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NRCS


Interactive Map Compares Past and Present Snowpack - Western Snowpack Levels Very Low

May 08, 2015 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Western snowpack, where it remains, is in full melt. All along the Cascades and Sierra Nevada are ski courses that never opened, bare mountains and snowless SNOTEL sites where snowpack is measured. Where snow accumulated, it melted prematurely during a warm March. One of the most common questions...

Conservation

A Greenhouse Garden Inspires an Urban New Orleans School

May 06, 2015 Sarah Haymaker, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Louisiana

Tucked in the middle of a mixed commercial and residential area of New Orleans still struggling to recover from the effects of Hurricane Katrina, is Carter G. Woodson Middle School − a state of the art public charter school known as Knowledge is Power Program (KIPP) Central City Academy. As I...

Conservation

Measuring Environmental Effects of Conservation Practices

May 05, 2015 Tynisha Tolbert, Agricultural Statistician

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA's rich science and research profile. Have you ever heard the saying, “In God we trust, all others bring data?" Those are the words of William Edwards Deming, a...

Conservation Research and Science

With USDA Support, Aging Utah Dams to be Revitalized

May 05, 2015 Kirk Hanlin, Assistant Chief, Natural Resources Conservation Service

In the 1950s and 60s USDA’s Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), working with state, local governments and partners, designed and built many dams across the United States for flood and sediment control and water storage. Many of these dams are coming to the end of their design life. In...

Conservation

Secretary Vilsack Accepts Climate Leadership Award

May 01, 2015 Kari Cohen, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

On April 28, 2015, the American Carbon Registry (ACR) presented Secretary Vilsack with its 2015 Climate Leadership award, intended to recognize an individual whose career commitments to address the changing climate have made a difference and whose example we hope will inspire other individuals to...

Alabama Water Festival Teaches Fourth Graders About Water Conservation

April 30, 2015 Amelia Hines, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Alabama

Although it’s no longer her job, Anna Miller still takes time to volunteer for the Lee County Water Festival every spring in Auburn, Alabama. The annual event has attracted hundreds of fourth graders with lessons on aquifers, the water cycle and water filtration, since it first began in 2004....

Conservation

Going Wild about Water at the World Water Forum

April 28, 2015 Tawny Mata, Office of the Chief Scientist

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA's rich science and research profile. Water is a precious resource and will become scarcer as the human population continues to grow. In many areas, climate change...

Research and Science

Southwestern Willow Flycatcher, Other Species Benefit from Riparian Restoration Work in Utah

April 28, 2015 Casey Burns and Ron Francis, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Utah

Jim Hook, owner of the Recapture Lodge and volunteer firefighter in Bluff, Utah, has been working for years to manage and restore the riparian habitat on his property along the San Juan River in southeast Utah. Where the Cottonwood Creek and the San Juan River meet, Hook is working with USDA’s...

Conservation

The Earth Day Confessions of a Soil Health Geek

April 22, 2015 Ron Nichols, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

I am a soil health geek. I didn’t seek to become a geek. But the more I learned about our living and life-giving soil, the more I became convinced this miracle under our feet holds the promise of our future. We are all connected to the soil. Without it, life as we know it would not exist. However...

Conservation

Bi-State Sage-Grouse Success Shows Importance of Voluntary Conservation Partnerships

April 21, 2015 Robert Bonnie, Under Secretary, Natural Resources and Environment

We can achieve more when we voluntarily work together, and the decision today not to list the Bi-State sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act proves the power of partnerships. In this case, collectively, we were able to proactively conserve and restore habitat for this geographically distinct...

Conservation
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