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Sierra National Forest


New Web-Based Tool Helps Land Managers Plan for Forests' Future

June 17, 2014 Stephanie Worley Firley, Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center, U.S. Forest Service

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 the USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. From South Carolina’s coastal plain to the North Carolina mountains to the tropics of Puerto Rico to the southern Sierra...

Forestry Research and Science

Puff and Fluff the Owls Return Home

August 19, 2013 Sherri Eng, Office of Communications, U.S. Forest Service

Puff and Fluff, the baby owls that Forest Service firefighters saved during the Carstens Fire in June, are finally home. Terri Williams of the Fresno Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation Service released the Western Screech-Owls on July 24 near where they were found over a month ago in a downed tree...

Forestry

Former Cop is a Smooth Negotiator

July 25, 2013 John C. Heil III, Pacific Southwest Region, U.S. Forest Service

During his 21 years as a California Highway Patrol officer, Bob Goodwin eased tensions during traffic accidents, issued verbal warnings and made arrests—all in a calm and cool way. Now, as Tribal relations advisor for the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Region, Goodwin is again relying on...

Forestry

Life's a Hoot for Owlets Saved from Wildfire

July 18, 2013 Sherri Eng, Office of Communications, U.S. Forest Service

As the flames from the recent Carstens Fire in the Sierra National Forest approached, two baby Western screech owls huddled abandoned in a nest. Then, without warning, the tree that was their home came crashing down to the ground. Firefighters working to contain the quickly-spreading fire had cut...

Forestry

Fishers Face a New Threat: Poisons Used by Marijuana Growers

July 30, 2012 Sherri Eng, Office of Communication, Pacific Southwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Illegal marijuana farms in our nation’s forests are not only threatening the safety of humans in these recreational areas, but are also causing ecological damage to the land. And now, there’s proof that the animals that make the forests their homes are also being harmed.

Forestry

Orphaned Bear Cubs Return Home to the Sierra National Forest

January 23, 2012 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

In late August, a black bear was brutally shot and killed on the Sierra National Forest in northern California, leaving behind two orphaned bear cubs.

Forestry
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