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Safer Skies for Navy Fliers and Vultures

April 20, 2012 Marty Daniel, Wildlife Biologist, APHIS Wildlife Services at NAS Whiting Field

Bringing USDA expertise into a cooperative effort with the U.S. Navy and a telecommunications company recently made flying safer for hundreds of vultures and Navy aviators near Milton, Fla.

Animals Plants

Escargot? More like Escar-No!

April 19, 2012 Eduardo Varona, APHIS State Operations Support Officer, Miami, FL

For the past several months, USDA’s Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and its partners at the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) have been fighting to stop the spread of the giant African snail—a nasty invasive pest that threatens Florida’s agricultural...

Animals Plants

Go Purple and Save an Ash Tree

April 17, 2012 Rebecca Blue, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs

The Patuxent Wetlands Park is a lovely setting in Anne Arundel County, Maryland where vibrant tidal wetlands give way to the Patuxent River. It is a place where the community enjoys fishing, boating and nature. It is also the site of one of the 500 purple, prism-shaped traps hanging high in Maryland...

Animals Plants

Meet USDA’s Youngest Ally in the Fight against Invasive Species: Ben Shrader, Invasive Hunter

April 10, 2012 Kelsey Branch, APHIS Biologist

In the battle to preserve agriculture and the environment, Ben Shrader is Luke Skywalker and invasive species are Darth Vader. Ben, a young man from central Texas, first became interested in invasive species after reading a newspaper article about plants wreaking havoc on native ecosystems. Also...

Animals Plants

APHIS Celebrates 40 Years on the Front Lines for U.S. Agriculture

April 05, 2012 Dr. Gregory Parham, APHIS Administrator

This is a special year for USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). Not only are we celebrating USDA’s 150 th anniversary, but we are also commemorating our own 40 th anniversary. Through the years, it’s likely you’ve heard about or witnessed firsthand some of APHIS’ activities, or...

Animals Plants

Celebrating 100 Years of Washington, DC’s Cherry Blossoms

April 04, 2012 Alyn Kiel, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

Since 1912, the beautiful pink and white blossoms of the Tidal Basin’s Japanese cherry trees have been one of our national Capital’s most iconic images. For Washingtonians, cherry blossoms herald the beginning of spring and a reprieve, albeit brief, between frosty winter weather (although this...

Animals Plants

Leave Hungry Pests Behind for Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month

April 02, 2012 Greg Rosenthal, APHIS Public Affairs, Riverdale, MD

April flowers and fresh spring foliage beckon us outside to enjoy a picnic, hike, or gardening project. But we're not the only ones being beckoned. Invasive pests are also coming out. They're hungry, and your state is on their menu. That's why USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS...

Animals Plants

Tapping Renewable Energy Potential at Airports

March 29, 2012 Gail Keirn, APHIS Public Affairs, Fort Collins, CO

Most people are familiar with the weekly summer ritual of mowing the lawn. At best, the smell of fresh cut grass is appealing, but often the task is considered time consuming, tiring and expensive. What if your “lawn” was actually hundreds of acres in size, and how often you mowed it, what type of...

Animals Plants

Ohioans See Giganteus Future

March 22, 2012 Kent E. Politsch, Chief, Public Affairs Branch, USDA Farm Service Agency

Miscanthus giganteus was a tall, bothersome grass a few years back, a good privacy plant, but to some, just a weed. It could grow about anywhere, reaching heights of 12-15 feet, and do it perennially for 20 years or more. Some say Miscanthus giganteus had a bad reputation, but it doesn’t bother...

Conservation Animals Plants

Individuals Across the Country Help Stop the Spread of Citrus Diseases

March 01, 2012 Lawrence Hawkins, APHIS Public Affairs Specialist, Sacramento, CA

Thanks to everyone who reported suspected citrus disease on USDA’s updated Save Our Citrus online Report It form. We have now received submissions from every citrus-producing state in the country. Using this new reporting form, site visitors can compare their own citrus plants to photos of four very...

Animals Plants

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