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High Wood Product Output Doesn’t Correlate to Higher Carbon Emissions According to US Forest Service Research

May 19, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Forest Service

A study by researchers at the U.S. Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory shows that the lowest rates of deforestation and forest carbon emissions occur in global regions with the highest rates of forest product output. Counter intuitively global regions with the highest rates of deforestation...

Forestry

American Chestnut Trees Return to the Hoosier National Forest

May 13, 2011 Teena Ligman, Hoosier National Forest

Once a prominent phenomenon in southern Indiana, Bedford just experienced the first re-planting of American chestnut trees on the Hoosier National Forest in partnership with Purdue University and the U.S. Forest Service’s Northern Research Station.

Finding Common Ground for Salmon and Sitka Deer

May 11, 2011 Samia Savell, NRCS Alaska

What do wild Alaskan salmon and Sitka black-tailed deer have in common? Other than playing starring roles on many Alaskans’ favorite dinner menus, they also both thrive in forests with large open canopies of hardwood and conifers with thick plant undergrowth. Such characteristics exist in mature...

Conservation Forestry

U.S. Forest Service and Partners Create a Storytelling DVD Designed to Inform and Inspire Hmong Americans

May 11, 2011 Jane Hodgins, Northern Research Station

A new DVD is helping to deliver conservation messages designed to encourage Hmong Americans to enjoy public lands and be mindful of the responsibilities associated with enjoying the America’s great outdoors. Conservation professionals have lacked culturally-appropriate tools for reaching the Hmong...

Conservation Forestry

Human Ecology Mapping and “All-Lands” Conservation

May 10, 2011 Diane Banegas, USDA Forest Service R&D

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from the USDA's rich science and research portfolio. U. S. Forest Service social scientist Lee Cerveny has carved out a special niche in the world of research. While her...

Forestry Research and Science

Study Shows Mangroves are a Major Player in Climate Change

May 03, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Forest Service

Mangroves have declined by nearly half in the last 50 years. This is disconcerting to scientists because the hardy brackish tidal tree in an important bulkhead against climate change, according to findings is a recent study published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Forestry Research and Science

US Forest Service Reforestation Efforts a Win-Win for Healthy Forests

April 27, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Forest Service

Every year across the country, the U.S. Forest Service plants trees on thousands of acres of land. These efforts help to restore valuable ecosystems and helping to combat the effects of climate change. “Planting trees is a win-win investment,” said Dave Cleaves, Climate Change Advisor for the Forest...

Forestry

Colorado Students Celebrate the International Year of Forests by Planting Trees

April 26, 2011 Steve Segin, Rocky Mountain Area Coordination Center, U.S. Forest Service

Cross posted from the Let’s Move! blog: More than 1,200 students, teachers and Scouts recently planted 4,500 trees at the Monument Fire Center on the Pike National Forest in Celebration of the International Year of Forests and as part of an ongoing restoration project in the area. The event brought...

Forestry Initiatives

Faces of the Forest Celebrates Nan Christianson

April 25, 2011 Beverly Carroll, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Nan Christianson worked in many jobs during her three decades with the U.S. Forest Service. She considers them all gifts. “I think that because I’ve been able to work with communities as well as with natural resources, it is fun to go back and see some of the things I have been a part of over the...

Forestry

Methuselah, a Bristlecone Pine is Thought to be the Oldest Living Organism on Earth

April 21, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Forest Service

Bristlecone pines are a small group of trees that reach an age believed by many scientists to be far greater than that of any other living organism known to man -- up to nearly 5,000 years.

Forestry
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