- Air-Potato
- Annosum Root Rot
- Asian Longhorned Beetle
- Bamboo
- Beech Leaf Disease
- Brazilian Peppertree
- Callery pear
- Chinese Privet
- Chinese Tallow Tree
- Cogongrass
- Elm Zigzag Sawfly
- Emerald Ash Borer
- Fall Cankerworm
- Forest Management
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- Balancing Objectives and Outcomes for Wildlife Habitat and Forest Management
- Guide to Herbicide Application Windows During a Southern Pine Rotation to Improve Productivity
- Hardwood Forest Management for Health and Productivity
- Herbaceous Forest Vegetation Management
- Integrative Forest Management for Wildlife and Forest Health
- Managing Forests for Wildlife and Forest Health
- Pine Straw Management in the Southeastern U.S.
- Risk Assessments for Non-Native Species
- General Forest Health
- Spongy Moth
- Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
- Japanese Climbing Fern
- Japanese Stiltgrass
- Johnson Grass
- Laurel Wilt
- Oak Decline
- Oak Wilt
- Pine Needle Diseases
- Prescribed fire
- Southern Pine Beetle
- Southern Pine Decline
- Spotted Lanternfly
- Thousand Cankers Disease
- Forest Economics
- Tree of Heaven
- Urban Forests
- Weather and Climate
Webinar
search:This webinar will cover the identification, biology, and management of oak wilt, with emphasis on the southeastern U.S.
This webinar will discuss the identification, biology, and management of cogongrass in the southeastern U.S.
This webinar will cover biology, ecology, and management of the emerald ash borer, an invasive tree pest now present throughout much of the eastern U.S. This webinar is jointly sponsored by the SREF Forest Health and Invasive Species Program and Emerald Ash Borer University.
This webinar will address the current state of knowledge on gypsy moth biology and management, with a particular emphasis on the insect's potential impact in southern forest systems.
This webinar will cover methodology for invasive species surveying, the development of management priorities, and the development of control methodologies based on the biology and ecology of Chinese tallow and the current forest condition. In addition, results of integrated methods combining mastication, herbicide, and fire for the control of Chinese tallow and the response of the native plant community to these treatments will be reviewed.
This webinar will discuss biology, ecology, and management of laurel wilt, a disease caused by the fungus Raffaelea lauricola) and disseminated by the redbay ambrosia beetle (Xyleborus glabratus).