California Horticultural Invasives Prevention (Cal-HIP) seeks to halt the introduction of invasive plants that can damage local ecosystems and are expensive to control or remove once they become established. Cal-HIP members are devising methods to avoid producing, selling or promoting potentially invasive plants.
The members have invited the state’s horticulture industry to join them in a new PlantRight program. Cal-HIP has identified problem plants and non-invasive alternatives that will thrive in each region of
Invasive species are a leading threat to biodiversity, second only to habitat destruction. Nationally, more than $35 billion is spent annually in eradication efforts and economic losses. In
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For more: Terri Kempton, Sustainable Conservation,