skip banner Southern Forest Resource Assessment    Final Report: Technical


Search this site:

 

Home > Final Report > HLTH-2   

Previous PageNext Page

Problems Caused by Invasive Nonnative Pests

As global trade and travel increases, so do the risks that nonnative forest pests will be introduced into the United States. They are often moved unintentionally as riders on plants, animals, personal property, or packing materials.


Nonnative insects and diseases have permanently changed southern forest ecosystems, and efforts to control them have cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Once established, populations of some imported insects and disease-causing organisms have quickly increased because natural control agents present in their native habitat were absent or ineffective in the new habitat. As a result, exotic pests have changed, and will continue to change, entire ecosystems by displacing native flora and fauna.


Previous PageNext Page

Glossary | Sci.Names | Process | Comments | Draft Report

 

content: James Denny Ward and Paul A. Mistretta
webmaster: John M. Pye

created: 4-OCT-2002
modified: 15-Mar-2007