts. After eight years of field testing, USDA Forest Service research forester Stacy Clark and her colleagues evaluated blight resistance and survival of the backcross-generation American chestnut seedlings, known as BC3F3. Their results were published in Forest Ecology and Management.