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NRCS


Fence Marking Project Protects Sage Grouse

July 30, 2015 Ron Francis and Lori Valadez, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Utah

In the “Old West”, barbed wire fences were often cut to allow trailing droves of cattle through. In the “New West,” livestock fencing is being marked to help reduce collisions for sage grouse and other wildlife. Sage grouse are especially at risk of hitting fences that are close to established leks...

Conservation

Assistance Helps Beginning Farmer Improve Operation

July 28, 2015 Morgan Rezac, NRCS Intern

A rich background in agriculture helped Wade Kloepping make the decision to come home to Dawson County after college and take over the family farm near Eustis, Nebraska. Two years before graduating from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Kloepping’s dad passed away; he was the manager of the family...

Conservation

Technology Enables Vermont Dairy Farmer to Measure Positive Impacts of Conservation

July 23, 2015 Amy Overstreet, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Vermont

Stewardship and cutting-edge technology are nothing new to the North Williston Cattle Company, a Vermont dairy farm that uses solar energy and robotic milking machines. The latest advancement on the 800-acre, 224-head operation are edge-of-field water quality monitoring stations, which measure water...

Conservation Technology

New Report Highlights Sage Conservation Successes, Stories

July 20, 2015 Tim Griffiths, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Statistics associated with the Sage Grouse Initiative (SGI) are quite impressive. Since 2010, more than 1,100 ranchers have teamed up with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in the partnership led by the agency to conserve habitat on 4.4 million acres, an area of working lands...

Conservation

Healthy Soil is Covered Soil

July 16, 2015 Dan Gillespie, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Nebraska

Of the several practices USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service recommends to improve soil health and sustainability one of the most important is to keep the soil covered. In corn and soybean fields, the starting point is maintaining the post-harvest crop residue on the soil surface. Crop...

Conservation

Training the Next Generation of Watershed Managers to Fight Drought

July 14, 2015 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

With drought reaching historic proportions in Western states, America needs people with both knowledge and experience in water management to help ensure that forests and working lands stay ahead of the effects of climate change. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food...

Conservation

Through Partnerships, Golden-Winged Warbler Thrives

July 14, 2015 Stacy Ouellette, Natural Resources Conservation Service, West Virginia

One species that enjoys the West Virginia Appalachian environment for breeding is the golden-winged warbler, but habitat has been hard to find. There was great excitement when Idun Guenther, a wildlife biologist with the state’s Department of Natural Resources, spotted two golden-winged warbler...

Conservation

USDA Conservation Innovation Grant Helps Rice Growers Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Voluntarily Participate in California's Carbon Market

July 10, 2015 Kari Cohen, Special Assistant to the Deputy Chief of Science and Technology, NRCS

Imagine a rice farmer in Arkansas altering his water management techniques to deliver water more efficiently and use fewer days of flooding, allowing for more precise water and nutrient management while maintaining consistent yields. After a decision by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), in...

Conservation

USDA Employee Named "Recovery Champion" for Oregon Chub Conservation Efforts

July 09, 2015 Tracy Robillard, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Oregon

The Oregon Chub is making waves in history. This February, it became the first fish to be delisted from the Endangered Species List because of recovery (not extinction). This success is directly attributable to more than 20 years of hard work by USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)...

Conservation

Survey: Lesser Prairie-Chicken Population Continues to Climb

July 07, 2015 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

The population of the lesser prairie-chicken is on the rise, according to survey results released last week by the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (WAFWA). Based on aerial surveys, biologists estimate the lesser prairie-chicken numbers about 29,000, a 25 percent increase from 2014...

Conservation
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