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Keeping Food Safe from Farm to Table

February 03, 2021 Faith Peppers, NIFA and Ben Chapman

During these challenging times, it's especially important to know that we have a safe and strong food supply. Here's what scientists and Cooperative Extension experts at North Carolina State University are doing to help.

Food and Nutrition Health and Safety

When Snow Becomes Deadly: How to Survive an Avalanche

February 02, 2021 Andrew Avitt, USDA Forest Service Office of Communications

Every year roughly 100,000 avalanches sweep down mountains across the U.S., damaging everything in their path and killing 28 people on average.

Forestry

ReFED Launches Insights Engine with Implications for Food Waste: An Interview with Dana Gunders

February 02, 2021 Jean Buzby, USDA Food Loss and Waste Liaison

ReFED is a national nonprofit working to advance data-driven solutions to reduce food loss and waste throughout the U.S. food system. ReFED is also a private-sector partner with USDA, EPA, and FDA’s interagency initiative to reduce food loss and waste. The organization has launched a Roadmap to 2030...

Food and Nutrition Health and Safety

Your Winning Game Plan for Super Bowl Sunday Food

February 02, 2021 Laura Scott, USDA-FSIS Public Affairs Specialist

Every coach has a winning game plan. What’s your plan for your Super Bowl eats? Strategizing now can help prevent foodborne illness in your household and reduce food waste later.

Health and Safety

Who Will Win? #TeamChickenWing or #TeamPorkRib

February 01, 2021 Michael Sheats, AMS Livestock and Poultry Program and Lillie Zeng, AMS Public Affairs

Sitting down for the Super Bowl on Feb. 7 might look a little different this year, but one thing remains the same: you need the perfect game day protein to fuel up for the Big Game. America has spoken and it’s down to chicken wing or pork rib - which team will you be on?

Food and Nutrition

Family Farms Continue to Power U.S. Agriculture

January 27, 2021 Tony Dorn, Environmental, Economics, and Demographics Branch Chief, National Agricultural Statistics Service

What do you think of when you hear the phrase family-owned business? You may not immediately think of the family farm, but they are just as important to our economy and communities. In fact, family farms account for 96% of all U.S. farms, according to the 2017 Census of Agriculture Farm Typology...

Research and Science

Coho Salmon Thrive in More Established ‘Neighborhoods’

January 27, 2021 Diane Banegas, Forest Service Research and Development

For decades, federal, state, and nonprofit organizations have focused on restoring habitat for the iconic Northwestern coho salmon, a species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

Forestry

Fine-Tuned Partnerships Rev Up Trail Recovery

January 21, 2021 Zheer Saeed, Resource Assistant, Forest Service Recreation, Heritage, and Volunteer Resources

Each year, severe wildfires ravage forests across the country, damaging ecosystems, infrastructure and recreation facilities, which are often in need of repair before they can be safely reopened. The 2018 Mendocino Complex Fire--one of the worst in California’s history--devastated more than 459,000...

Forestry

NIFA-Supported Research Innovates to Reduce Food Loss and Waste: An Interview with Robert Nowierski

January 12, 2021 Jean Buzby, USDA Food Loss and Waste Liaison

The National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) is USDA’s extramural science-funding agency within USDA’s Research, Education, and Economics mission area. What is NIFA doing to help reduce food loss and waste? This interview features insights from Robert Nowierski, NIFA, National Program...

Food and Nutrition Health and Safety

Conservation Program Benefits an Iconic Bird of the Southern Great Plains

January 06, 2021 Bob Sowers, Natural Resources Conservation Service

The lesser prairie-chicken and its habitat are making a comeback thanks to a USDA conservation program. The ground-dwelling bird was once abundant in the southern Great Plains, living in parts of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas. But over the past 150 years due to human migration...

Conservation

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