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Showing: 921 - 930 of 8103 Results

No Need to Watch Grass Grow Anymore!

August 14, 2019 Mina Chung, Writer, USDA Agricultural Research Service

Each spring, ranchers face the same challenge of trying to guess how much grass will be available for their livestock to graze during the summer. Ranchers make this determination relying on boots-on-the-ground observations of rangeland conditions. But now in the Northern Great Plains, ranchers have...

Research and Science

Use an Insulated Lunch Bag to Keep Meals Safe

August 13, 2019 Nirav Shah, MBA, MPH, Public Affairs Specialist, FSIS

No matter your age, the end of summer is also a time of beginnings. This means a new school year, new episodes of your favorite TV show and the start of football season.

Health and Safety

2017 Missouri Census of Agriculture: Show Me the Numbers

August 13, 2019 Bob Garino, Missouri State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

For anyone who wants to see the facts about Missouri agriculture, the 2017 Census of Agriculture is the place to look, with more than 60,000 facts covering every aspect of Missouri agriculture at the state and county levels.

Research and Science

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

Science Simulations Support Salmon, Other Species

August 09, 2019 Diane Banegas, USDA Forest Service

How do river ecosystems support fish? How do environmental changes influence the system’s capacity to support fish? And how might different restoration strategies influence fish? These are questions J. Ryan Bellmore, a research fish biologist who works in Juneau, Alaska, for the USDA Forest Service...

Forestry Research and Science

Purple Corn Offers Benefits Inside and Out

August 01, 2019 Korryn Shaw, Communications Staff Intern, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Purple corn is more than tasty and eye-catching. Scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have discovered a game-changing element of purple corn – it may help reduce the risk of major health diseases.

Research and Science

Multiagency Effort Goes Deep Inside a Fire

July 29, 2019 Gail Keirn, Rocky Mountain Research Station-Fort Collins, CO; Matt Burks, Pacific Northwest Research Station-Corvallis, OR and John Zapell, Fishlake National Forest-Richfield, UT

Forest fires often reach or exceed temperatures of 2,000° Fahrenheit—that’s equivalent to one-fifth the temperature of the surface of the sun. What is the impact of such high temperatures on the soil and plants of our forests? And how do the intensity and heat of a wildfire impact its behavior...

Forestry

Corn is America’s Largest Crop in 2019

July 29, 2019 Tom Capehart and Susan Proper, Economic Research Service

Despite an unusually wet spring followed by an unusually cool June, America’s corn farmers planted even more than they did last year. U.S. farmers have planted 91.7 million acres of corn in 2019, according to the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). That’s about 69 million football...

Research and Science

Agriculture is No.1 in South Dakota

July 26, 2019 Erik Gerlach, South Dakota State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

Every summer, families across the country turn their thoughts to vacation. Many will travel to South Dakota. Each year, approximately 3 million tourists from all over the world visit Mount Rushmore to experience the patriotic site. Millions more will enjoy the stunning views of Badlands National...

Research and Science

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