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How to Plan a Menu for a Crab Spider

July 5, 2016
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Dear Crab Spider, Please don't eat the pollinators. You may help yourself to a mosquito, a crane fly, a lygus bug, an aphid, and a katydid, not necessarily in that order. And more than one if you like.
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Livestock & Range: Article

Pajaro Compass Now Has Website!

July 5, 2016
By Devii R Rao
The Pajaro Compass Network was launched on June 23 at the Hollister Veterans Memorial Building. The Network is a group of agencies, non-profit organizations, and landowners who are interested in working together to enhance voluntary conservation throughout the Pajaro River watershed.
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UC Weed Science (weed control, management, ecology, and minutia): Article

New trial for control of waterhyacinth

July 5, 2016
By Guy Kyser
In June 2016 the Madsen team revisited the site of our 2015 surfactant study to establish a more extensive test of aquatic herbicides for controlling waterhyacinth in the Delta.
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Happy Independence Day!

July 4, 2016
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Today we celebrate the Fourth of July, also known as Independence Day. History books tell us that on July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence, declaring the 13 colonies a new nation and no longer part of the British Empire.
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What's Better than Sighting a Bumble Bee?

July 1, 2016
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
What's better than sighting a yellow-faced bumble bee, Bombus vosnesenskii? Well, a newly emerged Bombus vosnesenskii queen. On the last day of June, we spotted this fresh queen-looking foraging on our blanket flower (Gaillardia).
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UC Weed Science (weed control, management, ecology, and minutia): Article

Collaring an invasive

July 1, 2016
By Guy Kyser
This is the time of year when small islands of waterhyacinth break loose from their parent mats, seeking new marinas to clog up. The Madsen team is embedding radio dog collars into freefloating mats to track their movements with the currents, tides, and wind.
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