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watershed


Protecting Waterways Means Preserving a Way of Life for People Living in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed and Delaware River Basin

May 08, 2023 Xochitl Torres Small, USDA Rural Development Under Secretary

Water has always shaped where we plant our communities and how they grow. If you farm, fish, or live in rural America, you know that healthy waterways are vital to ensuring that communities, large or small, can continue to thrive.

Equity Rural

Rebuilding and Repairing a Piece of History

May 15, 2019 Creston Shrum, NRCS

On any sunny day in Faulkner County, Arkansas, you will find people boating, swimming, and camping at Lake Bennett in Wooley Hollow State Park. This 40-acre lake was named after Dr. Hugh Hammond Bennett, the first chief of USDA’s Soil Conservation Service, today known as the Natural Resources...

Conservation

Officials View Producer Efforts to Improve Quality of Chesapeake Bay

March 22, 2018 Skip Hyberg, Senior Economist, USDA Farm Service Agency

“As of 2015, an estimated 18,091,710 people lived in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, up from 17,986,898 in 2014. Experts predict the watershed’s population will surpass 20 million by 2030 and reach 21.4 million by 2040. Each of the 18.1 million people that live in the region affects the Bay: consuming...

Conservation

Farm Community Effort Leads to Improved Drinking Water for Thousands

March 16, 2018 Amelia Dorch and Chad Douglas, NRCS

All communities depend on clean water and that supply of clean water depends on the actions of members in the community and outside of it. The small city of Kutztown lies within the Saucony Creek watershed in Berks County, Pennsylvania. The watershed is mostly agricultural, dotted with small family...

Conservation

Celebrating World Water Day along the Eastern Continental Divide

March 22, 2016 Leah Anderson, U.S. Forest Service

Today, March 22, is World Water Day, and the U.S. Forest Service joins the international community in celebrating water and inspiring good stewardship of this vital resource. Forests are essential to our survival and well-being due in large part to the ecosystem services they provide, including our...

Forestry

Western Water Threatened by Wildfire

February 08, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service

By Tom Fry, Western Conservation Director, American Forest Foundation Tom Fry is the Western Conservation Director of the American Forest Foundation (AFF). AFF and the U.S. Forest Service hold a long-standing partnership in pursuit of protecting and conserving the important forest benefits that come...

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

In Oregon, Finding the Lost River Whychus

June 30, 2015 Maret Pajutee, District Ecologist, Sisters Ranger District, Deschutes National Forest

Sisters is a dreamy mountain town in Central Oregon with almost everything you might want in a scenic hideaway. With snowy peaks and expansive forests, it is an ideal location for biking, hiking, or simply contemplating wide expanses of blue sky. But for many years Sisters was missing one crucial...

Forestry

Much Ado about Fisher

May 15, 2015 Rachel LaMedica and Chamise Kramer, U.S. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region

Located at the base of the Ashland Creek Watershed, the city of Ashland, Oregon, is home to nearly 21,000 people and a bustling tourist industry that revolves around world-class theatre experiences. Rogue Valley residents and tourists actively and passionately recreate in the Ashland municipal...

Forestry

Comparing the Baltic Sea and Chesapeake Bay Provides Lessons for More Cost-Effective Policies

April 28, 2015 Marc Ribaudo, Economic Research Service

Situated on two different continents and separated by thousands of miles, the Chesapeake Bay on the East Coast of the United States and the Baltic Sea in northern Europe face remarkably similar problems. Both are relatively shallow basins of brackish water. Both marine areas suffer from...

Conservation
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