Skip to main content
Skip to main content

USDA Blog


Showing: 1 - 10 of 10 Results
Applied Filters

A Consequence of Our Citizenship

November 08, 2019 USDA

It can be challenging for veterans to find their voice this time of year. That’s understandable. Within an extraordinary community who once wore, or continues to wear the uniform of our country, and their families who stand strong at home, Veterans Day opens a personal window that profoundly touches...

Initiatives

USDA Southeast Climate Hub Workshop Discusses Salinization Impacts: What is Known and What is Not Known to Address Them

November 07, 2019 Nancy Gibson (Southeast Climate Hub), Steve McNulty (Southeast Climate Hub), and Michael Gavazzi (Southeast Climate Hub)

Trees and crops are experiencing stress, productivity loss and even death in coastal areas due to saltwater intrusion and salinization. For example, Somerset County, Maryland has been losing farmland to salt marsh migration at a rate of 100 acres per year over the last 10 years, and that amount is...

Climate

Partnering to Deliver Drought Information through USDA Service Centers: A New Fact Sheet Outlines Drought-Related Recovery Programs

November 01, 2019 Mark Brusberg (USDA-Office of the Chief Economist), Brenda Carlson (USDA-Farm Service Agency), Brian Fuchs (National Drought Mitigation Center), Rachel Steele (USDA-Office of the Chief Economist), Ariela Zycherman (USDA-Office of the Chief Economist)

When dealing with drought, producers can feel overwhelmed and unsure of where to get help to recover from their losses, mitigate risk, and/or prepare for future events. To support the agricultural community in locating the information they need, USDA in partnership with the National Drought...

Climate

The Psychology of Food Waste: An Interview with Brian Roe and Laura Moreno

September 09, 2019 Jimmy Nguyen, Program Analyst, USDA Food and Nutrition Service

What’s the psychology behind food waste and what can we do to change our behavior? This interview features insights from Brian Roe, Professor and Faculty Lead at The Ohio State University’s Food Waste Collaborative and Laura Moreno, who received her Ph.D. studying food waste at the University of...

Initiatives

Potential Future Increases in Intense Precipitation Events and Implications for Agriculture

August 30, 2019 Sanjeev Joshi, David Brown, Jurgen Garbrecht, and Phil Busteed, USDA-ARS Grazinglands Research Laboratory and Southern Plains Climate Hub

Intense precipitation is a mixed blessing for agricultural producers. Depending on its timing, severity, and the antecedent environmental conditions, it can bring much needed relief from droughts and strengthen crop and livestock productivity, or it can exacerbate flooding on already saturated...

Climate

From Internship to Public Service Career: A HACU Success Story

August 12, 2019 Elizabeth Yepes, International Trade Specialist at USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service and Chair, USDA’s Hispanic American Cultural Effort (HACE)

I never thought I could ever work in the U.S. government. One day, when I was applying for my U.S. citizenship at a local Hispanic nonprofit organization in Washington, D.C., I saw a flyer about the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities’ (HACU) National Internship Program (HNIP). This...

Initiatives

Transforming Debris into Treasure: The Long Road of Wood Product Development after Hurricane Maria

August 09, 2019 William A. Gould, Eva Holupchinski, Javier Rosario and Josh Fain, USDA Caribbean Climate Hub and the USDA Forest Service International Institute of Tropical Forestry

Extreme climate events can be devastating. However, some of their effects can be transformed into opportunities.

Forestry Climate

Drought In The World’s Largest Temperate Rainforest?

July 17, 2019 Aurora Cutler and Erik Johnson, Office of Sustainability and Climate, USDA Forest Service

Extreme drought in a rainforest might seem like an oxymoron, but it isn’t. Since early 2018, the southern portion of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest, the largest intact temperate rainforest in the world, has experienced moderate to extreme drought. This has wide-ranging consequences on drinking...

Forestry Initiatives

Nation’s Wettest 12-Month Period on Record Slows Down 2019 Planting Season

June 14, 2019 USDA Meteorologist Brad Rippey

The contiguous United States recently completed its wettest May to April period on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NOAA/NCEI). From May 2018 to April 2019, an average of 36.20 inches of precipitation fell...

Climate Farming

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Sandra “Sandy” Watts

March 20, 2019 Tomasina Brown, Special Assistant, USDA Office of Communications

USDA is proud to share stories of women in agriculture who are leading the industry and helping other women succeed along the way. In this blog, we feature Sandra “Sandy” Watts, USDA Forest Service Region 3 Deputy Regional Forester in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Initiatives