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Personalize Your Plate for National Nutrition Month

March 01, 2021 Nutrition.gov Staff, National Agricultural Library

Happy National Nutrition Month®! No matter what your age or life stage, Nutrition.gov has resources to help you personalize your plate with healthy choices. Build a healthy diet that meets your unique needs and preferences with these three tips:

Research and Science

Agriculture in America: Deeply Rooted in Black Culture

February 25, 2021 Chavonda Jacobs-Young, Acting Under Secretary, Research, Education, and Economics

The story of agriculture in America cannot be told without acknowledging the contributions of Black people. Black people have been and are an integral driver in the success of U.S. agriculture. From farming and cultivation to scientific research, the agriculture narrative is fortified by the many...

Equity Research and Science

Estimating Ecosystem Benefits from Rangeland Conservation Practices

February 24, 2021 Loretta Metz, National CEAP-Grazing Lands Component Leader, NRCS

Nature provides numerous benefits that people value. In the conservation world, we call these benefits ecosystem services. On rangelands, some ecosystem services can be bought and sold in traditional market systems – like forages, meat, and other animal products from livestock. Other ecosystem...

Conservation

Preparing for the 2022 Census of Agriculture

February 24, 2021 Adam Cline, Supervisory Statistician, NASS Census & Survey Division

Preparation for a large survey does not happen overnight, in a few weeks, or even a year. When it comes to USDA’s flagship data collection effort, the Census of Agriculture, this is especially true. USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) started preparing for the 2022 Census of...

Research and Science

Celebrating the Agricultural Impacts of 1890 Land-Grant Universities

February 23, 2021 Faith Peppers, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Communications Director

USDA has a long history of investing in and supporting our nation’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The 19 HBCUs established under the Second Morrill Act of 1890, along with the two HBCU land-grant universities established in the original 1862 legislation – University of the...

Equity Research and Science

Black History Month 2021: Agriculture, Family and the Land

February 23, 2021 Langston Hull, Scientific Technical Director, APHIS’ International Services Program

Every February, the APHIS community celebrates Black History Month and honors the many and varied contributions of African Americans to U.S. history. This year’s Black History Month theme is “The Black Family: Representation, Identity, and Diversity.” This feature, a personal narrative by APHIS...

Animals Equity

Spread the Word, Not the Weeds

February 22, 2021 Matt Burks, USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station

Deceptively delicate and fragile in appearance, the Eurasian watermilfoil forms thick mats in shallow areas of a lake, quickly growing and spreading to block sunlight, killing off native aquatic plants that fish and other underwater species rely on for food and shelter.

Forestry

Jumpstart Your Heart with a “Daly” Dose of Healthy Foods

February 16, 2021 Justice Wright, Deputy Communications Director, Research, Education, and Economics Mission Area

Every 36 seconds, a person dies from heart disease in the United States. Heart disease is the leading cause of the death in America, and in 2017, Black Americans were 20 percent more likely to die from heart disease than non-Hispanic whites. Several medical conditions and lifestyle choices...

Research and Science

Black History Month - Celebrating Black American Achievements Past and Present

February 12, 2021 Kristina Nelson, USDA Public Affairs Specialist

February is Black History Month, a time to recognize and celebrate the hard-fought achievements, sacrifices, and contributions made by Black Americans to every aspect of our country’s diverse cultural heritage, and particularly to the agricultural industry. It’s also a time for us to honor the Black...

Equity Initiatives

Black History: Our Living History

February 12, 2021 Michael Watts, Director of the Office of Civil Rights, USDA Forest Service

On the cold January night following her swearing in earlier in the day as the first woman vice president of the United States, Kamala D. Harris and First Gentleman Doug Emhoff stood before the Lincoln Memorial. The stoic face of Lincoln looked eastward, past some of the signposts of our history in...

Equity Initiatives

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