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ecosystems


Restoring Michigan’s Aquatic Ecosystems through the Regional Conservation Partnership Program

April 05, 2023 Michelle Banks Tice, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) worked with Michigan’s Grand Traverse Band (GTB) of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians to remove blockages to natural water flow in streams and rivers through the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP). USDA invested over $18 million in federal...

Conservation

Estimating Ecosystem Benefits from Rangeland Conservation Practices

February 24, 2021 Loretta Metz, National CEAP-Grazing Lands Component Leader, NRCS

Nature provides numerous benefits that people value. In the conservation world, we call these benefits ecosystem services. On rangelands, some ecosystem services can be bought and sold in traditional market systems – like forages, meat, and other animal products from livestock. Other ecosystem...

Conservation

New Tool Tests Management Strategies for Ecosystem Resilience

February 19, 2020 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, Forest Service

The USDA Forest Service has developed a new risk-assessment tool that helps scientists and decision makers manage natural resources and develop strategies that strengthen ecosystems.

Forestry

Science Simulations Support Salmon, Other Species

August 09, 2019 Diane Banegas, USDA Forest Service

How do river ecosystems support fish? How do environmental changes influence the system’s capacity to support fish? And how might different restoration strategies influence fish? These are questions J. Ryan Bellmore, a research fish biologist who works in Juneau, Alaska, for the USDA Forest Service...

Forestry Research and Science

USDA and Partners Work to Eliminate Invasive Nutria From Maryland’s Eastern Shore

July 02, 2018 Tanya Espinosa, Public Affairs Specialist, APHIS

Word has it that legendary actress Greta Garbo could be seen wearing nutria fur coats back in the day, and nutria fur coats can still be found in vintage clothing stores around the world. Nutria, sometimes called swamp rats, were first introduced into the United States in the 1800s to be used in the...

Animals

U.S. Agricultural Production Systems of the Future: What Research is Needed Now?

February 28, 2017 Seth Murray, Senior Advisor for Agricultural Systems, Office of the Chief Scientist

Depending on where you live in the United States, the first thing that likely comes to mind for agriculture production systems are the large fields of corn, soybeans, wheat or cotton seen growing each summer. But spend a few minutes looking at CropScape, a color-coded map that charts where almost a...

Research and Science

Gulf of Mexico Communities Depend on a Healthy Gulf

October 20, 2016 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

The Gulf Coast ecosystem is vital to our nation and our economy, providing valuable energy resources, abundant seafood, extraordinary recreational activities and a rich cultural heritage. This ecosystem was significantly injured by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill—the worst environmental disaster in...

Conservation

Ecologists Look to Traditional Knowledge to Bolster Sustainability Science

October 18, 2016 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, U.S. Forest Service

People around the world manipulate ecosystems for their own purposes. It’s what you leave behind when you’re finished working or living in the area that determines whether the ecosystem survives or is irreparably harmed for future generations. For scientists like John Parrotta, national program...

Forestry

Pollinator Week: Celebrating Blue Butterflies on the Great Lakes

June 21, 2016 Leah Anderson, U.S. Forest Service

In honor of National Pollinator Week, the U.S. Forest Service joins organizations and individuals across the world to celebrate pollinators and share ways to help them survive and thrive. Pollinators are vital to healthy ecosystems. Eighty percent of flowering plants require pollination by animals...

Forestry

Managing Forests in the Face of Drought - There is Help!

March 10, 2016 Marilyn Buford, U.S. Forest Service

Drought, especially prolonged or severe drought, can be a major stress in forest ecosystems. Drought can kill trees directly or indirectly through insect attack or wildfire. Both of which are more likely to occur during drought. Tree mortality impacts most of the ecosystem services provided by...

Forestry
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