agInnovation Research Center | Entomology
UOG Land Grant research and extension entomologists are engaged in research with practical applications in controlling invasive species and pest management using integrated control methods.
In recent years, UOG agInnovation entomologists have been actively working on the control of several introduced invasive insects that have the potential to radically alter the island’s terrestrial ecosystems: coconut rhinoceros beetle, little fire ant, Asian cycad scale, and cycad blue butterfly.
Content to come!
Title | Publisher | Date |
---|---|---|
Pollen DNA sampling reveals the preferred food sources of Guam honeybees | National Land Grant Impacts Database | 2023 |
Forest Insect & Disease Leaflet: Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle | U.S. Forest Service | April 2023 |
The coconut rhinoceros beetle problem on Guam: Past, present, and future | ||
Baiting litte fire ants with peanut butter | WPTRC Impact Report | 2017 |
A new coconut rhinoceros beetle biotype threatens coconut and oil palms in Southeast Asia and the Pacific | July 2016 |
Ross Miller, Ph.D.
Dean’s Circle, House 35
Phone: (671) 735-2068
Email: millerr@triton.uog.edu