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Central America


CAFTA-DR: A Trade Partnership that Works

March 02, 2018 Jason Hafemeister, Trade Counsel, U.S. Department of Agriculture

Under Secretary for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs Ted McKinney is leading a USDA trade mission to Central America this week, making it a good time to review where we stand as far as CAFTA-DR, the United States’ free trade agreement with five Central America countries and the Dominican...

Trade

Climate Change and Agriculture in the Americas

May 06, 2016 The Caribbean Climate Hub

All this month we will be taking a look at what a changing climate means to Agriculture. The ten regional USDA Climate Hubs were established to synthesize and translate climate science and research into easily understood products and tools that land managers can use to make climate-informed...

Building the Bench for Agriculture in 2015 and Beyond

December 30, 2015 USDA Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden

No matter where you're from, no matter what you look like, no matter your background, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is here for you. It has been an exciting year at USDA, filled with growth and opportunity. This year, I have traveled the country and the world to meet with farmers, ranchers and...

Conservation Food and Nutrition

Working Together to Address Global Food Insecurity

December 02, 2015 Agriculture Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden

As a daughter of farmers, and as someone who has spent her career working on behalf of farmers, one of the things I care most deeply about is the future of agriculture – both in the United States and around the world. That is why one of my highest priorities at USDA has been to help develop the next...

Food and Nutrition Trade

The Poinsettia, in the Shadow of the Christmas Tree

December 18, 2014 Carolyn Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Connecticut

The poinsettia – academic types may call it by its binomial name, and biologists might refer to its species. But how many of us are guilty of calling it that red flower with the pointy leaves used to decorate during the holidays? In the world of holiday shrubbery, the poinsettia has always taken a...

Conservation

West Coast Forests Celebrate International Migratory Bird Day

May 27, 2014 Erica Keene, Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest; and Kerry Greene, Klamath National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

‘Tis the season for migratory birds to make their journey north. Forests along the Pacific Flyway, which stretches from Alaska to Central and South America, recently celebrated International Migratory Bird Day with educational activities, conservation efforts and birdwatching trips. Staff from the...

Conservation Forestry

Insects for Dinner? Potential Tool in the Toolkit to Achieve Global Food Security

May 16, 2014 Sonny Ramaswamy, Director of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture

As an entomologist, the notion of eating insects isn’t new to me. However, for most Americans, the thought can make their stomachs churn. And yet, maybe seeing insects on their dinner plates is something Americans should get used to seeing. Yesterday, I delivered the keynote address at the Insects...

Conservation Food and Nutrition

New Mexico Farmers Supply Local Food to Community with Conservation

September 23, 2013 Mark A. Smith, NRCS New Mexico

Everything that siblings Adán and Pilar Trujillo do on their Chimayó, New Mexico, farm connects with the community. Their lettuce and chile peppers feed students at local schools. And they sell their rhubarb, rainbow chard and red Russian kale at the community market just down the road in Española...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Are Frogs on the Edge of Survival?

September 18, 2013 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

A lethal fungus is killing frogs and other water-dwelling amphibians all over the world, but a team of international scientists led by U.S. Forest Service scientist Deanna Olson is working to understand why. Olson, who works at the agency’s Pacific Northwest Research Station, and her colleagues have...

Forestry

FAS Helps Small Biz Find 'Out of This World' Success

July 12, 2013 Erin Tindell, Foreign Agricultural Service Public Affairs Specialist

When the astronauts aboard the International Space Station received a shipment of food recently, it included jam from a company called Stonewall Kitchen. Jonathan King and Jim Stott started selling their homemade jams from a folding table at a local farmers’ market in Maine in 1991. Today, their...

Trade
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