Universities research economics of combating invasive pests

Oct 13, 2008 9:35 AM

Universities in six states are recipients of federal funding to conduct research on measures to combat harmful pests and diseases, Ed Schafer, U.S. Agriculture Secretary, announced on Oct. 8. The USDA will award $974,000 this year for studies to examine the economic effects and efficiency of strategies to prevent, control, or eradicate invasive pests.

The funding will go to universities in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Nevada. The research projects are competitively awarded by the Program of Research on the Economics of Invasive Species Management (PREISM), administered by USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS). Among the subjects the projects will examine are:

• Economic tradeoffs of strategies for managing white pine blister rust in high-altitude pine forests used for recreation.

• Contractual arrangements that encourage ranchers to manage wildfire-inducing weeds in the Great Basin, tradeoffs between preemptive and restorative weed management, and gains from coordinating weed and wildfire risk management resources across multiple agencies and private entities.

• Decision support for analyzing risk of potentially invasive, imported ornamental plants, considering economic effects and characteristics of successful invaders.

• The potential for alternative mechanisms, such as marketable invasion permits and performance bonds, to encourage grower use of integrated pest management

• The effect of phytosanitary policies, such as pre-clearance, pre-treatment, and World Trade Organization notifications, on pest risks in agricultural produce imports and the implications for allocation of surveillance resources

• Structural characteristics of a robust, economically efficient surveillance network for early discovery of emerging animal diseases.

PREISM studies will provide analytically based principles, guidelines, and criteria for invasive species policy and program decision making, as well as the economic information, modeling systems, or other tools that support the decision making. Further information about these projects is available at: http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/InvasiveSpecies/.

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Continuing Education


(New Course)
Weed Resistance Management in Cotton

This course covers a wide range of options to effectively control weeds in cotton and reduce the risk of weed resistance management. It is accredited for hours/units for licensed/accredited applicators in 7 U.S. Cotton Belt states (Florida, Georgia, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, South Carolina an d Tennessee. CCA credit is pending).

This course is accredited in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming as well as for CCA credits:

(New Course)
Spray Drift Management

Keeping crop protection chemicals on the crop for which they are intended has been a cornerstone of farming not only to protect neighboring crops, but to not waste money allowing products to drift off the intended target. This accredited online continuing education course covers the critical elements of spray drift management.

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