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Exotic plants may be poorly adapted to your soil and climate and will not thrive. If they are well adapted, they may become invasive and be difficult to control.
News
USDA APHIS | Using Data to Tackle the Dangerous Mail Pest Pathway
How Stratford is trying to get rid of invasive nightshade plants
Field Bindweed A Nuisance Weed for Agricultural, Ranching and Homeowners
Green and Growing: Weed vigilantes put invasive knotweed on a starvation diet
Officials: Stop spread of zebra mussels
DEC and Partners Announce Effort to Prevent Spread of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
Guilford County officials working to prevent spread of hydrilla at Lake Higgins
What is next for the hyacinth on Hartbeespoort Dam?
Water hyacinth poses threat to Yercaud Lake
Hyacinth menace breeds mosquitoes as PMC waters down the issue
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Emerald Ash Borer - NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
Emerald Ash Borer and Your Community
APHIS - Pest Profile
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Videos
Danger - Don't Touch
Assignment Earth
The Silent Invader
Louisiana What We Can Do Citrus Psyllid
Huanlongbing in Florida
Grape: beware Sharpshooter spreading Pierce's
Lake Invaders The Fight for Lake Huron
Bee Diseases
Here Comes the Sound - Audio
Bugged Documentary Trailer
Maps
Forest Health
Emerald Ash Borer Resource Guide - Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection
Emerald Ash Borer - NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
CISR: Red Palm Weevil
Alien Moths Are Coming for Your Nuts - Wired Science
Stinkbugs Have Spread to 41 States; Can We Stop Them?
Tree cutting plan for Green Hill Park gets mixed reactions in Worcester - Worcester Telegram
Distribution | Mile-a-minute Vine
You Can Be A Forest Pest First Detector | Vermont Public Radio
Black-velvet Leatherleaf