U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service eradicates yellow crazy ants from seabird wildlife refuge
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this photo provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, yellow crazy ants are seen in a bait testing efficacy trial at the Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge in December, 2015. An invasive species known as the yellow crazy ant has been eradicated from the remote U.S. atoll in the Pacific. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Wednesday, June 23, 2021, that the ants have been successfully removed from the refuge.
COURTESY PACIFIC REMOTE ISLANDS MARINE NATIONAL MONUMENT
Above, conservation detection dog Guinness, led by Michelle Reynolds, sniffs for the scent of yellow crazy ants along brush near the shoreline at Johnston Atoll.
COURTESY USFWS / JUNE 2013
Volunteer Margeaux Wayne sprays bait with insecticide as part of yellow crazy ants eradication efforts at Johnston Atoll.
COURTESY PACIFIC REMOTE ISLANDS MARINE NATIONAL MONUMENT
The yellow crazy ant species has been eradicated at the Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, where it affected numerous seabirds. Above, seabirds perched themselves on an old dock along the East Island of Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge on May 27.
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