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US Forest Service Scientist Awarded High Honor by President Obama

September 29, 2011 Rebecca Wallace, U.S. Forest Service Forest Products Lab Office of Communication

President Obama has named Dr. Samuel L. Zelinka , a U.S. Forest Service scientist, as a recipient of the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor bestowed by the United States government on science and engineering professionals in the early stages of their...

Forestry

Resilient like a Fox

September 29, 2011 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Rare red foxes are making a surprising comeback according to U.S. Forest Service scientists who have released information claiming that at least six Sierra Nevada red foxes, a species once believed to have been nearly wiped out in the 1920s, are roaming in the wilderness south of Yosemite. Although...

Forestry

U.S. Forest Service Study Finds Climate Change to Affect Future Western Trout

September 28, 2011 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

A study authored by the U.S. Forest Service and other organizations including Trout Unlimited finds that global warming is expected to reduce the distribution of trout in the western U.S. because warmer streams will be less suitable for their growth and survival.

Conservation Forestry

Cooperative Restoration Project Benefits Salmon, Water Quality

September 28, 2011 Virginia Gibbons, Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, US Forest Service

Annual construction efforts on a multi-year restoration project to improve water quality and create high-quality fish habitat is currently in progress on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest in Oregon.

Conservation Forestry

Youth Conservation Crew Clears a Path for Outdoor Learning in South Carolina

September 26, 2011 Gwyn Ingram, Public Affairs Specialist, Francis Marion and Sumter National Forests

In today's technological society, children have retreated from outdoor activities -- bike riding, tree climbing or clinging to a rope swing to drop into a river -towards entirely virtual activities, indoor adventures at the end of a power cord. A few years ago, researchers and educators gave this...

Initiatives Forestry

National Fire Plan Funds Support Maine's Defensible Space Chipping Program

September 22, 2011 R. “Fitz” Fitzhenry, US Forest Service, State and Private Forestry

Two-thirds of Maine's population or about 780,000 residents live in the "wildland-urban interface.” In these areas structures intermingle with natural vegetation, and wildfire threatens lives, homes, and property. The Maine Forest Service’s Division of Forest Protection established a Wildland-Urban...

Forestry

Forest Service Finds Local Government and Home Owners Pay the Price for Non-Native Insects

September 21, 2011 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communications

While invasive insect species are widely recognized as being among the greatest threats to biodiversity and ecosystem stability worldwide, there has been little research into their economic impact on the national level especially for non-native invasive species. Many examples come to mind like the...

Forestry

Forest Service Job Corps Students Help Restore Historical Monument in South Dakota

September 19, 2011 Alicia Bennett, U.S. Forest Service Job Corps

Mount Roosevelt in South Dakota is maintained by the Black Hills National Forest as a recreational trail and picnic area where the 5,690-foot summit is dominated by the Friendship Tower--- a stone memorial that rises about 25 feet above the surrounding meadow. Friendship Tower was built by Seth...

Forestry

US Forest Service Symbol Woodsy Owl Turns 40

September 16, 2011 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Did you know that Woodsy Owl has been giving a hoot for 40 years? This week, the furry and big-eyed environmental and antipollution steward marks 40 years of being a U.S. Forest Service symbol.

Conservation Forestry

NRCS Works with Partners to Help Endangered Dusky Gopher Frog

September 16, 2011 Julie Grogan-Brown, NRCS Office of the Chief

Recently I got an intimate tour of a longleaf pine forest, a rapidly vanishing Southeastern ecosystem that is home to one-of-a-kind wildlife. Longleaf pines once dominated the landscape of coastal Mississippi, but deforestation and urbanization have decreased both these forests and the unique plants...

Conservation Forestry Animals Plants

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