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Forestry


Going to Great Heights for Data and Atmospheric Monitoring

March 31, 2015 Carita Chan, Research & Development, U.S. Forest Service

What lengths would you go to for the pursuit of science? That’s a question I asked myself when I had the opportunity to participate in data collection at the Glacier Lakes Ecosystem Experiments Site with John Frank and John Korfmacher, Electronics Engineer and Physical Scientist respectively, at the...

Forestry

The Greatest Good

March 31, 2015 Tom Tidwell, Chief, U.S.D.A. Forest Service

I was asked recently what the Forest Service mission meant to me. There are three words that always come to mind any time I think about what we do … the greatest good. Founder of the Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot said that where conflicting interests must be reconciled, the question shall always...

Forestry

A Year Round Fire Season?

March 30, 2015 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

There was a time when fire season for Western states meant only certain months out of the year. Not so long ago the U.S. Forest Service considered it primarily a summer problem with a few regions breaking the trend in early spring and late fall. But climate change, according to most wildland fire...

Forestry

How Does Wildlife Respond When Forest Management Helps to Reduce Wildfire Risk?

March 26, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service

Forest managers in the western United States often face difficult choices when it comes to reducing wildfire hazards while also maintaining wildlife habitat in forests that have changed dramatically in the last century. The U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station and partners are...

Forestry

Conifer Forum Arms Bi-state Sage-Grouse Supporters with Tools to Tackle Encroachment

March 26, 2015 Heather Emmons, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Nevada

Bi-state sage-grouse, a geographically distinct population of small game bird that lives along the border of Nevada and California, rely on a healthy sagebrush ecosystem. One of the largest habitat threats to the sage-grouse is the encroachment of pinyon and juniper trees. Once pinyon and juniper...

Conservation

Tlingit Master Carver Restores a 74-year-old Totem in Alaska

March 23, 2015 Gregory "Kent" Cummins, Tongass National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

In a small U.S. Forest Service workshop in Juneau, Alaska, a skilled Alaska Native artist is meticulously bringing a traditional artifact back to life. Tlingit Master Carver Wayne Price of Haines has begun the process of restoring the totem, which has overlooked the Auke Recreation Area near Juneau...

Forestry

The US Forest Service and International Day of Forests

March 20, 2015 Aysha Ghadiali, U.S. Forest Service, International Programs

Since 2013, the United Nations ( UN) has selected March 21 to be the unique day that the world thinks about the importance of trees. The U.S. Forest Service celebrates the International Day of Forests by bringing awareness about our involvement with international partners to continue to protect the...

Forestry

New Film to be Shown at USDA: Restoring the South's Brook Trout--Raise a Glass of Water to the Return of a Regional Icon

March 18, 2015 Nat Gillespie, Fisheries Program, U.S. Forest Service

For a community of brook trout in the southern Appalachian mountains, there are signs that the good times are coming back. To some, these native inhabitants might even appear to be waving a welcome home sign. Their numbers almost vanquished, they are as much a cultural emblem of these rugged and...

Forestry

The Power of One Tree - The Very Air We Breathe

March 17, 2015 Joanna Mounce Stancil, U.S. Forest Service

The second in a series of blogs honoring the United Nation’s 2015 International Day of Forests On Saturday, March 21, the U.S. Forest Service will celebrate the United Nation’s International Day of Forests. With such an important worldwide recognition of all forests do for us humans, the Forest...

Forestry

Forest Farming Ramps

March 16, 2015 Kate MacFarland, National Agroforestry Center, U.S. Forest Service

Ramps, these tasty spring ephemerals with the scientific name Allium tricoccum, are generally called ramps in the south and wild leeks in more northern areas. They are native to the hardwood forests of eastern North America. In many areas, ramps are viewed as a sign of the coming of spring and...

Forestry
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