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reforestation


Innovative Finance for National Forests Grant Program Fosters New Ideas, Partnerships

December 07, 2020 Andrew Avitt, USDA Forest Service, Office of Communications

The USDA Forest Service is charged with caring for 193 million acres of the nation’s forests and grasslands and solving some of the most complex land management challenges. Across the country, forests densely packed with trees are at high risk of catastrophic wildfire as well as insect and disease...

Forestry

Trillion Trees: Reducing Wildfire Risk, Protecting People and Wildlife

August 27, 2020 Aurora Cutler, Office of Sustainability and Climate, USDA Forest Service

An opaque, autumn haze smothers much of the western United States from the millions of acres burning across forests in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains. Fire size and severity are rising in tandem with record heat, low winter snowpack, decreased summer rains, and abundant forest fuels...

Forestry

Hurricane Recovery for Forest and Conservation Nurseries

January 13, 2020 Diane Haase, Reforestation, Nurseries, and Genetics Resources, U.S. Forest Service

Hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones have caused devastating damage to nearly all of the American-Affiliated islands during the past few years. In 2017, Hurricanes Irma and Maria struck the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. Just a year later, Typhoons Yutu and Mangkhut hit Guam and the Northern...

Forestry

Tribal Plant Nurseries are About More than Growing Plants

November 19, 2019 Jeremiah Pinto, Research Plant Physiologist/Tribal Nursery Coordinator, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Forest Service

Numerous tribes throughout the US are growing native plants for reforestation and restoration. For many of them however, there are deeper connections with the plants they’re propagating. Sure, the plants fulfill an ecological purpose for the projects they’re intended for, but often there can be...

Forestry

Reforestation Tool to Help Determine Where to Plant Tree Seedlings

April 28, 2017 Holly R. Prendeville, Coordinator, USDA Northwest Climate Hub

After timber harvest or a forest fire, reforestation is essential for a productive working landscape and healthy ecosystem. When replanting you need to decide where you will get tree seeds or seedlings. To help you and other forest land managers, reforestation scientists at the USDA Forest Service...

Climate

In the Wake of the Rim Fire, What Comes Next? A Story of Recovery, Restoration and Reforestation

April 13, 2015 Gregg Goodland, U.S. Forest Service

Like a phoenix rising from ashes, blackened portions of the Stanislaus National Forest, which were left by the Rim Fire that blazed through the Sierras in August of 2013, have begun to spring to life. Left with a burn scar that is one-third larger than New York City, a reforestation team is...

Forestry

Under Secretary Bonnie Tells World Congress of Scientists Their Work will Light the Way to Better Forest Management

October 29, 2014 Carita Chan, Research and Development, U.S. Forest Service

Confronting climate change will be substantially cheaper and easier if we conserve forests, and the key to that is expert knowledge and science, Undersecretary of Natural Resources and the Environment Robert Bonnie told thousands of attendees at the recent 24 th World Congress of the International...

Conservation Forestry

StrikeForce Helps S.C. Family Protect & Preserve Forest Land

December 19, 2013 Amy Overstreet, Natural Resources Conservation Service, South Carolina

The soil in Marlboro County, S.C. is known to be fertile, and legend has it that the land was once so productive it was sold by the pound instead of the acre. In this agricultural oasis, brothers Oliver and Martin Smith are continuing the farming tradition that has been in their family for three...

Conservation

Great Lakes Greenhouse Gives Native Plants a Second Chance

April 01, 2013 Janel Crooks, Hiawatha National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Biologists have long recognized the important role native plants play in maintaining a healthy forest. When native plants are crowded out by invasive plants, those native species can suffer to the point of extinction. Since the early 1990s, the Hiawatha National Forest has operated a greenhouse in...

Forestry
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