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restoration


Volunteers Experience the Power of Service and Healing in the Rainforest

January 06, 2020 Tamberly Conway, Recreation and Heritage, USDA Forest Service

In September 2017, Hurricane Maria, a deadly category 5 hurricane devastated Dominica, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. Amidst the devastation was the El Yunque National Forest, the only tropical rainforest among the USDA Forest Service’s 193 million acres. Reliably lush and green, the...

Forestry

New Science Framework Provides Basis for Conservation and Restoration of Sagebrush

April 16, 2019 Jessica Brewen and Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Forest Service

“Resilience” is the ability to recover from change, or when you think about landscapes, the ability to recover from disturbances like wildfires. A new model takes the idea of resilience and applies it to the natural environment, specifically, to sagebrush. This resilience model is one of the core...

Conservation Forestry

Devastating Fire Season Inspires Restoration Collaboration in the Spirit of Shared Stewardship

October 31, 2018 Margee Haines and Josh McDaniel, USDA Forest Service

The summer of 2015 was exceptionally hot and dry in northern Idaho. Fuel moistures had dropped to alarming levels, and when a series of lightning storms moved across the region in early August, hundreds of fires flared up. A group of fast-moving and intense fires, which eventually became known as...

Forestry

USDA Supporting the National Native Seed Strategy

March 13, 2017 Holly R. Prendeville, Ph.D., Northwest Climate Hub Coordinator, Forest Service

The use of native plant material in conservation, restoration and land management results in healthy ecosystems countering the effects of invasive plant species, altered wildfire regimes, extreme weather events and human-caused events. The National Seed Strategy for Rehabilitation and Restoration...

Conservation

Looking to the Future and Learning from the Past in our National Forests

November 01, 2016 Randy Johnson, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development Program

Forests are changing in ways they’ve never experienced before because today’s growing conditions are different from anything in the past. The climate is changing at an unprecedented rate, exotic diseases and pests are present, and landscapes are fragmented by human activity often occurring at the...

Forestry

Gulf of Mexico Communities Depend on a Healthy Gulf

October 20, 2016 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

The Gulf Coast ecosystem is vital to our nation and our economy, providing valuable energy resources, abundant seafood, extraordinary recreational activities and a rich cultural heritage. This ecosystem was significantly injured by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill—the worst environmental disaster in...

Conservation

Getting a New Perspective on the Great Lakes' Water Quality

October 07, 2016 Cody Sullivan, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development Program

The Great Lakes cover over 95,000 square miles and contain trillions of gallons of water. These vestiges of the last Ice Age define immense. But their greatness makes water quality monitoring difficult. In 2010, Titus Seilheimer, a US Forest Service research ecologist at the time, led a project...

Forestry

5 Ways Landowners Give Shell-ter to the Gopher Tortoise

October 06, 2016 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

The gopher tortoise earned its name for good reason – because it likes to dig and spends much of its time underground. The gopher tortoise, the Southeast’s only land-dwelling tortoise, burrows in the sandy soils below longleaf pine forests where it can escape heat and danger. Its burrows are popular...

Conservation

FAS Capacity-Building Efforts in Central America Yield Benefits There and at Home

June 27, 2016 Robert Schubert, FAS Office of Capacity Building and Development

Pablo Chacón, a young Guatemalan farmer who is studying agroforestry at the Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center (CATIE) in Turrialba, Costa Rica, can now show the people in his home community how livestock grazing and hardwood forests can co-exist and prosper. Earlier this...

Initiatives Forestry Trade USDA Results

Wildlife after Wildfire in Southern Appalachia

May 17, 2016 Lisa Jennings, Natural Resource Specialist, U.S. Forest Service

It was my first prescribed burn. After weeks of training and months of anticipation, I was finally on the ground – drip torch in hand – ready to apply fire to restore the mixed pine-hardwood forests at the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains on the Pisgah National Forest. Joining the U.S Forest Service...

Forestry
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