Interior says five-year invasive-species strategy is producing nationwide results
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Summary
The Department of the Interior released a report highlighting outcomes from its five-year invasive species strategy, citing tougher prevention at borders and recreation sites, new detection tools like drones and environmental DNA, and claiming hundreds of thousands of acres have been brought under control.
The Department of the Interior released a report this week saying its five-year invasive species strategy, developed under the first Trump administration, is delivering measurable results nationwide.
The department highlighted stronger prevention measures at borders and recreation sites, use of detection technologies including drones and environmental DNA, and reported that "hundreds of thousands of acres" of invasive plants have been brought under control through the strategic plan.
The broadcast did not provide the report text or an exact acreage figure; it summarized the report27s findings without quoting scientists, regional land managers, or third-party evaluations. The department27s segment credited the multi-year strategy for these outcomes but did not specify which species or which regions account for the acreage cited.
For details on methods, species targeted, and regional outcomes, the department27s published report and supporting data should be consulted; the program segment provided a summary statement of results rather than detailed evidence.

