News

Americans are being urged to crush bright pink blobs found along Florida's waterways as an invasive snail species continues ...
Lantana camara is a favorite of many gardeners for obvious reasons. After all, the showy pink, purple, yellow and orange ...
The town of Chelmsford and residents along Freeman Lake are taking a noninvasive approach to fighting invasive aquatic weeds ...
GEORGIA, USA — Georgia’s scenic landscape may be one reason the invasive spotted lanternfly is spreading faster than many ...
More than 100 Wisconsin residents have petitioned the DNR to require a wake boat to be decontaminated if moving from one ...
A research study funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture collected data on thousands of acres of damaged farmland across ...
"This is not a pest we want to ignore." Officials raise alarm over infestation of dangerous species as it reaches new US ...
Georgia residents who capture wild hogs could be awarded with an expensive trapping tool from the Georgia Department of ...
In her first six months, Donald Trump’s second agriculture secretary has altered the course of the U.S. Department of ...
Nonsexual cannibalism is less common but may be associated with food availability or territorial aggression,” the researchers ...
Researchers are looking at an invasive species of algae along the Atlantic coast as a possible reason for mercury in the food chain.
A new invasive insect, the spotted lanternfly, is making its way into Georgia, and state researchers are asking for the public's help in tracking its spread. Here's what you need to know.