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Displaying 541 to 560 of 764

  • Quackgrass (Elytrigia repens) Control Methods in Organic Agriculture [PDF, 1.28 MB]

    • Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry.

    • See also: Weeds - Quackgrass for more species resources

  • Quackgrass Management on Organic Farms [PDF, 347 KB]

    • University of Maine. Sustainable Agriculture Program.

    • See also: For Farmers for more resources

  • Quagga Mussels Detected for First Time in a Texas Reservoir

    • Feb 2, 2022
    • Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

    • The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) reports that invasive quagga mussels have been detected for the first time in Texas. The quagga mussel discovery was made by National Park Service (NPS) staff at the International Amistad Reservoir in the Rio Grande basin along the Texas-Mexico border near Del Rio. Quagga mussels are a close relative of the zebra mussel, which has invaded 33 Texas lakes across six river basins since it was first introduced in Texas in Lake Texoma in 2009. In addition to being the first detection of quagga mussels in Texas waters, this is also the first finding of any invasive mussel species in the Rio Grande basin.

      TPWD and partners monitor for invasive mussels in Texas lakes, but anyone who finds them in lakes where they haven’t been found before should report them immediately by emailing photos and location information to AquaticInvasives@tpwd.texas.gov.

  • Rapid Response Lowers Eradication Costs of Invasive Species: Evidence from Florida

    • 2018
    • Agricultural & Applied Economics Association. Choices Magazine.

    • Research offers evidence that the economic costs associated with invasive species is in large part determined by the response time between arrival of a pest and the beginning of eradication or control efforts.

      Citation: Alvarez, S. and D. Solís. 2018. "Rapid Response Lowers Eradication Costs of Invasive Species: Evidence from Florida." Choices. Quarter 4.

  • Regional Biosecurity Plan for Micronesia and Hawaii

  • Regional Invasive Species & Climate Change Management Challenge: Out of Control? The Effects of Climate Change on Biological Control Agents and their Target Hosts

    • 2023
    • University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    • Biocontrol is an important management tool that utilizes one species (a biocontrol agent) to control another (a target host) and can be an effective approach for controlling populations of invasive species across broad spatial scales. There are growing concerns that mismatches between how biocontrol agents and their hosts respond to climate change could alter the efficacy of current and future biocontrol programs.
      See also: Environmental Conversation Education Materials for additional educational materials (2011 to present)

  • Regional Listening Sessions Give Farmers a Voice in the Battle Against Herbicide Resistance

    • Feb 27, 2017
    • Weed Science Society of America.

    • Both scientists and regulators have had a lot to say about the growing problem of herbicide resistance and how weed management techniques need to change in response. But there have been few organized opportunities for farmers to make their voices heard and to share their experiences in managing herbicide-resistant weeds.

  • Report Highlights Aquatic Invasive Species Solutions

    • Apr 5, 2023
    • Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.

    • The Aquatic Invasive Species Commission and key partners received input from and engaged in dialogue with key stakeholders, federal and state decision makers, and leading experts. Recommendations focus on modernizing marine fisheries laws, making strategic investments, and improving collaboration among federal, state, local, and tribal agencies. The purpose of this collaborative process was intended to assess the current threat from aquatic invasive species (AIS), explore gaps in public policy and funding, and offer recommendations for how AIS can be addressed more effectively at the federal, state, tribal and regional levels.
      See also: The new report Report and Recommendations: Improving the Prevention, Eradication, Control and Mitigation of Aquatic Invasive Species (Feb 2023) [PDF, 908 KB]

  • Report to the Congress: Control of the Brown Tree Snake (BTS) [PDF, 60 KB]

    • Aug 2008
    • DOD. Defense Technical Information Center.

    • This report provides information on specific aspects of the Department’s BTS control program as required by Section 314 of Public Law 110-181. Submitted by The Office of the Secretary of Defense, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Installations and Environment).

  • Reports of Haemaphysalis longicornis in the United States

    • University of Georgia. College of Veterinary Medicine. Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study.

  • Research Highlights: Exotic and Invasive Species

    • USDA. Forest Service.

    • Read about Forest Service's research highlights. Can filter and sort by Topic, keywords, year, research unit, and more.
      See also:  Additional highlights for related topics Pest Management and Plant Diseases

  • Researchers Help Design Incentive Programs to Rid South America of Invasive Beaver

    • Jan 11, 2016
    • Virginia Tech.

    • North American beavers have wiped out 30 percent of forests along rivers and streams in Tierra del Fuego, a remote archipelago at the southern tip of South America, causing the greatest landscape change to these fragile forests in the last 10,000 years. It’s no surprise, then, that the governments of Chile and Argentina want the invasive beavers gone. But eradicating them has proven to be difficult, researchers found, because it requires the participation of every single landowner in the area.

  • Researchers Receive USDA Funding to Combat Devilishly Invasive Tree-of-Heaven

    • Oct 21, 2024
    • Virginia Tech. News.

    • The $900,000 grant will help Virginia Tech researchers see if the spotted lanternfly can help spread a fungus that kills the tree-of-heaven. The goal of the grant is to develop a native fungus as a biocontrol for the tree-of-heaven. Researchers are investigating whether the spotted lanternfly could help transmit the fungus from tree to tree, reducing the need for human intervention.

  • Results of the 2022 Lionfish Challenge: A record-breaking year!

    • Sep 16, 2022
    • Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    • The Lionfish Challenge 2022, the seventh annual, is a summer-long tournament that rewards divers for their lionfish harvests. The tournament boasted a total of 707 registered participants, the most in the program’s history. 196 divers conducted a total of 676 trips throughout the state during the 3-month tournament and brought in a whopping 25,299 lionfish.

  • Revisiting the “Tens Rule”: Vulnerability to Plant Invasions Worldwide Is Higher Than Previously Estimated

    • Oct 20, 2024
    • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center.

    • The widely cited “tens rule” in invasion ecology suggests that approximately 10% of established, non-native species will become invasive–or display negative impacts—when introduced to new environments. This study demonstrates that the tens rule is a poor estimate of invasion rates on a global scale. Instead, a ‘twenties rule’ is a better rule of thumb, meaning that roughly 20% of all established, non-native species eventually become invasive

  • RiversEdge West - Impacts of Tamarisk

    • RiversEdge West.

    • Special Note: RiversEdge West formerly known as the Tamarisk Coalition, change effective Mar 1, 2018.

  • Rooted in Research

    • USDA. FS. Northern Research Station.

    • "Rooted in Research" is the Northern Research Station's science delivery platform, with events and products tailored to natural resource professionals, partners, collaborators, and engaged citizens throughout the Northeast and Midwest. The bimonthly Rooted in Research focuses on the management implications of the latest research for natural resource managers. This publication features synthesized scientific information for high-priority land management needs, delivering key science findings to people who make and influence decisions about managing land and natural resources.

  • Russian Knapweed Biological Control Success with Host Specific Wasps and Midges

    • Dec 16, 2022
    • CAB International. Invasives Blog.

    • Russian knapweed (Rhaponticum repens) is a nonnative weed in the western United States. It was introduced in the late 1800’s and is now invading and degrading cropland, rangeland, riparian areas, and roadsides. This deep-rooted perennial is persistent and difficult and expensive to control by conventional means, is toxic to horses and outcompetes native vegetation by producing chemicals that inhibit plant growth. Russian knapweed is listed by the State of Colorado as a noxious weed, to be suppressed, contained, or locally extirpated.

      The Colorado Department of Agriculture (CDA) offers biocontrol agents to help suppress weeds and insect pests. When two gall-forming agents were developed and tested by CABI, and became available for use against Russian knapweed, the CDA was prepared to use them against the more than 50,000 hectares of the weed that currently infests Colorado.