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Arizona


Year's First National Water Forecast Predicts Limited Supply West of the Continental Divide

January 27, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

A limited water supply is predicted west of the Continental Divide, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) National Water and Climate Center (NWCC) data in its first forecast in 2014. The NWCC also predicts normal water supply east of the Continental Divide and will continue...

Conservation

Secretary's Column: Fighting Rural Poverty in Appalachia and the Delta Region

January 17, 2014 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Cross posted from the Huffington Post: Rural America faces a unique set of challenges when it comes to combating poverty in our towns and communities. Too often, rural people and places are hard to reach or otherwise underserved—but not forgotten. I believe that USDA and its partners have the tools...

USDA Results Conservation Food and Nutrition Rural

Jointly Developed Watershed Assessment Model Being Used in Yosemite National Park

December 03, 2013 Tara T. Weaver-Missick, 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. An award-winning watershed assessment tool, the Automated Geospatial Watershed Assessment (AGWA), was deployed to assess...

Research and Science

Moving up and Out -- These Trees Were Made for Walking

December 03, 2013 Joanna Stancil, State and Private Forestry, U.S. Forest Service

With large areas of our planet heating up because of climate change, some trees (and plants) are pulling up roots and heading north, to higher elevations and to cooling climes—well, sort of. A U.S. Forest Service-led study suggests there are a few dozen tree species in the eastern U.S. that are...

Forestry

NIFA Grant Brings Power of the Sun to Remote Arizona Community

November 26, 2013 Jill Lee, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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. A man in Arizona threw away an extension cord – and that’s a big deal for some folks who live about 100 miles west of Tucson...

Energy Research and Science

Local Food Leaders Take a Break to Hang Out

November 22, 2013 Elanor Starmer, National Coordinator and Advisor, Local and Regional Food Systems

What do Tristan Reader of Tohono O’odham Community Action (TOCA), Amy Bacigalupo of the Land Stewardship Project in Minnesota, Haile Johnston of Common Market in Philadelphia and Michael Todd’s environmental studies class at Ames High School in Ames, IA have in common? They’re all building...

Food and Nutrition Farming

U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, a Gift from the People, Headed Toward Washington, D.C.

November 04, 2013 Franklin Pemberton, Colville National Forest, and Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

More than 300 people gathered on in 25-degree weather to witness the harvesting of the 88-foot 2013 Capitol Christmas Tree from the Colville National Forest, the first step in its 5,000 mile journey from Washington State to the U. S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. More than a dozen spotters and...

Forestry

Nationwide Census on Farm to School Activities Shows Promising Results

October 22, 2013 Deborah Kane, National Director, USDA Farm to School Program

When students have experiences such as tending a school garden or visiting a farm they’ll be more likely to make healthy choices in the cafeteria. And when schools invest their food dollars in their local communities, all of agriculture benefits, including local farmers, ranchers, fishermen, food...

Food and Nutrition Farming

Leading by Example: Conservation in Arizona

September 18, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS

Travel 30 miles south of Alfredo and Sabrina Zamora’s farm in Cochise County, Ariz., and the imposing border fence between the U.S. and Mexico rises up across the horizon. This border county is rural, arid, open land where the Zamoras have spent their lives farming. The couple is well known in the...

Conservation

USDA Grasshopper Warrior Wins Prestigious Award for Life's Work

August 09, 2013 Natalie Loggans, USDA APHIS, Public Affairs

Grasshoppers and Mormon crickets of the West beware: R. Nelson Foster, of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, is roaming the rangelands looking for you, and when he finds you, he’ll stop your feeding frenzy right in its tracks. Foster serves as Assistant Laboratory Director at APHIS’...

Animals Plants
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