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Arizona


Partnerships Help Accelerate Forest Restoration, Increasing Benefits, Decreasing Threats

November 19, 2015 Ellita Willis, Washington Office, U.S. Forest Service

We cannot care for public forests and grasslands alone—the land benefits the most when communities join us and provide input to help shape forest plans. The U.S. Forest Service takes pride in being part of the communities we serve, whether by managing the land to be resilient to disturbance or as...

Forestry

Land-Grant Universities Make NFL Natural Turf Grass Better and Safer

October 08, 2015 Alexandra Wilson, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Grass is a big deal in football – a really big deal. Nearly every day of the week, untold millions of people watch players step out onto lush, green fields painted with white. All aspects of the game are tough. Even growing and maintaining a real turf grass field has its challenges, like freezing...

Research and Science

A Diet to Help Conserve Bees When Food Is Scarce

October 06, 2015 Kim Kaplan, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

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 portfolio. The fact that honey bees are a critical link in pollinating plants, especially our crops, has become better known to the...

Research and Science

School Lunch Equipment Grants Help Provide Healthier Meals to Students Nationwide

August 27, 2015 Amanda Heitkamp, Public Affairs Specialist, Food and Nutrition Service

USDA supports our tireless school nutrition professionals as they work to provide kids the nutrition they need to learn and develop into healthy adults. To further assist schools, USDA announced the availability of $25 million in National School Lunch Program (NSLP) equipment grants for Fiscal Year...

Food and Nutrition

On the Map: The Land, Water and Conservation Fund

August 11, 2015 Robert Bonnie, USDA, Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment and Kristen Sarri, DOI, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Policy Management and Budget

There is a Federal program that you may not have heard of, but it is responsible for conserving millions of acres of recreational and conservation lands for Americans to enjoy, and it helps fund local parks, provide access to rivers and trails, and preserve wildlife habitat in every state in the...

Conservation

Opportunities for Native Youth Available through APHIS' Safeguarding Natural Heritage Program

August 10, 2015 Leslie Wheelock, Director, Office of Tribal Relations

The land and our strong ties to the earth as humans are a source of culture and livelihood throughout Indian Country. Native youth carry the hopes of their ancestors forward, and many tribes have visited with me at the Office of Tribal Relations, interested in learning how their children and...

Conservation Animals Plants

Wildfire-Related Tragedy Leads to Landmark Forest Restoration Partnership

July 28, 2015 L.F. Chambers, Office of Legislative Affairs, U.S. Forest Service

The Schultz Fire of 2010 started with an abandoned campfire. High winds blew the flames into neighboring trees and brush, igniting a wildfire that would grow to 15,000 acres of the Coconino National Forest and threaten residents near Flagstaff, Arizona. In the following days 750 homes would be...

Forestry

Recognizing the Value of Cleaner Watersheds

July 23, 2015 Jonas Epstein, National Forest System, U.S. Forest Service

The mission of the Forest Service is to “sustain the health, diversity and productivity of the Nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations.” The provisioning of water resources – notably clean drinking water and flood control – is central to this. Growing...

Forestry

Genetic Studies Reveal a Tree's History to Ensure its Future

July 02, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

It can reach heights of 200 feet and live 500 years, and occupies landscapes across the western United States. Some say its bark has an unforgettable smell resembling vanilla or even cinnamon, and this tree is one tough cookie. It grows in a variety of soils and climates and survives fires that...

Forestry

Surf's High for a Desert Plant

May 29, 2015 Kim Kaplan, Public Affairs Specialist, ARS Information Staff

When you hear “surf’s up,” the last thing you might think of is a desert shrub called “guayule” (pronounced “why-oo-lee”). But technology that began with a partnership between USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and a small Arizona-based company, Yulex Corporation, recently put wetsuits made...

Technology
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