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Forestry


Fall Colors the Muskeg on Alaska’s Tongass National Forest

October 18, 2012 Mary Stensvold, US Forest Service Regional Botanist, Sitka, Alaska

Muskegs, a colloquial term for peat bogs, blanket 10 percent of the Tongass National Forest. These wetlands range in size from a few square feet to many acres. Over the ages, muskegs formed as Sphagnum mosses, rushes and sedges grew and built up spongy carpets in these very wet, almost treeless...

Forestry

Forest Service Supplies Sustenance for Feds Feed Families

October 18, 2012 Avery Richburg, American Studies Program Intern, Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships

This week, USDA and other federal departments and agencies are recognizing the huge success of the 4 th annual Feds Feed Families Food Drive. USDA employees, farmers, and friends raised a total of 2.77 million pounds of food this summer! The U.S. Forest Service was a big part of this effort and the...

Food and Nutrition Forestry

US Teens Win Third Prize at International Jr. Foresters’ Competition

October 17, 2012 Jennifer Smith, International Programs and Ellita Willis, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

While most teens were enjoying a much deserved summer break, South Tahoe High School seniors Emily Barnett and Tyler Myers were prepping for an international competition. With the support of their teacher and Forest Service (FS) employees, they presented their field research project, “The Effects of...

Forestry

U.S. Forest Service Wants You to Get in Where You Fit In!

October 16, 2012 Tiffany Holloway, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

Every fall, nature puts on a dazzling show across America’s great outdoors for all of us to see. Whether you’re an adventurist or someone who just likes a good road trip, national forests are the places to be this time of year.

Forestry

Native American Youths in Florida get Behind-the-Scenes Look at Forest Service Careers

October 12, 2012 Susan Blake, Public Affairs Officer, National Forests in Florida

Their eyes wide open and their minds prepped to learn, a group of Native American youths from Florida recently glimpsed the skills and knowledge needed for Forest Service careers during a field trip to the Apalachicola National Forest. Forest professionals from civil engineering, landscape...

Forestry

US Forest Service Lands in North Dakota Listed on the National Register of Historic Places

October 11, 2012 Deidra L. McGee, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

Two crown jewels in the heart of North Dakota have recently been announced as historic places tied to President Theodore Roosevelt’s conservation legacy. The Elkhorn Ranch and Greater Elkhorn Ranchlands are now on the National Register of Historic places as a national historic district. President...

Forestry

US Forest Service Researcher Uses Science to Fight Forest Fires

October 11, 2012 Deidra L. McGee and Robert H. Westover, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

With wildfires that raged out of control this fire season, a year of “devastating conflagrations” seems to be the only way to describe such massive destruction on the nation’s forested lands. And scientists who know something about limiting the power of these forest infernos are needed more than...

Forestry

International Pilots Learn Human Rights Lessons During Visit to Historic Fort in Florida

October 10, 2012 Susan Blake, Public Affairs Officer, National Forests in Florida

Nestled in the southwest corner of Florida’s Apalachicola National Forest sits a historic fort known today as Fort Gadsden—the only historic landmark listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the U.S. Forest Service’s Southern Region. The fort served as a Native American trading post, a...

Forestry

US Forest Service’s Largest Experimental Forest is an Example of Cooperative Research

October 10, 2012 Robert H. Westover, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

The Olympic Experimental State Forest is the largest site in the U.S. Forest Service’s national network of experimental forests and it’s the only representative of the Olympic Peninsula’s temperate rain forest ecosystem, which is known for its extreme rainfall and growth rates. Its large size...

Forestry

Fall Wildflowers are Part of the Fall Colors Parade in the East and South-Central United States

October 09, 2012 Larry Stritch, U.S. Forest Service National Botanist, Washington D.C.

Fall is a wonderful time to find an amazing array of wildflowers on your national forests and grasslands. But before you venture out, take a moment for a sneak preview on the U.S. Forest Service’s Fall Colors web site for a few ideas to plan your visit Early morning hikers who are out and about in...

Forestry
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