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Forestry


Don’t Spoil Summer Fun by Forgetting Safety

June 16, 2017 Larry Moore, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The Forest Service has 193 million acres of beautiful national forests and grasslands for all of us to visit and summer is a great time to do get outside and enjoy them. The water is more comfortable for a swim, the weather is warmer, and in most places, the kids are out of school.

Forestry

The Benefits of Helping Great Plains Trees - One Diagnosis at a Time

March 09, 2017 Jennifer Hayes, U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station

It began as a causal conversation in a hotel lobby in Kansas. After a day of discussions during the annual meeting of the Great Plains Tree Pest Council, the after-hours talk turned to the idea of updating the 1986 Diseases of Trees in the Great Plains manual.

Forestry

Research Can Help the Economy and Inform Policy

February 16, 2017 Cody Sullivan, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development

When most people think of forests, science isn’t the first thing that comes to mind, but, perhaps, it should. That’s because the U.S. Forest Service Research and Development program oversees projects across many science disciplines including forestry, genetics, wildlife, forest products and wildfire...

Forestry Research and Science

A Farewell Message from Secretary Tom Vilsack to Employees

January 13, 2017 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Today, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack sent the following message to all USDA employees: I want to take this opportunity on my final day at USDA to express my profound gratitude to the people who work at USDA. Every day, nearly 90,000 people leave their families and the comfort of their home to do...

Conservation USDA Results Initiatives Energy Food and Nutrition Health and Safety Forestry Trade Animals Plants Rural Research and Science Technology

Selecting Trees to Grow in Cities: Database Captures Urban Tree Sizes, Growth Rates Across US

January 05, 2017 Paul Meznarich, Pacific Southwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

In the cramped environs of U.S. cities every inch counts, especially if attempting to make space for nature. But now city planners and urban foresters have a resource to more precisely select tree species whose growth will be a landscaping dream instead of a maintenance nightmare. The U.S. Forest...

Forestry

Interactive Online Resource to Learn about Climate Change Adaptation

December 21, 2016 Kailey Marcinkowski, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The Climate Change Resource Center (CCRC) has recently released a new education resource on climate change adaptation responses to help the USDA Forest Service, USDA Climate Hubs, other agencies, and the general public learn more about responding to a changing climate. The CCRC is an online...

Initiatives Forestry

The Brightest Gem in Washington isn't the Hope Diamond, it's the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree

December 07, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The American public doesn’t have to sneak a peek at the Christmas present the U.S. Forest Service has given them this year because it’s on full display just below the U.S. Capitol dome on the building’s West Lawn. A gift from the Forest Service’s Payette National Forest, this year’s U.S. Capitol...

Forestry

A Dazzling Gem from Idaho Arrives on Capitol Hill

December 01, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

You know Christmas is right around the corner when images of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree being hoisted from a very long tractor trailer show up on your social media apps and on TV. An ongoing American tradition since 1964, this year, the great tree called fondly by its fans “An Idaho Mountain...

Forestry

Southern Landowners Want to Help At-Risk Wildlife Species

November 30, 2016 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service, Office of Communication

Amid rising numbers of at-risk wildlife in the South, a new report from the American Forest Foundation (AFF) revealed private and family landowners in the South offer a solution to help at-risk wildlife species. Southern forests rank at the top in terms of biodiversity when measured by the number of...

Forestry

Shaping Forests from the Bottom Up: It's All About Root Disease

November 08, 2016 Bruce D. Moltzan, Forest Pathologist, U.S. Forest Service

The old proverb: “You can’t see the forest for the trees” should have continued with a line saying that it’s even harder to see below the trees. Because seeing under trees, their root system to be exact, is how scientists understand and appreciate the things that will determine what we all see in...

Forestry
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