Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Mexico


UTEP Researchers Take a Different Path to Tackle International Drought Issues

July 28, 2015 Scott Elliott, 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. Scientists from the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) are working with stakeholders to determine the course their...

Research and Science

Migrating Monarchs

July 17, 2015 Karin Theophile, International Programs, U.S. Forest Service

Last month, beautiful monarch butterflies floated across Chicago’s skyline as a part of their annual migration. During this year’s journey, they found more milkweed plants in several places along their paths because of an innovative program that connects urban communities with nature. Area school...

Forestry Trade

Announcing New Steps to Promote Pollinator Health

May 19, 2015 Dr. John P. Holdren, Assistant to the President for Science & Technology and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

Cross-posted from the White House blog: Pollinators are critical to the Nation's economy, food security, and environmental health. Honey bee pollination alone adds more than $15 billion in value to agricultural crops each year, and helps ensure that our diets include ample fruits, nuts, and...

Animals Plants

Birds, Butterflies, Dragonflies and Bats

April 21, 2015 Karin Theophile, U.S. Forest Service

When it comes to the U.S. Forest Service, it’s not always about trees. Sometimes it’s all about the birds, the dragonflies and the butterflies. Oh, and the bats. At least, that’s what it was all about during a ceremony last month recognizing some great contributions from U.S. Forest Service and...

Forestry

Removing Barriers to Agricultural Trade Ensures US Products Can Thrive in Foreign Markets

April 10, 2015 Secretary Tom Vilsack

Fiscal Year (FY) 2014 saw the United States once again make significant gains in the international trade as USDA expanded opportunities for American producers overseas. In FY14 American farmers and ranchers exported a record $152.5 billion of food and agricultural goods to consumers worldwide, an...

Trade

Expanding Trade Opportunities by Translating Documents into Spanish

March 11, 2015 Craig Morris, Deputy Administrator of the Agricultural Marketing Service Livestock, Poultry, and Seed Program

When trading commodities on the market, it is critical that buyers and sellers across the supply chain speak the same trade language. For meat products, large volume buyers – ranging from the federal government to schools, restaurants and hotels – reference the U.S. Institutional Meat Purchase...

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

Providing the Gift of Water for Poinsettias and Other Ornamental Crops

December 12, 2014 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Happy Poinsettia Day! Of the countless iconic holiday season images in American homes, perhaps the most popular and colorful of them started off as a humble bush from our neighbors to the south. The poinsettia was introduced to this country in the late 1820s by Joel Poinsett, the first American...

Conservation

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

U.S. College Students Earn Title of "Earth's Best" in International Soils Judging Contest

July 07, 2014 Amy Overstreet, Natural Resources Conservation Service

While many tuned in to watch the World Cup to see which team would become the globe’s soccer champs, others watched a competition of a different kind: one that named the earth’s best identifiers of slices of earth. College students from the United States competed with teams from nine other countries...

Conservation
Subscribe to Mexico

AskUSDA

One central entry point for you to access information and help from USDA.