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70 Years in the Last Frontier

February 16, 2018 Molly Voeller and Brad Fisher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

From protecting people and their communities to growing food in high tunnels to restoring streams for salmon to protecting precious soils, the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has been investing in Alaska’s working lands for 70 years. The NRCS’s commitment to agriculture in...

Conservation

How the Military Helps Protect Natural Landscapes

February 16, 2018 Jarrett Caston, State and Private Forestry Program, USDA Forest Service

Home to the premier restricted military airspace for unmanned aircraft system training in the western U.S., Army base Fort Huachuca supports training for personnel from the Air Force, Marine Corps, and U.S. Border Patrol. But it also serves as an example of successful mixed-use wildlands...

Forestry

USDA Agencies Band Together to Assist Producers Impacted by 2017 Hurricanes

February 14, 2018 Cassie Bable and Lauren Moore, FSA Public Affairs Specialists

Just as families, friends and communities came together to respond to damages that occurred during the hurricanes of 2017, so did government agencies.

Disaster

Student Diversity Program Winners are Honored Guests at this Year’s Ag Outlook Forum

February 13, 2018 Susan Carter, Chief Communications Officer, Office of the Chief Economist and Agricultural Outlook Forum Manager

The next generation of agricultural leaders get to rub elbows with today’s ag decisionmakers at the 2018 Agricultural Outlook Forum (AOF) later this month. Twenty undergraduate juniors and seniors and 10 graduate students have been selected as winners of the 2018 Student Diversity Program. These...

Initiatives

Good Forest Management Yields Wildlife Oasis

February 08, 2018 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

For Mike and Laura Jackson, many mornings begin with hot tea and birds. This particular morning, they spotted a mourning dove, a pileated woodpecker and many others. And the retired science teachers in Bedford County, Pennsylvania jot down the types and numbers of birds they see each day.

Conservation

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Barbara Rater

February 07, 2018 Sarah Campbell, Stakeholder Engagement Specialist, Farm Service Agency

Every month, USDA shares the story of a woman in agriculture who is leading the industry and helping other women succeed along the way. This month, we hear from Barbara Rater from the National Agricultural Statistics Service. This month we’re focusing on the Census of Agriculture, which has been...

Initiatives

USDA Programs Empower Arkansas Farmer

February 06, 2018 Cheryl Brooks, Farm Loan Officer, Cross County, Arkansas & Dana Rogge, Public Affairs Specialist

From the time Brittany Caskey was a toddler, she lived her life in the dirt and on tractors, learning from an early age the kind of work it takes to make things grow. In the small community of Hunter, in Woodruff County Arkansas, Caskey grew up with a dream of becoming a farmer. In 2017, the 26-year...

Farming

Traveling to South Korea for the Olympics? Bring Back Great Memories, Not a Pest or Disease

February 06, 2018 Joelle Hayden, APHIS Public Affairs

The Winter Olympics begin shortly in South Korea, bringing us two weeks of incredible athletic performances. While many of us will watch the games from our TVs, computers or phones, some lucky individuals will travel to witness the games in person. And when traveling, people often bring back items...

Animals

USDA Charts Course for Strengthening World Aquaculture

February 06, 2018 Jan Suszkiw, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

Charting a course ahead for the conservation and sustainable farming of freshwater and marine species is a chief focus of the first State of the World’s Aquatic Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, a Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report that will contain subsections from 89...

Research and Science

New Tool Helps California Land Managers Predict Tree Mortality

February 05, 2018 Alison Feliciano, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

From 2006 through 2016, more than 100 million trees died in California due to the combined impacts of drought and bark beetles. Although tree mortality is part of a natural life cycle, at a massive level it can lead to adverse economic and social effects. So many dead and dying trees increase the...

Forestry

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