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Arizona


Five Cs of Arizona

December 04, 2014 Dave DeWalt, Arizona State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

The Census of Agriculture is the most complete account of U.S. farms and ranches and the people who operate them. Every Thursday USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service will highlight new Census data and the power of the information to shape the future of American agriculture. For decades...

Conservation

Local Food, Local Places: Bringing Expertise and Creative Thinking to Community Economic Development

December 03, 2014 Doug McKalip, Senior Advisor for Rural Affairs at the White House Domestic Policy Council

Cross-posted from the White House Rural Council blog: Around the country, communities are seeking creative approaches to integrating entrepreneurship, environmental management, public health, and other place-based considerations into successful economic planning. Local food development can be one...

Rural

Smooth Sailing to Grand Canyon West with the Hualapai Tribe

November 07, 2014 Alan Stephens, Arizona State Director, USDA Rural Development

There were many things to celebrate about the newly paved nine-mile stretch of the Diamond Bar Road in Western Arizona, a road that links state and county roads to Grand Canyon West on the Hualapai Reservation. At the ribbon cutting celebration for the completed road, Tribal, state and federal...

Rural

Working the Night Shift - Bats Play an Important Role in Pollinating Crops

October 29, 2014 Pattie Thomas, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Most people associate pollination with bees and birds but often forget the work of their furry colleagues: bats. Bats take the night shift, playing a major role in pollinating crops and spreading seeds. One important bat is the Mexican long-nose bat, which dwells in large colonies. Their range...

Conservation Forestry

USDA Celebrates Efforts in Support of U.S.-Mexico Cattle Trade

October 10, 2014 Abbey Fretz, APHIS Legislative Director

Trade... Employee safety... U.S. Livestock Health… Every organization must work to balance its priorities, and these are just a few of the priorities that the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has as part of its work at the livestock inspection facilities along the border between...

Animals Plants

Bees Help Native American Students Learn about Math, Science

August 26, 2014 Sean Adams, USDA Agricultural Research Service Information Staff

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. There’s nothing like a little “hands-on” activity to help students learn. And what better way to encourage math and science...

Research and Science

Citrus Trees: Move It AND Lose It

August 25, 2014 Abby Yigzaw, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS)

Soon, citrus producing states across America, including Arizona, California, Florida, Louisiana and Texas, will be full of fresh citrus. But gone are the days of sharing the fruit trees or seeds with friends and family out of state or even in the next county. It’s no longer as simple as packing it...

Animals Plants

A Week to Remember Fallen Wildland Firefighters

July 02, 2014 Robert Westover, Office of Communications, U.S. Forest Service

This week the nation stops to remember historic losses in the wildland firefighter community as we pay homage to the 14 lives lost in the 1994 South Canyon Fire in Colorado, the 19 lives lost in the Yarnell Hill Fire in Arizona last year and the others who have lost their lives serving the public...

Forestry

Small Loan Makes Big Difference for Family in Remote Area of Navajo Nation

June 19, 2014 Arizona Rural Development State Director Alan Stephens

Some mornings Nona Schuler would make the teeth-jarring drive along a washboard dirt road from her home on the Navajo Nation to her job in town only to discover when she got there that her earrings didn’t match. Without electricity and lighting, it was often difficult for her to see what she was...

Energy Rural

Final Yearly Snowpack Forecast Divides West into a Wet North and Dry South

June 18, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Every winter Westerners look to the mountains and may not realize they’re peering into the future. More snow cap means more water come spring and summer. Many lives and livelihoods depend on nature’s uneven hand. Thanks to USDA’s National Water and Climate Center, what used to be speculation is now...

Conservation
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