Skip to main content

Resource Search

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 1581 to 1600 of 6009

  • Forest Pests: Invasive Plants and Insects of Maryland - Multiflora Rose [PDF, 421 KB]

  • Forest Pests: Invasive Plants and Insects of Maryland - Oriental Bittersweet [PDF, 242 KB]

  • Forest Protection

    • Tennessee Department of Agriculture.

  • Forest Service Publications - Treesearch

    • USDA. Forest Service.

    • Treesearch is an online system for sharing free, full text publications by Research and Development scientists in the USDA Forest Service. Included in Treesearch are scholarly works authored by the agency’s scientists and published by journals, in conference proceedings, or in books. Treesearch also offers scholarly works published by the agency which may or may not have been authored by agency researchers.

  • Forest Service, Partners Work to Restore American Elm

    • Mar 29, 2023
    • USDA. Forest Service.

    • Once common across eastern North America, the American elm is deeply ingrained in our nation's history. However, a large portion of the tree population was affected by Dutch Elm Disease beginning in the 1930s. Today, short-lived elms can still be found in forests, but because they tend to be much smaller, they no longer play such an important ecological role. A multifaceted collaborative effort is underway to restore the stately and once dominant American elm to persist on the landscape of the nation's forests.

  • Forest Tree Diseases and Climate Change

    • USDA. FS. Climate Change Resource Center.

    • Forest tree diseases are often caused by infectious pathogens such as fungi and bacteria. Changing climate conditions can influence the spread of infectious diseases and their carriers, and add stresses to trees, making them more susceptible to diseases. Tree disease can also be caused by abiotic conditions such as air pollution, though this page deals primarily with biotic factors. Read the synthesis paper to learn more about these climate-disease interactions and how management strategies can address the potential shifting patterns of tree disease.

  • Forestcast Podcast

    • USDA. FS. Northern Research Station.

    • From the forefront of forest research, the Northern Research Station invites you inside the largest forest research organization in the world — the USDA's Forest Service. In each podcast episode, you’ll hear stories, interviews, and special in-depth anthologies of the science that's studying, questioning, and solving some of today's most compelling forest issues.

      Non-native invasive insects and pathogens are causing significant ecological damage to forests worldwide.  The first season explores biological invasions — and their repercussions — in the Midwest and the Northeast. The second season examines tree breeding and selection to promote resistance to invasive insects and diseases.

  • Forester Forums - White Pine Blister Rust [PDF, 1.42 MB]

    • Sep 2014
    • Idaho Department of Lands.

    • See also: Forester Forums for more fact sheets

  • Forestry Assistance - Forest Pest Management Program

    • Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. Forestry Division.

  • Forestry Extension

    • University of Kentucky. College of Agriculture, Food and Environment.

  • Forestry Images

    • Forestryimages.org.

    • Published by: University of Georgia. Bugwood Network; USDA. Forest Service.

  • Forestry in South Dakota - Dutch Elm Disease

    • South Dakota Department of Agriculture & Natural Resources.

  • Forests & Trees - Invasive Species

    • University of New Hampshire. Cooperative Extension.

  • Forests and Forestry - Forest Health

    • Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation.

  • Forests for Bats: New Booklet for Landowners and Managers

    • May 6, 2021
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • "Almost all North American bats rely on forests for survival," says Roger Perry, USDA Forest Service research wildlife biologist. Perry recently led the team that updated Forest Management and Bats, a booklet designed for private landowners and anyone managing forests. It was first published in 2006 by Bat Conservation International, and Daniel Taylor of BCI wrote the original version and contributed to the update. The updated publication is a 2020 product of the White-nose Syndrome National Plan.

  • Formosan Subterranean Termite

    • Texas A&M University. Center for Urban and Structural Entomology.

  • Formosan Subterranean Termite (Coptotermes formosanus) [PDF, 283 KB]

    • County of Los Angeles (California). Agricultural Commissioner. Weights and Measures.

  • Formosan Subterranean Termites

    • Louisiana State University Agricultural Center. Research and Extension.

  • Formosan Termites in North Carolina

    • Jun 2018
    • North Carolina State University. Cooperative Extension.

  • ForWarn II - Satellite-Based Change Recognition and Tracking

    • ForWarn.

    • ForWarn is a satellite-based forest disturbance monitoring system for the conterminous United States. It delivers new forest change products every eight days and provides tools for attributing abnormalities to insects, disease, wildfire, storms, human development or unusual weather. Archived data provide disturbance tracking across all lands since 2000.