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Bureau of Land Management


In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Shawna A. Legarza

November 07, 2017 Tomasina Brown, Special Assistant, Office of Communications

Every month, USDA shares the story of a woman in agriculture who is leading the industry and helping other women succeed along the way. This month, we hear from Shawna A. Legarza. Shawna is currently the Director of Fire and Aviation Management for the U.S. Forest Service. Shawna was raised on a...

Initiatives

New Study Offers Sage Advice

January 18, 2017 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

For many, one of the New Year’s first big chores is to remove a tree from inside their home. Trees, beautiful and useful as they are, do not belong everywhere. Such is the case with trees and other woody species that are expanding into the Western grasslands. Over the years, woody species like...

Conservation

New Research Provides Insights into Sage Grouse DNA

September 27, 2016 Jennifer Hayes, U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, and Brianna Randall, Natural Resources Conservation Service Sage Grouse Initiative

The greater sage grouse is an iconic bird that lives in the American West's sagebrush landscape. It’s also a species at the center of a nationwide debate focused on how best to manage its habitat to balance multiple uses and ensure the bird’s long-term survival. And the dialogue has just been...

Conservation Forestry

Honoring my Teachers, Sharing Traditions on the San Carlos Apache Reservation

April 22, 2016 Deputy Under Secretary Arthur "Butch" Blazer, Natural Resources and Environment

With more than 40 years of professional experience working in the field of natural resources, I am sometimes asked to share the personal outdoor experiences I had as a tribal member growing up on my reservation. When the request involves children, and those children are Native American, I am...

Conservation Initiatives Forestry

From Devastation to Restoration

February 11, 2016 Diane Banegas, U.S. Forest Service

Wildfires in sagebrush and other range ecosystems are increasing in frequency and severity, often in relation to drought conditions and intrusive species like cheatgrass, a non-native, highly flammable invasive species that establishes itself as a monoculture and crowds out native grasses and forbs...

Forestry

Protecting Sage Grouse for Future Generations... One Seed at a Time

December 14, 2015 Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

The need for food and shelter for wildlife to survive is basic, particularly for sage grouse living in a post-wildfire landscape in western states. The U.S. Forest Service is helping this upland game bird survive by growing about 3 million sagebrush shrubs a year to restore the area’s dry, grassy...

Forestry

Genetic Studies Reveal a Tree's History to Ensure its Future

July 02, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

It can reach heights of 200 feet and live 500 years, and occupies landscapes across the western United States. Some say its bark has an unforgettable smell resembling vanilla or even cinnamon, and this tree is one tough cookie. It grows in a variety of soils and climates and survives fires that...

Forestry

Braving Frigid Alaska Elements, Federal Workers Volunteer for the 'Toughest 300 Miles in Dog Racing'

February 25, 2015 Jane Knowlton, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

Think Alaska in the winter: a large land canvas of powdery, granular or icy snow and days of often very, very cold weather. With those conditions, it’s off to the races for some of the heartiest Alaskan sled dogs and volunteers like U.S. Forest Service employee Carol Teitzel, who works in the U.S...

Forestry

USDA Public-Private Partners Tackling Wildfire Issues in Oregon's East Face of the Elkhorn Mountains

February 20, 2015 Tracy Robillard, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Oregon

Like many woodland owners in eastern Oregon, Tim Fisher enjoys and appreciates the value wildlife brings to his 1,500-plus acres in Baker County. “I love watching the elk up here,” he said as he drove his pickup truck up a steep dirt road on his property, a mountainous view surrounding him. “I come...

Conservation

Happy Birthday AmeriCorps!

September 12, 2014 Wendy Wasserman, USDA Office of Communications

As AmeriCorps celebrates its 20 th anniversary, USDA salutes the deep relationship we’ve had with these remarkable volunteers and service members. From engaging in critical natural conservation efforts to helping kids learn more about nutrition and gardening to working directly with local...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Forestry
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