Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Climate Change


Could Forest Thinning Help Ease Water Shortages in the United States?

July 22, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

Planning for the future of the nation’s water resources is more important now than ever before as severe drought grips the West, affecting heavily populated areas and critical agricultural regions. Forests generally yield huge quantities of water—much more than crops or grasslands—but also use a lot...

Forestry

The Climate Hubs Tool Shed - An Inventory of Relevant Tools to Help Land Managers Respond to Climate Variability

July 21, 2015 Rachel Steele, National Climate Hubs coordinator

Producers want tools that can help implement adaptation strategies to reduce climate-related pressures and ensure the quality of production. They also need information about the effects of climate change on production systems. These range from management of labor resources in specialty crop...

Conservation

Cultivating Native Leaders in Conservation

July 14, 2015 Leslie Wheelock, Director, Office of Tribal Relations

Recently, ninety Alaska Native, American Indian, and Native Hawaiian high school students came together at the National Conservation Training Center in Shepherdstown, West Virginia for a week of intensive education and peer-to-peer training about the impact of climate change on tribal communities...

Conservation Forestry

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

The Morrill Act: 153 Years of Innovations for American Agriculture

July 02, 2015 Sonny Ramaswamy, Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

July in America. It is summer time and school’s out. It is about vacations and maybe a trip to the beach. It is Independence Day—the 4 th of July—and parades and fireworks. It is about barbecues, hotdogs, and burgers. 2015 marks America’s 239 th birthday. July is also the month for another important...

Initiatives

Northeast Regional Climate Hub Vulnerability Assessment Published

June 23, 2015 Rachel Steele, USDA National Climate Hubs Coordinator

The Northeast Regional Climate Hub covers Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. The Northern Forests Climate Sub Hub shares this footprint and represents people...

Northern Plains Regional Climate Hub Vulnerability Assessment Published

May 04, 2015 Rachel Steele, USDA National Climate Hubs Coordinator

The Northern Plains Regional Climate Hub—encompassing Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, and Colorado— has a high diversity of land use types including the largest remaining tracts of native rangeland in North America. Substantial areas of both dryland and irrigated cropland and...

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...

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

On "Bring Your Daughter to Work Day," a Local Student Learns about Climate Change

April 28, 2015 Wayne Maloney, Office of Communications

Last week, Secretary Vilsack went to Michigan State University to deliver a major climate address. Among those in attendance was 15 year old Ellie Hohenstein, a freshman at Annandale High School in Fairfax County, VA. She provides this blog concerning her experiences as she accompanied her father to...

Subscribe to Climate Change

AskUSDA

One central entry point for you to access information and help from USDA.