If you have ever traveled out of the country, you have been given a set of rules to follow when bringing back stuff from your holiday. This list includes no meat, fruits and vegetables, plants, cut flowers, and then other stuff. Do you know why those rules exist?
Prevent Invasive Invaders
The rules are to try and prevent invasive pests from entering the United States. The United States Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has proclaimed August as “Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month.” An invasive is a plant or animal from another country that then escapes and starts to take over things. Invasives cause over $1 billion in damage to the United States in a year. Think fire ants, which arrived in a load of ship’s ballast in Mobile, Alabama in the 1950s and have taken over the South.
Emerald Ash Borer
The North isn’t safe, either. The emerald ash borer beetle is an Asian bug that is killing huge swaths of ash trees from Michigan to New York and is spreading rapidly. Louisville sluggers, the famous baseball bats made from ash, maybe a casualty of this invasive species.
How Invaders Arrive
How do these things get here? Sometimes deliberately, such as the English sparrow. A rich nut released breeding populations of all the birds mentioned in Shakespeare into Central Park in New York in the early 1900s. Some of them died or stayed local, but some spread rapidly.
Stowaways
Most of the time, though, it is inadvertent. Thrips hitch a ride on a plant brought back from another country. Fire ants are in the soil used as ballast on a ship. The emerald ash borer probably came into the country in a packing crate made with untreated wood.
How You Can Help
What can you do? APHIS has a cool website called Hungry Pests that gives more information on invasive species and how to prevent their arrival or spread. Texas has a website called Texas Invasives that trains citizen scientists to identify and report invasive species. Other states probably have similar sites, so a search on “invasive species” and your state will probably turn up one where you live.
In addition, there are five key concepts to remember, quoted from Hungry Pests:
- Don’t pack a pest. When traveling, make sure you don’t have any unintended stowaways.
- Be aware of quarantined areas. Don’t transfer fruits, vegetables, or plants in or out of areas that are under quarantine.
- Check your packages. Many times, invasive pests come packaged in things we order from other states or counties. Check packaging and goods to ensure no pests are sneaking in.
- Pests aren’t pets. They may look cute and cuddly, but leave them where they are. Don’t move a pest from one location to another…you may be helping them spread.
- Report a pest. If you see an unusual pest in your back yard, garden, or anywhere else, report it to your local county agriculture commissioner.
One more is do not transport firewood out of your county. If you are traveling to a place where you need some, buy it there. The emerald ash borer is spreading in firewood and some other pests could, too.
Prevent Disaster
You do not want to help an invasive pest spread or have your name forever associated with one as the person who let x bug into the area. Follow these recommendations and you will not have to worry about that.
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great information! thanks for stopping by my blog 😉
so nice post thanks this impormation
This is a very good topic. Here in Wisconsin most parks and camping areas do not allow any firewood to be brought in. That is a very good indication of how bad the invasive species problem is.
Hi Stephanie. This is an interesting post. Which is the best pest removing formula?
The best way to remove a pest depends both on the pest involved and where it is. If you find an invasive pest, the best thing to do is call your county extension agent and report it. They will tell you how to kill it.
wow, I’ve never seen an unusual pest just yet. But I dont think I want to wait to find out.
Glen, Miami Furniture