Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Conservation


Hundreds of Free Webinar Series Offer On-Demand Conservation Training

February 09, 2016 Spencer Miller, Public Affairs Specialist, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Conservation science is a broad, deep field that’s growing all the time. To help people brush up on conservation practices and learn about new technologies, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service ( NRCS) offers hundreds of free conservation webinars from its online Science and Technology...

Conservation Research and Science

A High Five for Farmers and the Conservation Stewardship Program

February 04, 2016 Michelle Banks, Natural Resources Conservation Service

At USDA this month, we’re taking some time to focus on the work of farmers, ranchers and forest landowners to conserve our planet and our resources for the future. They know, like we do, that cleaner air, water, soil and habitat are not only good for our planet, but also contribute to healthy and...

Conservation USDA Results

10 #USDAResults in Conservation and Forestry You Should Know

February 04, 2016 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

At the beginning of this year, we launched a year-long reflection on USDA-wide results achieved over the course of this Administration. This week begins a month-long focus on seven years of USDA accomplishments to preserve our natural resources for tomorrow’s generations – accomplishments that have...

Conservation Forestry USDA Results

USDA Celebrates a Record of Conservation Successes

February 03, 2016 Robert Bonnie, Undersecretary for Natural Resources and Environment

Throughout the last seven years, the USDA Forest Service and Natural Resources Conservation Service have made great strides in conserving private working lands and our public lands for future generations. We have pioneered approaches to conservation that use incentives and partnerships to work with...

Conservation USDA Results

Accountant to Farmer: Finding Moisture in Dry Soil Conditions

February 03, 2016 Jennifer Cole, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“Nothing motivates me quite like being told I can’t do something. They told me no-till doesn’t work here, and you’re not supposed to be able to grow any type of canola. Well, look around. Here we are.” When Douglas Poole speaks, you can hear the passion in his voice for healthy soil and how it has...

Conservation

Brown Tree Snake Research Wins DoD's 2015 Resource Conservation Project of the Year

February 02, 2016 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

This month USDA highlights some of the important partnerships that work with us to care for our land, air and water. The work stretches into areas and takes USDA employees to places you wouldn’t suspect. For example, the damage wreaked by invasive brown tree snakes on Guam is hard to imagine...

Conservation Animals Plants

Chicken Ranching Boosts Pasture Soil Health on Iowa Farm

January 27, 2016 Laura Crowell, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Iowa

When bison roamed the Great Plains, prairie chickens and other fowl played an important role as the clean-up crew. They would follow the herds feasting on the larvae in bison manure. In Doug Darrow’s 160-acre mob grazing system near Oxford, Iowa, his 300 chickens have the same job, but they ride in...

Conservation

Farming Nature's Way

January 12, 2016 Dan Gillespie, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Nebraska

No-till farming used to be only about reducing soil erosion. Today, continuous no-till is the preferred tillage system in some areas. Why? It’s all about soil health. The loss of organic matter in soil, which is the lightest soil component and the first to wash away, is the healthiest portion of our...

Conservation

Oregon Organic Farmer Unlocks Soil Health Secrets and Boosts Production

January 08, 2016 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Oregon

For agricultural producers, it’s an age-old question: How do you grow the largest, healthiest, most-profitable crops possible? Oregon organic farmer Chris Roehm says the secret is in the soil. Co-owner and operator of Square Peg Farm in Forest Grove, Roehm is among a growing number of producers...

Conservation

Innovative Program Promotes Rotational Grazing in Chesapeake Bay Area

January 06, 2016 Ciji Taylor, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“Who better to share the benefits of intensive rotational grazing than farmers who are actually doing it on their lands?” asked Beth L. McGee, Chesapeake Bay Foundation Senior Regional Water Quality Scientist. Intensive grazing systems, a type of rotational grazing that uses higher per acre stocking...

Conservation
Subscribe to Conservation

AskUSDA

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