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  • YouTube - Weed of the Week: Scotch Thistle

    • Google. YouTube; University of Arizona. Coconino County Cooperative Extension.

  • YouTube - Removing Giant Reed in Sabino Canyon

    • Google. YouTube; Tuscon Audubon (Southern Arizona).

  • The Mediterranean Fruit Fly [PDF, 135 KB]

    • Arizona State University. Agriculture and Life Sciences.

    • See also: Citrus Insect Pests for more factsheets

  • Save Our Saguaros - Beat Back Buffelgrass!

    • Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum.

    • The rapid spread of buffelgrass through the Sonoran Desert rivals climate change and water scarcity as our region's most pressing environmental issue. Buffelgrass is one of many plants that were brought here from other parts of the world. Lacking the insects, diseases, and other organisms that helped keep them in check back home, some have spread like wildfire, much to the detriment of our native plants and animals. Buffelgrass is the worst of these invasive plants because it is not only invading our desert, but transforming our formerly fire-proof desert into a fire-prone grassland. The fight to control buffelgrass is the fight to save an ecosystem and some of the most magnificent stands of saguaros in the world. Volunteer for a buffelgrass pull, register your own buffelgrass pull, or request a presentation or ID guide.

  • Regulated and Restricted Noxious Weeds (R3-4-244)

    • Arizona Department of Agriculture.

  • Pink Bollworm Management [PDF, 44 KB]

  • Pests and Pest Control

    • Arizona Department of Agriculture.

  • Non-Native Invasive Plants of Arizona

    • Dec 2019
    • University of Arizona. Cooperative Extension.

    • This booklet is the 2019 revision of a similar booklet published in 2001 and the second edition.  This updated edition of the guides provide management suggestions for most listed species based on a synthesis of field trials and greenhouse experiments mostly conducted in the arid southwest.  The second edition included most of the invasive plant species that appeared in the 1st edition with several species added.  The updated booklet is not intended to provide a comprehensive list of all of Arizona’s invasive weeds, but rather, it illustrates a few invasive plants that have become, or have the potential to become, problematic in Arizona.
      Publication Number: AZ1482-2016

  • Mussel Decontamination - What Day Users Need To Know

    • DOI. NPS. Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.

    • It is crucial to keep the mussels from moving from Lake Powell to other lakes and rivers. Utah and Arizona state laws require you to clean, drain, and dry your boat when leaving Lake Powell using self-decontamination procedures. Additional steps are required if you launch on other waters without a significant drying period or if you are on Lake Powell for more than 5 days.

  • Invasive Plants of Concern

    • Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management.

  • Invasive Plants

    • Arizona Native Plant Society.

  • How You Can Help

    • DOI. NPS. Saguaro National Park.

    • Learn how to help stop the spread of invasive plants.

  • Glen Canyon Mussel Update

    • DOI. NPS. Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.

    • Quagga mussel larvae, or veligers, were first confirmed in Lake Powell in late 2012 after routine water monitoring tests discovered mussel DNA in water samples taken from the vicinity of Antelope Point and the Glen Canyon Dam. As of early 2016, thousands of adult quagga mussels have been found in Lake Powell, attached to canyon walls, the Glen Canyon Dam, boats, and other underwater structures, especially in the southern portions of the lake. It is crucial to keep the mussels from moving from Lake Powell to other lakes and rivers. Utah and Arizona state laws require you to clean, drain, and dry your boat when leaving Lake Powell using self-decontamination procedures.

  • Forest and Woodland Health

    • Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management.

  • Asian Longhorned Tick, an Invasive Tick in the United States [PDF, 1.75 MB]

    • Mar 2019
    • University of Arizona. Cooperative Extension.

  • Asian Citrus Psyllid - Don't Move Your Citrus!

    • Arizona Department of Agriculture.

  • Arizona Plant Diagnostic Network

    • University of Arizona; USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service; Arizona Department of Agriculture.

    • The Arizona Plant Diagnostic Network is designed to link growers and master gardeners with plant experts in your community and with plant scientists at the University of Arizona. These experts are available to answer questions about plant health and help identify new and emerging plant pests and pathogens in Arizona. The goal is to increase public awareness of incoming threats to the plants and produce in our State.

  • Arizona Pest Management

    • University of Arizona. Cooperative Extension.

  • Arizona Game and Fish Department Watercraft Inspection & Decontamination

    • Arizona Game and Fish Department.

    • If your watercraft has been in a Listed Infested Water [PDF, 116 KB] six or more consecutive days, you must have your boat inspected and decontaminated by AZGFD or an authorized agent prior to transport. To prepare for your decontamination, please click here. For more information about aquatic invasive species and AZGFD AIS regulations, visit Aquatic Invasive Species.