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longleaf pines


Retired Couple's Commitment to Restoring Longleaf Pine Highlights Partnership's Success

July 22, 2014 Amelia Hines, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Georgia

Tim and Harriette Allen have focused their golden years on a shared passion that has set them on a path to conservation. The Georgia couple’s love of nature and a desire to help the environment spurred them to become part of a national effort to conserve and restore longleaf pine forests throughout...

Conservation

Conservation Efforts Help Protect Longleaf Forests for Future Generations

July 18, 2014 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

I have a few decorative items on my desk at work, and some of those are longleaf pine cones. Even though I only learned of the rare longleaf pine forest – and the large pine cones that fall in them each year – a few years ago, it was love at first sight. Longleaf pine forests once covered the...

Conservation

Under Secretary Bonnie Visits South Carolina to See Longleaf Partnerships

May 23, 2014 Amy Overstreet, Natural Resources Conservation Service, South Carolina and Michelle Burnett, U.S. Forest Service

The longleaf pine ecosystem is one of the most diverse in the world. It provides habitat to nearly 900 plant species and 29 federally-listed threatened or endangered species. It’s prized for its valuable timber and its strength against disease, pests and damaging storms. But longleaf pine forests...

Conservation Forestry

Endangered Mississippi Frog Finds a New Home

May 07, 2013 Mario Rossilli and Kara Davis, National Forests in Mississippi, U.S. Forest Service

To most people, the sound heard near Pony Ranch Pond could easily be mistaken as snoring. To local conservation professionals, however, it was more like a song, signifying hope and celebrating a small victory for the nearly extinct dusky gopher frog. In February, National Forests in Mississippi...

Conservation Forestry

Alabama’s Conecuh National Forest Helps Reestablish the Eastern Indigo Snake

April 27, 2012 Max Silvera, Public Affairs Specialist, Southern Region, and Tammy Freeman Truett, Public Affairs Officer, National Forests in Alabama

Alabama conservationists are closer to regenerating a population of the threatened eastern indigo snake in the Conecuh National Forest through the release of numerous juvenile snakes on the forest. The indigo snake is North America’s largest native snake, and plays an important ecological role in...

Forestry Animals Plants
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