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U.S. Forest Service Study Finds Climate Change to Affect Future Western Trout

September 28, 2011 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

A study authored by the U.S. Forest Service and other organizations including Trout Unlimited finds that global warming is expected to reduce the distribution of trout in the western U.S. because warmer streams will be less suitable for their growth and survival.

Conservation Forestry

Making Rabies History – World Rabies Day, September 28

September 28, 2011 Gail Keirn, APHIS Public Affairs, Fort Collins, CO

Today is World Rabies Day. Scientists, public health professionals, veterinarians, wildlife biologists, and others from around the globe will celebrate World Rabies Day by raising awareness about efforts to rid the world of rabies. Rabies is one of the oldest known diseases, yet it remains a...

Conservation Animals Plants

Cooperative Restoration Project Benefits Salmon, Water Quality

September 28, 2011 Virginia Gibbons, Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, US Forest Service

Annual construction efforts on a multi-year restoration project to improve water quality and create high-quality fish habitat is currently in progress on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest in Oregon.

Conservation Forestry

Listening Session Gives the Floor to Organic Community

September 21, 2011 Miles McEvoy, Director of National Organic Program

The Department of Agriculture (USDA) was all ears on Tuesday as it opened up its hall to organic stakeholders to ask the question, “What activities should the Department focus on to serve the organic community?” Many took the opportunity to respond. During a day-long listening session hosted by USDA...

Conservation

Industry Insight: Checkoff Programs Empower Business

September 21, 2011 David R. Shipman, Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service

When it comes to expanding market share, increasing revenue and getting the word out about a great product or commodity, checkoff programs prove that there’s strength in numbers. Officially called research and promotion programs, checkoff programs give agricultural producers, importers and other...

Conservation Research and Science

US Forest Service Symbol Woodsy Owl Turns 40

September 16, 2011 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Did you know that Woodsy Owl has been giving a hoot for 40 years? This week, the furry and big-eyed environmental and antipollution steward marks 40 years of being a U.S. Forest Service symbol.

Conservation Forestry

NRCS Works with Partners to Help Endangered Dusky Gopher Frog

September 16, 2011 Julie Grogan-Brown, NRCS Office of the Chief

Recently I got an intimate tour of a longleaf pine forest, a rapidly vanishing Southeastern ecosystem that is home to one-of-a-kind wildlife. Longleaf pines once dominated the landscape of coastal Mississippi, but deforestation and urbanization have decreased both these forests and the unique plants...

Conservation Forestry Animals Plants

Forest Service Waives Fees for National Public Lands Day, Sept. 24

September 16, 2011 Deidra L. McGee, Public Affairs Account Manager, USDA Forest Service Office of Communication

Just one day after the start of autumn, the Forest Service is waiving fees at hundreds of recreation sites across the country on Saturday, Sept. 24 in recognition of Public Lands Day.

Conservation Forestry Initiatives

Restoring Wetlands and Protecting History at the Same Time

September 15, 2011 Pat Hoeffken, NRCS Arkansas

A USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) project designed to alleviate crop losses from flooding and restore wetlands along the Arkansas and Petit Jean Rivers is also protecting a significant archeological site in Yell County, Arkansas.

Initiatives Conservation

NRCS Helps Renovate the Landscape at Nicollet Tower and Interpretive Center Area

September 14, 2011 Kent Duerre and Colette Kessler, NRCS South Dakota

South Dakota is in the middle of the Great Plains, a vast prairie ecosystem stretching across much of North America that two hundred years ago was covered in native grasses and wildflowers. Today, visitors can get a glimpse of the prairie of the past, with the help of NRCS ’ Conservation Technical...

Conservation