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    Corps Tiny Weapon Winning the Bio Control Battle [Image 10 of 35]

    Corps Tiny Weapon Winning the Bio Control Battle

    PALATKA, FL, UNITED STATES

    04.30.2019

    Photo by Brigida Sanchez 

    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mark Haltiwanger, small craft operator, Chelsea Bohaty, invasive species management biologist, and Will Goodhart, heavy equipment operator collect dozens of tiny alligator flea beetles in nets. The beetles feed on the invasive aquatic alligator weed found in Lake Woodruff, on the Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge, in Deland, Florida. The alligator weed has invaded many water systems in the South and is slowly working its way westward. The alligator flea beetle is one of the methods that the Corps uses to control the invasive alligator weed. The noxious weeds blocks transportation routes threatens native species and reduce water capacity in our reservoirs. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Invasive Management Species Branch is committed to providing technical support for the control of invasive species in our national and regional ecosystem restoration program.

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    IMAGE INFO

    Date Taken: 04.30.2019
    Date Posted: 07.23.2019 17:41
    Photo ID: 5601466
    VIRIN: 190430-A-AZ289-3289
    Resolution: 1500x1000
    Size: 1.48 MB
    Location: PALATKA, FL, US
    Hometown: DELAND, FL, US
    Hometown: JACKSONVILLE, FL, US

    Web Views: 62
    Downloads: 11

    PUBLIC DOMAIN