Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Pacific Northwest Station


Threatened Sea Bird with a Catchy Name

March 13, 2013 Sherri Eng, Southwest Pacific Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Marbled murrelets are not the background singers in a ‘60s band. Rather, they are a native sea bird species whose population south of Canada is declining. Like the Pacific Northwest’s iconic northern spotted owl, this small seabird’s nesting habitat may be threatened by the loss of coastal old...

Conservation Forestry

Forest Service Research Indicates Yellow-Cedar and Other Trees in Alaska Hold Biomass and Carbon

January 20, 2012 Robert H. Westover, US Forest Service Office of Communication

Tall and majestic, yellow-cedar is a culturally and economically valuable tree that has been dying off on more than a half-million acres for the past 100 years in southeast Alaska and nearby British Columbia. In fact, yellow-cedar decline is now viewed as one of the best documented examples of the...

Forestry

Alaskan Tlingit Elder Leaves Long-Lasting Legacy

June 24, 2011 Deidra L. McGee, Forest Service Public Affairs Manager

The Forest Service fondly remembers the contributions of Dr. Walter A. Soboleff, a centenarian deeply revered and Tlingit elder, who died last month at the age of 102. Located in Alaska, the Tlingit are a Native society that developed a complex hunter-gatherer culture in the temperate rainforest of...

Forestry
Subscribe to Pacific Northwest Station

AskUSDA

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