Latest News

In the News: Thanks to Eradication Plans, Future Bright for Redonda Island (www.islandconservation.org)

09/13/2016

Redonda, a Caribbean island that is part of Antigua and Barbuda, was once a brilliant ecosystem. The island is home to a variety of plants and animals including endemic lizards. It’s also an Important Bird Area (IBA), meaning that it supports globally significant seabirds. Due to the presence of invasive species, the once thriving island has been transformed into a barren rock. Invasive goats have heavily grazed the island, decimating the native vegetation and thereby exhausting the very source of food they depend on.

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Web Reads: Global treaty to halt invasive aquatic species to enter into force in 2017 (www.imo.org)

09/08/2016

The International Convention for the Control and Management of Ships' Ballast Water and Sediments (BWM Convention) will enter into force on 8 September 2017, marking a landmark step towards halting the spread of invasive aquatic species, which can cause havoc for local ecosystems, affect biodiversity and lead to substantial economic loss. Under the Convention’s terms, ships will be required to manage their ballast water to remove, render harmless, or avoid the uptake or discharge of aquatic organisms and pathogens within ballast water and sediments

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The Threat of Invasive Species (www.doi.gov)

09/06/2016

From the Zika, the mosquito-borne virus recently making headlines across the globe, to Cheatgrass, which increases the danger of wildfire as the plant spreads across the Western U.S. – invasive species come in all shapes and sizes. But the one thing they have in common is the threat they pose.

Invasive species are simply that—invasive. They are non-native species whose introduction causes or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human and animal health. If left to spread, invasive species can cost billions of dollars to manage and can have devastating consequences on the Nation’s ecosystems, economy, and human health. Invasive species was one of many topics being discussed this week at the World Conservation Congress held for the first time ever in the United States in Honolulu.

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In the News: One-sixth of land on Earth is highly vulnerable to invasive species (www.purdue.edu)

08/31/2016

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - One-sixth of the Earth's land is highly vulnerable to invasive species, and most countries have a limited capacity to protect their natural resources from non-native animals, plants or microbes, a global analysis shows. Invasive species can spread quickly and dramatically alter landscapes, ecosystems and human health and livelihoods, often with harmful consequences. Notable examples of invasive species in the U.S. include Burmese pythons, West Nile virus, emerald ash borers and tumbleweed.

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In the News: Oregon wild horse roundup canceled (www.capitalpress.com)

08/30/2016

A planned roundup of wild horses from the Three Fingers herd in Malheur County, Ore., has been canceled due to a rangeland fire in the area. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management decided to withdraw its decision to gather 100 of the herd’s 200 horses near Jordan Valley, Ore., in late August, forestalling at least temporarily an animal rights group’s lawsuit seeking to block the action.

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In the News: Feds Helping V.I. Combat Invasive Species (stthomassource.com)

08/30/2016

The U.S. Department of the Interior's Office of Insular Affairs recently awarded the Department of Planning and Natural Resources’ Division of Fish and Wildlife $10,000 for the development of an invasive species action plan, according to DPNR. The plan will provide guidance to local and federal governments on invasive marine and land-based species affecting the territory. The plan, due to be completed by the end of this year, will be authored by DPNR with contributions from the University of the Virgin Islands, the National Park Service, and other local and federal entities.

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