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Displaying 521 to 540 of 764

  • Policy Resolution 2022-11, Biosecurity and Invasive Species Management

    • Jun 30, 2022
    • Western Governors' Association.

    • This resolution addresses invasive species management and adds substantial new policy, including: a call to address the destructive relationship between invasive grasses and wildfires; mechanisms to enhance regional invasive species research, planning, and coordination; and recommendations to Congress and federal agencies on improving invasive species management on federal lands and supporting state-led management efforts.

      WGA resolutions are in effect for three years and then expire or are renewed. See all current WGA Policy Resolutions.

  • Policy Resolution 2024-02, National Forest and Rangeland Management

    • Nov 8, 2023
    • Western Governors' Association.

    • This policy resolution addresses the management of forest and rangelands in coordination with federal agencies and addresses issues including wildland fire, invasive spaces, and collaborative efforts.

      WGA resolutions are in effect for three years and then expire or are renewed. See all current WGA Policy Resolutions.

  • Pollinators at a Crossroads

    • Jun 20, 2020
    • USDA. Blog.

    • Bees and other pollinators, including birds, bats, butterflies, moths, flies, wasps, beetles, and small mammals, play a critical role in our food production system. A healthy pollinator population is vital to producing marketable commodities. More than 100 U.S. grown crops rely on pollinators. The added revenue to crop production from pollinators is valued at $18 billion. Pollinators also support healthy ecosystems needed for clean air, stable soils, and a diverse wildlife. That’s why USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) partners with the Land-Grant University System, U.S. government laboratories, and private and non-profit organizations to support research, education, and extension programs advancing pollinator health.

  • Port of New Orleans Finds Invasive Insects in Wood on Deck of Foreign Vessel

    • Jul 28, 2021
    • DHS. Customs and Border Protection.

    • A cargo ship was ordered to leave the U.S. waters after U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agriculture specialists at the Port of New Orleans discovered invasive insects found in the wood used to secure its previous cargo offloaded earlier in Mexico.

      The wood used to pack the aluminum shipment was found to be infested with five separate pests, two of which required action. Two of the pests discovered pose an agricultural threat to the U.S. They were positively identified by USDA entomologists as Cerambyciae and Myrmicinae.

  • Potato Cyst Nematodes Pest Information and Biosecurity

    • New South Wales Department of Primary Industries (Australia).

  • Potato Pest Management Guidelines - Late Blight

    • Mar 2019
    • University of California. Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program.

  • Potential Zika Virus Risk Estimated for 50 U.S. Cities

    • Mar 16, 2016
    • The University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). Atmos News.

  • Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage: European Starlings and Their Control [PDF, 759 KB]

    • Internet Center for Wildlife Damage Management.

    • See also: Birds for more fact sheets

  • Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage: Nutria [PDF, 617 KB]

    • Internet Center for Wildlife Damage Management.

    • See also: Rodents for more fact sheets

  • Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage: Wild Pigs [PDF, 345 KB]

  • Prevention is Key: Lessons from Laurel Wilt

    • Jul 22, 2021
    • USDA. FS. Southern Research Station. CompassLive.

    • Since 2002, forests in the southeastern U.S. have struggled against a disease called laurel wilt. In 18 years, laurel wilt has spread to 11 southeastern states and killed hundreds of millions of trees. A review article by USDA Forest Service scientist Rabiu Olatinwo reflects on the origins and spread of laurel wilt throughout the last several years. Olatinwo, a research plant pathologist at the SRS, published this research with recently retired plant pathologist Stephen Fraedrich and research entomologist Bud Mayfield in the journal Forests.

  • Protecting Agriculture on the Internet – One Click, One Post, One Sale at a Time

    • Apr 24, 2018
    • USDA. Blog.

    • A big way invasive pests can move from one location to another is through unregulated internet sales. We are seeing more and more of these sales, and it’s a real concern. Why? With normal commercial or retail sales, we can use techniques like quarantines and fumigation to make sure that purchased items are pest-free or don’t enter pest-free areas. But many times, sales on the internet do not follow these techniques, opening up the chance for invasive pests to move freely to new areas. APHIS' Smuggling, Interdiction and Trade Compliance Office looks for these types of sale offers online and stops them.

  • Protecting What Matters: Stories of Success

    • Mar 15, 2018
    • National Invasive Species Council.

    • Stories of successes. Report highlights game changing advances in the prevention, eradication, and control of invasive species through investments in science and technology.

      Citation: Holland, J.S., J.R. Kirkey, and J.K. Reaser. 2018. Protecting What Matters: Stories of Success. National Invasive Species Council (NISC) Secretariat. Department of the Interior, Washington, DC.

  • Public Comments Sought on Draft Integrated Letter Report, Programmatic Environmental Assessment for Inspection Stations in Upper Missouri River Basin

    • Feb 16, 2021
    • DOD. USACE. Omaha District.

    • A draft integrated letter report and programmatic environmental assessment has been developed to determine the economic and environmental impacts of federal participation in state-managed watercraft inspection programs along the Upper Missouri River Basin in Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. Public comments on the draft EA were accepted until March 2, 2021.

      The existing watercraft inspection programs are managed collaboratively by the states of Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska, where watercraft transported along highways are inspected for the presence of aquatic invasive species and decontaminated when detected. If approved, federal participation in the program would be cost-shared (50 percent) with each of the states, and would employ a regional strategy to identify locations that would provide the greatest likelihood of preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species to reservoirs operated and maintained by the Corps in the Upper Missouri River Basin.

  • Public Input Sought on Proposed Measures to Stop the Spread of Aquatic Invasive Species Into Yellowstone National Park

  • Public Invited to Become a First Detector and Report Invasive Species

    • Sep 10, 2018
    • Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office. Washington Invasive Species Council.

    • To help combat the $1.3 billion threat invasive species pose to Washington's economy every year, the Washington Invasive Species Council is inviting the public to the frontlines of its work by detecting invasive species and reporting them on its newly improved WA Invasives app. The free app enables anyone to report a plant or animal by collecting photographs, geographic coordinates, and sighting information. Users recreating in the backcountry also can collect data offline, when cellular service isn't available. The app also acts as digital field guide.

  • Purdue Experts Encourage ‘Citizen Scientists’ to Report Invasive Species

    • Feb 2019
    • Purdue University.

    • A major tool in the fight against invasive species is the Report INvasive website, hosted by Purdue College of Agriculture and the Indiana Invasive Species Council. The website includes several ways that people can report invasive species, including a smartphone app from the Great Lakes Early Detection Network. “There are not that many specialists and experts covering the state,” Sadof said. “When there are concerned citizens reporting, however, we have many more eyes and a better chance of detecting and eradicating a harmful species early.”

  • Purple Star-thistle Control [PDF, 147 KB]

    • Apr 2012
    • Marin Agricultural Land Trust (California).

  • Python Patrol - Stopping a Burmese Python Invasion

    • Oct 14, 2019
    • Nature Conservancy.