TY - CONF TI - Biotic and abiotic factors controlling nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural soil AU - Vance, L. AU - Robarge, W. AU - Carley, D. AU - Rufty, T. C2 - 2010/// C3 - ASA Annual Meeting Abstracts DA - 2010/// SP - 140–27 ER - TY - CONF TI - Benghal dayflower seed viability and impact on dispersal AU - Riar, M. AU - Spears, J. AU - Burns, J. AU - Webster, T. AU - Carley, D. AU - Rufty, T. C2 - 2010/// C3 - ASA Annual Meeting Abstracts DA - 2010/// SP - 194–3 ER - TY - CONF TI - Carbon storage under bermudagrass fairways in the southeast AU - Carley, D. AU - Rufty, T. AU - Sermons, S. AU - Vance, L. AU - Bowman, D. AU - Shi, W. C2 - 2010/// C3 - ASA Annual Meeting Abstracts DA - 2010/// SP - 202–212 ER - TY - SOUND TI - Turf Talk: Bringing Sustainability into the Conversation AU - Seth Carley, D. DA - 2010/10// PY - 2010/10// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Nitrogen Management to Off-Set Heat-Stress on Creeping Bentgrass Greens AU - Seth Carley, D. DA - 2010/8// PY - 2010/8// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Managed Ecologies: Are They Sustainable? AU - Seth Carley, D. DA - 2010/2// PY - 2010/2// ER - TY - CONF TI - Pest Information, Detection and surveillance projects of the center for Plant Health Science and Technology of USDA-APHIS AU - Meissner, H.E. AU - Magarey, R. AU - Engle, J. AU - Borchert, D. AU - Walters, T. AU - Cave, G. T2 - Caribbean Food Crops Society 46th Annual Meeting C2 - 2010/// CY - Boca Chica, Dominican Republic DA - 2010/// PY - 2010/7/11/ ER - TY - JOUR TI - The application of @Risk in pest quantitative risk assessment T2 - Plant Quarantine DA - 2010/// PY - 2010/// UR - http://oversea.cnki.net/kcms/detail/detail.aspx?filename=ZWJY201006003&dbcode=CJFQ&dbname=CJFD2010 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Pest Risk Maps for Invasive Alien Species: A Roadmap for Improvement AU - Venette, Robert C. AU - Kriticos, Darren J. AU - Magarey, Roger D. AU - Koch, Frank H. AU - Baker, Richard H. A. AU - Worner, Susan P. AU - Raboteaux, Nadilia N. Gomez AU - McKenney, Daniel W. AU - Dobesberger, Erhard J. AU - Yemshanov, Denys AU - De Barro, Paul J. AU - Hutchison, William D. AU - Fowler, Glenn AU - Kalaris, Tom M. AU - Pedlar, John T2 - BIOSCIENCE AB - Pest risk maps are powerful visual communication tools to describe where invasive alien species might arrive, establish, spread, or cause harmful impacts. These maps inform strategic and tactical pest management decisions, such as potential restrictions on international trade or the design of pest surveys and domestic quarantines. Diverse methods are available to create pest risk maps, and can potentially yield different depictions of risk for the same species. Inherent uncertainties about the biology of the invader, future climate conditions, and species interactions further complicate map interpretation. If multiple maps are available, risk managers must choose how to incorporate the various representations of risk into their decisionmaking process, and may make significant errors if they misunderstand what each map portrays. This article describes the need for pest risk maps, compares pest risk mapping methods, and recommends future research to improve such important decision-support tools. DA - 2010/5// PY - 2010/5// DO - 10.1525/bio.2010.60.5.5 VL - 60 IS - 5 SP - 349-362 SN - 0006-3568 KW - biological invasions KW - biosecurity KW - ecological niche models KW - climate change KW - pest risk assessment ER - TY - JOUR TI - Enhancing early detection of exotic pests in agricultural and forest ecosystems using an urban-gradient framework AU - Colunga-Garcia, Manuel AU - Magarey, Roger A. AU - Haack, Robert A. AU - Gage, Stuart H. AU - Qi, Jiaquo T2 - ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS AB - Urban areas are hubs of international transport and therefore are major gateways for exotic pests. Applying an urban gradient to analyze this pathway could provide insight into the ecological processes involved in human‐mediated invasions. We defined an urban gradient for agricultural and forest ecosystems in the contiguous United States to (1) assess whether ecosystems nearer more urbanized areas were at greater risk of invasion, and (2) apply this knowledge to enhance early detection of exotic pests. We defined the gradient using the tonnage of imported products in adjacent urban areas and their distance to nearby agricultural or forest land. County‐level detection reports for 39 exotic agricultural and forest pests of major economic importance were used to characterize invasions along the gradient. We found that counties with more exotic pests were nearer the urban end of the gradient. Assuming that the exotic species we analyzed represent typical invaders, then early detection efforts directed at 21–26% of U.S. agricultural and forest land would likely be able to detect 70% of invaded counties and 90% of the selected species. Applying an urban‐gradient framework to current monitoring strategies should enhance early detection efforts of exotic pests, facilitating optimization in allocating resources to areas at greater risk of future invasions. DA - 2010/3// PY - 2010/3// DO - 10.1890/09-0193.1 VL - 20 IS - 2 SP - 303-310 SN - 1051-0761 KW - agricultural plant pests KW - exotic species KW - forest plant pests KW - gradient analysis KW - invasion risk KW - nonindigenous species KW - urban influence ER - TY - JOUR TI - Modeling Spatial Establishment Patterns of Exotic Forest Insects in Urban Areas in Relation to Tree Cover and Propagule Pressure AU - Colunga-Garcia, Manuel AU - Haack, Robert A. AU - Magarey, Roger A. AU - Margosian, Margaret L. T2 - JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY AB - Journal Article Modeling Spatial Establishment Patterns of Exotic Forest Insects in Urban Areas in Relation to Tree Cover and Propagule Pressure Get access Manuel Colunga-Garcia, Manuel Colunga-Garcia 1 1Corresponding author: Center for Global Change and Earth Observations, Michigan State University, 204 Manly Miles Bldg., 1405 S. Harrison Rd., East Lansing, MI 48823 (e-mail: colunga@msu.edu). Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Robert A. Haack, Robert A. Haack Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Roger A. Magarey, Roger A. Magarey Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Margaret L. Margosian Margaret L. Margosian Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Journal of Economic Entomology, Volume 103, Issue 1, 1 February 2010, Pages 108–118, https://doi.org/10.1603/EC09203 Published: 01 February 2010 Article history Received: 19 June 2009 Accepted: 30 October 2009 Published: 01 February 2010 DA - 2010/2// PY - 2010/2// DO - 10.1603/ec09203 VL - 103 IS - 1 SP - 108-118 SN - 1938-291X KW - invasive species KW - nonindigenous species KW - urban forest KW - emerald ash borer ER -