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Forestry


US Forest Service Every Kid in a Park Program Offers Field Trip Idea, Educational Resources - and a Free Holiday Tree Permit

November 03, 2016 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

For the second year, the U.S. Forest Service is part of the administration’s Every Kid in a Park program, an initiative to provide American fourth graders with a free pass to more than 2,000 federal land and water sites for them, their siblings and up to three adults. The pass includes access to 153...

Forestry

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

Join the Bat Squad and Pull for Bats during Bat Week

October 24, 2016 Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

Bats have quite the list of positive effects in our world, from the billions of dollars they save in pesticides to natural pollination and seed spreading. Bats eat about one-half of their body weight in insects each night. We need bats. In honor of our furry, flying mammal friends, consider pulling...

Conservation Initiatives Forestry

Five Ways Agroforestry Can Grow Forest Products and Benefit Your Land, Your Pockets & Wildlife

October 19, 2016 Jocelyn Benjamin, USDA-NRCS and Kate MacFarland, USDA National Agroforestry Center

Much of the beauty in American agricultural landscapes is complemented by the trees in those landscapes. We depend on these tree’s products every day–from the paper our children use in school, to many of the fruits we eat, the wood burning in our fireplaces, and the wildlife habitat created by those...

Conservation Forestry

Ecologists Look to Traditional Knowledge to Bolster Sustainability Science

October 18, 2016 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, U.S. Forest Service

People around the world manipulate ecosystems for their own purposes. It’s what you leave behind when you’re finished working or living in the area that determines whether the ecosystem survives or is irreparably harmed for future generations. For scientists like John Parrotta, national program...

Forestry

US Forest Service Helps Educate Students at World's Largest Conservation Event

October 13, 2016 Paul Robbins Jr. and Denise Adamic, Pacific Southwest Region, U.S. Forest Service

Approximately 180 middle and high school students joined Smokey Bear, U.S. Forest Service staff and a host of other conservation-focused professionals from around the world for Student Day at the Hawaiʻi Convention Center in Honolulu. The students were invited to learn about natural resources...

Conservation Initiatives Forestry

US Forest Service Celebrates Historic Preservation Milestone

October 12, 2016 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, and Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

It takes a special person to spend two weeks of hard-earned vacation time delicately slicing through layers of soil to unearth the past as part of an archeological dig or hand sawing logs for re-birth of a worn-down historical cabin. The U.S. Forest Service has a deep appreciation for the thousands...

Conservation Forestry

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

Brown Bat Found in Washington State Infected with Familiar Strain of Fungus

October 05, 2016 Jane Hodgins, U.S. Forest Service

When a little brown bat discovered near North Bend, Washington, in March tested positive for White-nose Syndrome or WNS, scientists had a lot of questions. The bat was found nearly 1,300 miles from the nearest confirmed case of WNS in eastern North America, so the most pressing question was about...

Forestry

New and Improved Tools Help Adapt Forests to Changing Conditions

October 05, 2016 Maria Janowiak and Chris Swanston, U.S. Forest Service

Changes in climate and extreme weather are already increasing challenges for forest ecosystems across the world. Many impacts are expected to remain into the future. This means forest managers, conservationists and woodland owners continually need to address climate change to ensure forests can...

Forestry
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