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National news
release

News story about TEAM
Leafy Spurge (Nov. 2001)
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TEAM Leafy Spurge Receives Top ARS Tech
Transfer Award By
Linda McElreath
February 12, 2003
BELTSVILLE, Md., Feb. 12Spreading the word about
ways to combat noxious weeds has garnered
The Ecological Areawide Management
(TEAM) of Leafy Spurge a top technology transfer award from the
Agricultural Research Service. The
programs members include ecologist Gerald Anderson, ecologist Chad
Prosser, technical information specialist Bethany Redlin, information aide Jill
Miller and entomologist Robert Richard.
ARS, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency, will honor TEAM Leafy
Spurge and other award-winners today during a 1 p.m. ceremony at the
agencys headquarters in Beltsville. This event provides a venue for
our agency to honor researchers whove gone the extra mile in moving
promising new technologies from the laboratory to the marketplace, said
Edward B. Knipling, ARS Acting Administrator.
Anderson, Redlin and Miller are based at ARS
Northern Plains Agricultural Research
Laboratory (NPARL) in Sidney, Mont. Prosser, formerly with NPARL, now works
at Theodore Roosevelt National Park in
Medora, N.D., and Richard works for USDAs Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) in Fort
Collins, Colo. During todays ceremony, Knipling will present Anderson,
the TEAM representative, a gold plaque and cash award for Outstanding
Technology Transfer.
The Montana-based leafy spurge program was formed in 1997 to
develop, and disseminate information about, integrated pest management
strategies to combat leafy spurge, an exotic invasive species that infests at
least 5 million acres in the United States and Canada. In the Dakotas, Montana
and Wyoming alone, leafy spurge infestations cost about $144 million annually
in production losses and control expenses. It crowds out native vegetation and
threatens biodiversity, and the herbicides most commonly used against it can
have adverse environmental consequences.
Funded by ARS and managed cooperatively with APHIS, TEAM Leafy
Spurge has developed effective and affordable management strategies to control
the weed during the past six years. Strategies theyve researched include
using biological control insects, naturally occurring plant pathogens and
various grazing techniques.
TEAM Leafy Spurge has been extraordinarily successful in
accomplishing its mission, said Knipling. Members have distributed more
than 48 million biological control flea beetles and produced more than 20
informational products, including brochures, CD-ROMs, manuals, newspaper
articles and a documentary.
These informational products have reached a huge audience and
educated ranchers and land managers throughout North America about how to deal
with leafy spurge infestations. TEAM officials have traveled an estimated
250,000 miles to give more than 100 presentations, and theyve distributed
close to 45,000 biological control manuals. Their documentary, Purging
Spurge: Corralling an Ecological Bandit, was televised in June 2002 and
helped reach an even wider audience. TEAM members have partnered extensively
with other federal, state and local agencies and institutions, and have
extensively informed the public of the dangers of invasive species.
Some participants whove used tools developed by TEAM Leafy
Spurge have had great success in controlling spurge infestations. In fact,
researchers believe that if the same integrated management plans are carried
out over larger areas, leafy spurge could be reduced to an incidental weed.
For more information about TEAM Leafy Spurge, visit
http://www.team.ars.usda.gov.
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