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According to the EPA, diquat “rapidly adheres to soil particles,” which makes it unlikely to leach into drinking water.
People should be asking questions. This process was set up to give people that opportunity,” Charamut said. “But get your ...
Connecticut is among several states that uses the herbicide Diquat to combat hydrilla, an invasive plant species that grows ...
An ominous warning about the world's most invasive aquatic plant was given after Michigan plunged manpower, money, and more ...
Environmental advocates are raising concerns over the state’s plan to use a controversial herbicide to combat the spread of ...
An herbicide used to treat hydrilla, an invasive plant in Connecticut lakes, ponds and rivers, has recently been the target ...
A noxious aquatic weed has been identified as a suspect in the deaths of one of America’s most iconic symbols of freedom, the bald eagle. The suspected culprit, hydrilla verticillata — or as ...
Lake Mishnock is a hidden gem in West Greenwich. But if you look closely you'll find a dangerous opponent that's capable of ...
The hydrilla found in DuPage may have been unintentionally released from a homeowner’s aquarium or a water garden, IDNR reported. Hydrilla can grow up to an inch per day and form dense mats of ...
Hydrilla and the aquarium hobby. Bailin Shaw, president of the Chicago Aquatic Plant Society, visits family and friends in the South often, where he’s seen ponds and lakes overtaken by hydrilla.