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Texas Residents: We Need Your Help To Protect Citrus from Invasive Pests

May 03, 2021 Cecilia Sequeira, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

It’s amazing to think that just three counties in Texas’ Lower Rio Grande Valley produce more than 9 million cartons of fresh grapefruit and oranges each year, making it one of the United States’ top citrus areas. But it’s not easy! South Texas citrus growers face a significant challenge: a small...

Animals

Keeping Airline Passengers and Wildlife Safe: APHIS and its Partners Work to Identify Best Management Practices for Wildlife Repellents at Airports

March 29, 2021 Gail Keirn, APHIS Legislative and Public Affairs

A variety of wildlife species—from birds to rodents and rabbits—often visit airport environments leading to safety concerns for both wildlife and airline passengers. Collisions between wildlife and aircraft have increased in the past 30 years because of an increase in both hazardous wildlife species...

Animals

Two Sisters Ensure Family Farming Legacy Thrives

March 02, 2021 Brielle Wright, Facilities Service Technician, APHIS

I am Brielle Wright, a facilities service technician with APHIS’ Marketing and Regulatory Programs Business Services in Raleigh, North Carolina. Both sides of my families were heavily involved in agriculture. As children we loved being in the garden planting cucumber and cantaloupe. Our great...

Animals Equity

Black History Month 2021: Agriculture, Family and the Land

February 23, 2021 Langston Hull, Scientific Technical Director, APHIS’ International Services Program

Every February, the APHIS community celebrates Black History Month and honors the many and varied contributions of African Americans to U.S. history. This year’s Black History Month theme is “The Black Family: Representation, Identity, and Diversity.” This feature, a personal narrative by APHIS...

Animals Equity

Changing the Narrative on Bats and Rabies

December 04, 2020 Gail Keirn, APHIS Legislative and Public Affairs

Lately, when we hear about bats in the news it's often in the context of emerging infectious diseases. Yet, despite potential public health threats, bats are extremely important to the health of our natural ecosystems.

Animals

Montana Range Riding Aids Ranchers, Mitigates Conflicts

November 10, 2020 Jessianne Castle, Biological Science Technician, USDA Wildlife Services

As silvery moonlight washed across the Montana meadow, it sent long shadows over the grass. Tonight, I didn’t need the gentle clang of the grazing bell to tell me where the horses were feeding. My leggy quarter horse was as brightly silver-white as the full moon. The distant lowing of cows across...

Animals

USDA’s Cutting-Edge Methods Help Deliver a Victory Against Asian Giant Hornet

October 29, 2020 Greg Rosenthal, Communications Specialist, USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

After weeks of searching, Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) entomologists–—using a radio tag provided by USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service and a trap developed by the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service–— have located and eradicated the first Asian giant hornet (AGH)...

Animals

APHIS Wildlife Biologists Aid Squirrel Recovery on the Delmarva

October 22, 2020 Margaret “Marnie” Pepper, District Supervisor, APHIS-Wildlife Services, Chesapeake Bay Nutria Eradication Project/Detector Dog Program

Many claim that 2020 has been a year of chaos and calamity, but for one rare squirrel, it might be a year of hope and new beginnings. The Delmarva Fox Squirrel (DFS) is a subspecies of fox squirrel found on the eastern shore of Maryland, Southern Delaware and Virginia. This pudgy, slow squirrel with...

Animals Conservation

World Rabies Day

September 24, 2020 Tanya Espinosa, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Did you first learn about rabies through the children’s book or movie “Old Yeller”? Rabies has changed drastically over the last century in the United States, moving from a majority of cases occurring in domestic animals like the literary canine hero, to a disease occurring predominantly in wildlife...

Animals

An Important Action to Take: Check Your Trees!

August 24, 2020 Jeffrey Davidson, Commodity Specialist for Forest Products, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Did you know that USDA has declared August as Tree Check Month? That’s because August is the peak time of year to spot the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB)—an invasive wood-boring beetle that attacks 12 types of hardwood trees in North America, such as maples, elms, horse chestnuts, birches and willows...

Animals Forestry

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