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Forestry


Forest Service Research Indicates Yellow-Cedar and Other Trees in Alaska Hold Biomass and Carbon

January 20, 2012 Robert H. Westover, US Forest Service Office of Communication

Tall and majestic, yellow-cedar is a culturally and economically valuable tree that has been dying off on more than a half-million acres for the past 100 years in southeast Alaska and nearby British Columbia. In fact, yellow-cedar decline is now viewed as one of the best documented examples of the...

Forestry

Oregon Resident Honored as Forest Service Regional Volunteer of the Year

January 20, 2012 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The Northwest Region of the Forest Service has named Joel Starr of Philomath, Ore., as their volunteer of the year. The honor is bestowed upon those individuals who contribute outstanding service to public lands. Starr has worked on a variety of volunteer projects for the Willamette, Deschutes...

Forestry

California Welcomes Wild Wolf for First time in 87 Years

January 18, 2012 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

For the first time in almost 90 years, the state of California has become home to a wolf. A few days shy of the new year, OR7 meandered alone into the Golden State after crossing the state border shared by Oregon. The 2-year-old gray wolf is the first and only documented wolf in California since...

Forestry

Ring Profiler Gives Scientists a Luminous Look at Tree Rings

January 17, 2012 Rebecca Wallace, U.S. Forest Service Forest Products Lab

The Ring Profiler may sound like the title of fantasy novel but in fact it’s an innovative tool U.S. Forest Service scientists are using to better determine how much a tree grows annually.

Forestry

Faces of the Forest Celebrates Mark Twery

January 12, 2012 Renee Lee, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

How does a former dancer and theater technician end up in a career in forestry? Meet Mark Twery, a supervisory research forester on the Northern Research Station in Burlington, Vt., who is not only all of the above, but loves his unique job that incorporates forestry with dance.

Forestry

Laughing All the Way to the Seed Bank

January 12, 2012 Candra Berg, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Everyone wants to have a full bank account --- including bank accounts that hold seeds. The U.S. Forest Service recently held a workshop with the Dominican Republic Ministry of Environmental and Natural Resources in Dry Branch, Ga., focusing on ways to increase the capacity to develop and maintain a...

Forestry

Thanks to the Forest Service, A Tool to Lessen Bat Fatalities at Wind Energy Facilities

January 11, 2012 Sherri Eng, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication, Pacific Southwest Research Station

With the literal rise of wind energy facilities across the country in recent years, migratory bats have been affected and can die in the huge turbines designed to catch the wind—and, unintentionally, winged creatures that fly at night. The new interactive tool referred to as the Bat Occupancy...

Forestry

Forest Service Partners with Washington State Mountain bike Filmmakers

January 11, 2012 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service is tapping into its creative side to address illegal trail building on public lands by announcing an official partnership with a newly released mountain bike documentary. The hour-long documentary, entitled "PEDAL-DRIVEN: a bikeumentary," delves into the escalating conflict...

Forestry

In Oregon, Beaver Dams are Being Used to Restore Habitat

January 09, 2012 Matthew Burks, Wallowa-Whitman National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

The Forest Service is known for developing partnerships to get the greatest good out of scarce fiscal resources. On the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest one of the partners is four-legged.

Conservation Forestry

Protecting Natural Resources Impacted by Tourism in Chile

January 05, 2012 Candra Berg, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Patagonia, Chile is known for its spectacular views, amazing scenery and great fly fishing. The area attracts 2 million tourists annually. But only 20 percent of Chile’s natural resources are protected. Chilean stakeholders recently partnered with the U.S. Forest Service and the State Department to...

Forestry Trade
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