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US Forest Service Honors Outstanding Achievements in Conservation

April 11, 2013 Karin Theophile, International Programs, U.S. Forest Service

An educational program about bats, an effort to increase Dusky Canada goose breeding and an annual bird migration celebration are among the winners of the 2013 Wings Across the Americas Conservation Awards. The U.S. Forest Service awards were presented recently during the North American Wildlife and...

Forestry

Innovative Partnership to Protect Colorado Springs Water Supply

April 10, 2013 Mike Stearly, Rocky Mountain Region, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service and Colorado Springs (Colo.) Utilities recently announced a new 5-year partnership to help restore the areas burned by the devastating Waldo Canyon Fire that tore through part of the west side of the city in 2012. Through the partnership, Colorado Springs Utilities will...

Forestry

Biting Down on the Origin of a Tooth

April 05, 2013 L.F. Chambers, Office of Communication, and Michael Fracasso, Minerals and Geology Management, U.S. Forest Service

The big female sniffed at the dry Late Cretaceous air as she trotted – delicately, considering her 7-ton frame – along a game trail through a stand of towering conifers, whose needled lower branches trembled slightly at her passing.

Forestry

Moving Harper’s Beauty Off Road

April 03, 2013 Zoe Hoyle, Southern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The first week of March found a team of plant biologists down on their knees in a highway right-of-way in the Florida Panhandle searching for Harper’s beauty, one of Florida’s rarest native plants.

Forestry

Great Lakes Greenhouse Gives Native Plants a Second Chance

April 01, 2013 Janel Crooks, Hiawatha National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Biologists have long recognized the important role native plants play in maintaining a healthy forest. When native plants are crowded out by invasive plants, those native species can suffer to the point of extinction. Since the early 1990s, the Hiawatha National Forest has operated a greenhouse in...

Forestry

A Tale of Alaskan Winter Weather Explains Current, Changing Landscapes

March 29, 2013 Mary Stensvold, Alaska Region, U.S. Forest Service

Yellow-cedar is an ecologically, culturally, and economically important tree species in the coastal temperate rainforests of Alaska and British Columbia. This slow-growing tree has few natural insect and disease agents and is capable of living more than 1000 years. But less snow in Alaska’s winters...

Forestry

Break Away with the Kids for Spring Outdoor Activities

March 28, 2013 Sue Cummings, Office of Conservation Education, U.S. Forest Service

Spring is here, and spring break is just around the corner or already underway. For parents everywhere trying to figure out how to keep their children amused, the answer can be simple: Get them outside! Spring is a great time to watch birds collect materials to build nests or to check out the buds...

Forestry

Forest Service Helps Restore Fish to Oregon Stream

March 26, 2013 Chris Bentley, Mt. Hood National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

After nearly a century, a five-mile stretch of the Lower Oak Grove Fork of Oregon’s Clackamas River will have native fish swimming year-round in this restored stream once again. Early in the 20th century, the growing communities around Portland needed hydroelectric power. The Oak Grove Fork dam...

Conservation Forestry

Forest Service Innovation is Helping Make the Forever Stamp Stick, Well, Forever

March 25, 2013 Rebecca Wallace, Forest Products Laboratory, U.S. Forest Service

Twenty years have passed since the U.S. Postal Service first started transitioning from lickable stamps to the peel-and-stick squares used today, thanks to the research by the U.S. Forest Service’s Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wis. The two agencies first research collaboration focused on...

Forestry

Smokey Bear Hug Warms the Heart of Young Virginia Boy Battling Cancer

March 22, 2013 Michael R. Williams, George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, U.S. Forest Service

Six-year-old Nathan Norman counts Smokey Bear as one of his new best friends. The Rustburg, Va., boy recently met Smokey and a number of wildland firefighters and law enforcement officers from the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests as part of his hobby of reaching out to these first...

Forestry

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