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U.S. Forest Service


Removal of Invasive Tree Improves Health of American Samoa Forests

April 27, 2012 Sherri Eng, Public Affairs Specialist, U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station

Removal of destructive invasive trees is an ongoing challenge for the U.S. Forest Service. What folks might not realize is that this challenge of protecting native forests extends all the way to the South Pacific.

Forestry

USDA Official Reads The Lorax to Assembly of Children, Encourages Them to Take Care of Forests

March 05, 2012 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Imagine being a kid and having a senior government official come to your school to share the joy of reading and storytelling. Then imagine the excitement when an actual Dr. Seuss character enters the room! That’s what happened when Arthur “Butch” Blazer, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Natural...

Forestry

Secretary's Column: Skills for American Workers

February 10, 2012 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

As America works towards an economy that’s built to last, we must make sure to provide American workers with the skills they need to compete. If we want to build an economy that makes, creates and innovates; if we want to usher in a new era for American manufacturing and American-produced energy...

USDA Results

U.S. Forest Service Study Finds Climate Change to Affect Future Western Trout

September 28, 2011 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

A study authored by the U.S. Forest Service and other organizations including Trout Unlimited finds that global warming is expected to reduce the distribution of trout in the western U.S. because warmer streams will be less suitable for their growth and survival.

Conservation Forestry

NRCS Works with Partners to Help Endangered Dusky Gopher Frog

September 16, 2011 Julie Grogan-Brown, NRCS Office of the Chief

Recently I got an intimate tour of a longleaf pine forest, a rapidly vanishing Southeastern ecosystem that is home to one-of-a-kind wildlife. Longleaf pines once dominated the landscape of coastal Mississippi, but deforestation and urbanization have decreased both these forests and the unique plants...

Conservation Forestry Animals Plants

Colorado Students Celebrate the International Year of Forests by Planting Trees

April 26, 2011 Steve Segin, Rocky Mountain Area Coordination Center, U.S. Forest Service

Cross posted from the Let’s Move! blog: More than 1,200 students, teachers and Scouts recently planted 4,500 trees at the Monument Fire Center on the Pike National Forest in Celebration of the International Year of Forests and as part of an ongoing restoration project in the area. The event brought...

Forestry Initiatives

2010 Robert Bateman Get to Know Contest Launches on October 1

September 30, 2010 2010 Robert Bateman Get to Know Contest Launches on October 1

Renowned wildlife artists Robert Bateman and Wyland, in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, invite American youth to “get to know” their wild neighbors of other species. The Get to Know contest encourages young people to develop a deeper appreciation of biodiversity through art, writing...

Forestry

An Environment of Safety and Risk Management

September 10, 2010 Phil Sammon, USDA FS Public Affairs Office; Washington, DC

The recapture of the two fugitives on a National Forest last month made headlines across the nation. An alert Forest Service employee became integral to the recapture and the successful end to this situation. In a matter of just a few moments, this employee made several key decisions and took...

Forestry
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