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Forestry


Bi-State Sage-Grouse Success Shows Importance of Voluntary Conservation Partnerships

April 21, 2015 Robert Bonnie, Under Secretary, Natural Resources and Environment

We can achieve more when we voluntarily work together, and the decision today not to list the Bi-State sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act proves the power of partnerships. In this case, collectively, we were able to proactively conserve and restore habitat for this geographically distinct...

Conservation

Birds, Butterflies, Dragonflies and Bats

April 21, 2015 Karin Theophile, U.S. Forest Service

When it comes to the U.S. Forest Service, it’s not always about trees. Sometimes it’s all about the birds, the dragonflies and the butterflies. Oh, and the bats. At least, that’s what it was all about during a ceremony last month recognizing some great contributions from U.S. Forest Service and...

Forestry

Historic Handwoven Rug Lays Path for US Forest Service Employee to her Shinaali

April 20, 2015 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Tribal Relations, U.S. Forest Service

Nanebah Nez turned to a roomful of U.S. Department of the Interior employees and asked quietly for a moment to herself. When the group of curators left, Nez turned her attention to an 80-year-old piece of her ancestral past and quietly began her private prayer in Navajo, “Yáat’eeh Shinaali,” or...

Forestry

The Forest Legacy Program: 25 Years of Keeping Working Forests Working

April 17, 2015 Scott Stewart, Forest Legacy Program Manager, U.S. Forest Service

Two million four hundred seventy thousand acres -- equivalent in size to two Delawares -- are protected through the Forest Legacy Program, which is celebrating its 25 th anniversary this year. Enacted through the 1990 Farm Bill’s Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act, this voluntary program has proved...

Forestry

Deer Sign of the Times: Pellet Surveys Reveal Whitetail Abundance

April 14, 2015 Joshua Hanson, Allegheny National Forest, and Alex Royo, Research Ecologist, Northern Research Station

It’s a cool 37 degrees Fahrenheit as Alex Royo and I step out of the Forest Service truck and on to the muddy forest road. With the meteorologist calling for sun and a high of 66 degrees by lunchtime, I am already faced with the day’s toughest decision – do I keep my warm jacket on or leave it in...

Forestry

In the Wake of the Rim Fire, What Comes Next? A Story of Recovery, Restoration and Reforestation

April 13, 2015 Gregg Goodland, U.S. Forest Service

Like a phoenix rising from ashes, blackened portions of the Stanislaus National Forest, which were left by the Rim Fire that blazed through the Sierras in August of 2013, have begun to spring to life. Left with a burn scar that is one-third larger than New York City, a reforestation team is...

Forestry

Longleaf Pine Savanna Helps Educate Farmers, Others on Value of Forest

April 07, 2015 Renee Bodine, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Florida

The Nature Conservancy’s Apalachicola Bluffs and Ravines Preserve, an hour west of Tallahassee, Florida, protects nearly 6,300 acres of restored sandhill habitat. Young longleaf pines stand in thick waves of golden wiregrass. Wild turkey, bobwhite quail, gopher tortoise and Florida pine snake once...

Conservation Forestry

Latino Youth Conservation Leaders, Forest Service Leaders Share Blissful Experience of Transformational Conservation Successes

April 06, 2015 Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

(Editor’s note: Luis Cruz is a youth conservation leader with Latino Legacy and PLT GreenSchools!, part of the Houston East End Greenbelt project. These projects are part of an eight-year partnership with the U.S. Forest Service Friends of the National Forests and Grasslands of Texas-Latino Legacy...

Forestry

Tusayan Ranger District Achieves Goal of Zero Human-Caused Fires

April 01, 2015 Jacqueline Banks, Kaibab National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

In calendar year 2014, the Tusayan Ranger District of the Kaibab National Forest achieved a longtime goal of zero human-caused wildfires. According to forest wildfire records, the last time the district had zero human fires was in 1965, exactly 50 years ago. “Over the last three years, we have had a...

Forestry

Loss of Space Threatening North American Sasquatch

April 01, 2015 Tiffany Holloway, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

There are many reasons the U.S. Forest Service conserves open space. It allows us to deliver clean water, provide space for recreation activities and maintain wildlife habitat for a variety of creatures – most notably the North American Sasquatch. While most people believe the Sasquatch to be a...

Forestry
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