Skip to main content
Skip to main content

USDA Blog


Showing: 801 - 810 of 8109 Results

Hawaii’s Crown Jewels of U.S. Agriculture

April 07, 2020 Shawn Clark, Hawaii State Statistician, USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service

Without a doubt, Hawaii is an influencer’s paradise when it comes to spurring creativity for storytellers, brands, and entertainment on social media platforms of all kinds. But are these “influencers in the wild” missing out on the crowning jewel of U.S. agriculture? Maybe not, but there is a...

Research and Science

USDA Wildlife Services Highlights Wildlife Damage Management Tools

April 03, 2020 Gail Keirn, APHIS Legislative and Public Affairs

Invasive rodents on islands, predators eating livestock, vultures pecking at property, birds colliding with airplanes. Wildlife damage can take many forms. As such, wildlife managers need a variety of tools to help reduce damage.

Animals Technology

Rural Distance Learning Gets a Tech Boost in Oklahoma and Texas

April 02, 2020 Chad Rupe, Administrator, Rural Utilities Services

Hilliary Communications, which serves parts of Oklahoma and Texas, has reinforced its commitment to its customers and communities with a series of upgrades in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak. This is especially important since students across the state will begin distance learning on April 6 as...

Broadband Rural

Rural Development Project Uses 3D Printing in Fight against COVID-19 Spread

April 01, 2020 Hilda Legg, Kentucky Rural Development State Director

As Kentucky does its best to battle the spread of COVID-19, state officials and medical providers have been looking for ways to answer the increasing need for medical personal protective equipment. One of those responding in a big way here in Kentucky is a somewhat unlikely source: Somerset...

Coronavirus Rural Technology

Going Outdoors While Social Distancing

March 31, 2020 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

The idiom ‘be careful what you wish for’ is likely coming to roost for those of us who love to show off 193 million acres of national forests and grasslands.

Coronavirus Forestry Recreation

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Helen Chipman, PhD, RDN

March 31, 2020 Kellie Burdette, Senior Communications Manager, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

In celebration of Women’s History Month, USDA is featuring Dr. Helen Chipman of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). Dr. Chipman serves as Acting Division Director for Nutrition and Food Safety, and National Program Leader, Food and Nutrition Education.

Research and Science

G20 Meeting of Agriculture Chief Scientists Reflects Trends in 2020 and the Value of Core Research Principles

March 30, 2020 Laura Schreeg, PhD, International Affairs Advisor, Office of the Chief Scientist, USDA

As the new decade unfolds, a remarkable trend is evident in the world. In 2020, the global community and the media have been focused on the surge of a novel virus, the spread of African swine fever, wildfires, outbreak of desert locust, and debates on the safe use of agricultural technology. These...

Research and Science

Paying it Forward When it Really Counts

March 30, 2020 USDA Rural Development Colorado State Director Sallie Clark

Connie Baker is the epitome of the strong sense of community and support in Colorado’s rural areas, so it was no surprise to me when she recently stepped forward to help folks during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Coronavirus Rural

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Dr. Dominique Carter

March 27, 2020 Justice Wright, Deputy Director of Communications, Research, Education, and Economics Mission Area

In this blog, we feature Dr. Dominique Carter, Agricultural Science Fellow with USDA’s Office of the Chief Scientist. Dr. Carter’s work touches various research portfolios to measure the performance and impact of USDA science initiatives. In addition to her work, she is also interested in emerging...

Research and Science

Peace as Quiet Victory

March 27, 2020 I.J. Pérez, AMS Public Affairs

Among frontline troops serving in Southeast Asia fifty years ago, peace was a distant thought. They were too busy fighting while diplomats assembled in Paris. U.S. forces were pushing hard against the Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army in provinces along the A Shau Valley, into Cambodia and Laos...

Initiatives

Pregúntele a USDA

Un punto de entrada central para acceder a información y ayuda del USDA.