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Cover Crops and No-Till Help South Dakota Lamb Farmer

August 05, 2015 Colette Kessler, Natural Resources Conservation Service, South Dakota

Demand for fresh lamb from ­five star restaurants drives Bob Corio’s use of cover crops and better forages that provide feed but also build organic matter in the ­fields he farms in Union County, South Dakota. “We needed something else for our sheep to eat other than hay,” says Corio, who has a...

Conservation

Food Safety is Everybody's Business

August 04, 2015 Rosalie Marion Bliss, 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. USDA’s summer road trip may have come to an end, but many folks are still firing up the grills as summer winds down. With...

Health and Safety Research and Science

Training the Next Generation of Watershed Managers to Fight Drought

July 14, 2015 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

With drought reaching historic proportions in Western states, America needs people with both knowledge and experience in water management to help ensure that forests and working lands stay ahead of the effects of climate change. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food...

Conservation

The Morrill Act: 153 Years of Innovations for American Agriculture

July 02, 2015 Sonny Ramaswamy, Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

July in America. It is summer time and school’s out. It is about vacations and maybe a trip to the beach. It is Independence Day—the 4 th of July—and parades and fireworks. It is about barbecues, hotdogs, and burgers. 2015 marks America’s 239 th birthday. July is also the month for another important...

Initiatives

Discovery Could Rekindle Interest in a USDA Trailblazer

June 23, 2015 Dennis O’Brien, 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. Bountiful harvests don’t magically appear on store shelves and supermarkets. USDA scientists strive to make sure that the...

Research and Science

It's National Pollinator Week! Celebrate Bees, Bats and Other Pollinators on Friday, June 19, at USDA's Pollinator Festival

June 15, 2015 Annie Ceccarini, USDA Farmers Market Manager and The People’s Garden Initiative Manager

It’s National Pollinator Week, June 15-21! Join us on Friday, June 19, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., to learn about bees, birds, bats and other pollinating animals at the sixth annual Pollinator Festival outside USDA Headquarters along 12th Street in Washington, DC. More than 14 USDA agencies, other...

Initiatives Animals Plants

Deal Gives Back

June 11, 2015 Meryl Harrell, Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary

Here at USDA, we believe in the power of community to make a difference. So when Alice Deal Middle School in Washington, DC, reached out to the USDA Center for Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships to come visit for their annual day of service, we were eager to welcome over 100 seventh graders...

Conservation Initiatives

Gleaning Sweet Potatoes for a Good Cause

June 11, 2015 Jan Suszkiw, Agricultural Research Service

After grading and collecting research data, Larry Adams and his crew fill sweet potato sacks for delivery to the Leland Food Pantry in Leland, Mississippi. There, the freshly dug sweet potatoes will be distributed to low-income families and other needy members of the community. Adams, an...

Food and Nutrition

Putting Antibiotic Stewardship into Action

June 04, 2015 Dr. Catherine Woteki, USDA Chief Scientist and Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics

The White House on June 2 convened a national forum to seek action on the problem of anti-microbial resistance. The development of antibiotics was one of the most significant medical achievements of the last century, and has helped to save millions of lives. But their overuse or misuse has resulted...

Food and Nutrition

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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