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Wildlife


Smurfs Encourage Kids to Get Outdoors

August 02, 2013 Anabele Cornejo, Cleveland National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Little blue gnome-like creatures helped the U.S. Forest Service kick off its latest campaign to get people out into the woods. Partnering with the Ad Council and Sony Pictures Entertainment, the Forest Service recently launched its Discover the Forest campaign featuring the Smurfs and their new...

Forestry

Easement Ensures Family Farm Will Be Preserved

July 25, 2013 Jason Johnson, NRCS Iowa

Editor’s Note: As USDA shares stories of program accomplishments from across the country, Secretary Vilsack continues to remind Americans of the importance of the Farm Bill to many of these efforts. The success of the Wetlands Reserve Program in Iowa and across the nation is another reminder of the...

Conservation

Reducing Wildfire Risk and Protecting Our Drinking Water in a Changing Climate

July 19, 2013 Tom Tidwell, Chief of the U.S. Forest Service and Mike Connor, Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation

Cross-posted from the White House Council of Environmental Quality blog: Americans are all too familiar with the devastation catastrophic wildland fires can wreak on the landscape. Fire takes lives, destroys homes, impacts wildlife, and devastates millions of acres of valuable forests and grasslands...

Conservation Forestry

Mudding On National Forests Is Illegal and Destructive

July 17, 2013 Shannon O’Brien, Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Mudders, take note: It is against the law to tear up forest roads and meadows for fun, and the legal and financial consequences can be steep. Tearing up high-country meadows with four-wheel-drive and off-road vehicles destroys wildlife habitat and ecosystems. During a recent investigation, Forest...

Forestry

NRCS Helps with Reforestation Efforts on a Scarred Tribal Landscape

June 18, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS

From the top of Limestone Ridge, 6,000 feet up, the scars of a massive wildfire on Arizona’s White Mountain Apache Reservation in east central Arizona are still visible. As far as the eye can see are bare mountain ranges where century-old ponderosa pines once stood. A decade ago, the Rodeo-Chediski...

Conservation Forestry

Your Wilderness Photo Could be Displayed at a Special Smithsonian Exhibition

June 13, 2013 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The United States has 757 wilderness areas covering nearly 110 million acres of public land, but just one of your photographs could be among those displayed at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History as part of a year-long celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act of...

Forestry

Water Quality Trading in the Chesapeake Bay: Partnerships for Success

June 11, 2013 Ann Mills, Acting Under Secretary for Natural Resources & Environment

The Chesapeake Bay Watershed, the largest estuary in North America, covers 64,000 square miles and includes more than 150 rivers and streams that drain into the bay. Roughly one quarter of the land in the watershed is used for agricultural production, and agricultural practices can affect the health...

Conservation

Forest Service Celebrates Bird Migration

June 05, 2013 Alicia N. Brizuela, Conservation Outreach Intern

The beauty of watching a flock of birds migrating on the wing is a sight many enjoy. Protecting their habitats to help them on their journeys is part of the work that U.S. Forest Service employees across the nation do every day. “Forests and grasslands managed by the U.S. Forest Service are critical...

Conservation Forestry

A ‘Wild’ Experience with the Forest Service

May 02, 2013 Jennifer Velez, Klamath National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

With the increased use of electronic devices and scheduled activities competing for children’s outdoor time, how can we strike a balance? There’s still hope by encouraging kids to get outdoors and to experience wild things. In March, the Klamath National Forest and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s...

Forestry

Snowshoe Race supports New Mexico Forest’s Trails

February 04, 2013 Ruth Sutton, Cibola National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Can you picture yourself running in a 5K race on a crisp winter morning at the top of a 10,678-foot, snow-covered peak in snowshoes? That's what approximately 150 adventurous people did when they competed in the 11th annual Sandia Snowshoe Race on Jan. 19, 2013. The race is sponsored by the Friends...

Forestry
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