Presentations now available from 2018 AIS Research and Management Showcase
Presentations
Assigning watercraft inspection stations to Minnesota lakes: An operations research approach (Robert Haight)
Comparison of hybrid and parental watermilfoil growth and phenology in Minnesota (Wes Glisson and Dan Larkin)
Engineering the carp genome: A new paradigm for the control of invasive species (Sam Erickson)
Estimating AIS risk for Minnesota lakes (Nick Phelps)
Honing management by hoarding datasheets (Mike Verhoeven)
Invasive Phragmites pushback: Is eradication possible? (Julia Bohnen and Sue Galatowitsch)
New common carp management techniques: Selective toxins and Whooshh (Peter Hundt and Przemek Bajer)
New findings on new invaders: The latest on starry stonewort spread and hybrid watermilfoil behavior (Dan Larkin and Wes Glisson)
Public participation in aquatic invasive species solutions (Megan Weber)
Public values of aquatic invasive species management (Lucy Levers and Amit Pradhananga)
Spiny waterflea fouling fishing gear (Valerie Brady and Donn Branstrator)
Viruses! Silver bullet for common carp in Minnesota lakes? (Soumesh Kumar Padhi and Sunil Kumar Mor)
You are what you eat: Beginning to understand how AIS disrupt sport fisheries (Gretchen Hansen)
Zebra mussel veliger transport and survival via residual water and recreational watercraft (Adam Doll)
Posters
A computational model provides a way to stop invasive carp at Minnesota Lock and Dams (Anvar Gilmanov)
Eurasian and Hybrid watermilfoil genotype distribution in the Minnesota metro (Jasmine Eltawely)
How long has it been in the lake? Sediment reveals invasion history of spiny waterflea (Nicki DeWeese)
New phenology insights: A year in the life of starry stonewort (Carli Wagner)
Testing the efficacy of algaecides for starry stonewort control (Rafael Contreras-Rangel)
What's in your bucket? Quantifying AIS introduction risk from baitfish (Margaret McEachran)
Winter, water, and herbicide: A retrospective analysis of factors driving curlyleaf pondweed dynamics in sixty Minnesota lakes (Mike Verhoeven)