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Illinois


The More Conservation for the Illinois and Macinaw Rivers - the Better

June 10, 2014 Tim Malone, District Conservationist, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

Rivers are special places, and for me, the Illinois and Macinaw rivers in central Illinois are my special places. Both rivers eventually send their waters to the Mississippi River, and the area provides habitat for wildlife as well as recreational opportunities like hunting and fishing. But the...

Conservation

Light Detection and Ranging Helps USDA Pinpoint and Protect Archaeological Mounds

June 02, 2014 Sharron Santure, Cultural Resources Specialist, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

Sometimes to stop soil erosion, prevent nutrient and sediment runoff and improve habitat, conservation work does disturb the ground. Because of this, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service relies on its archaeologists on staff to review locations prior to implementing these conservation...

Conservation

A Wetland Returns to its "Roots" Through a Conservation Easement

May 28, 2014 Jody Christiansen, Illinois Natural Resources Conservation Service

If the land floods more often than growing a crop, why not let it go back to what it wants to be – a wetland. That’s what happened on the Hoppe Heritage Farmstead in 2011. The Hoppe sisters owned cropland along the southern branch of the Kishwaukee River in DeKalb County, Ill. About half of the land...

Conservation

Partnerships and Volunteers Bring a Midwest Wetland to Life

May 22, 2014 Jody Christiansen, Illinois Natural Resources Conservation Service

Now, when you look at the Nygren Wetland Preserve in Illinois, a menagerie of wildlife can be seen – ducks and geese paddling about, white pelicans lounging, otters swimming and a pair of sandhill cranes huddling in a nest. There was talk of the endangered blanding turtles living in the wetland, too...

Conservation

USDA Grants Assist Small Farmers Who are Making a Big Impact in Agriculture

April 30, 2014 Jennifer Martin, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Farming and ranching is not a one-size-fits-all approach. Agriculture in the United States is a mixing bowl of diversity, and it’s most evident when comparing large- and small-scale farming operations. Having grown up on a small, family farm in Iowa, I saw first-hand not only how important our small...

Conservation

Budding Conservation Practice Helps Farmers use Technology to Control Amount, Timing of Water

April 28, 2014 Ciji Taylor, Natural Resources Conservation Service

An up-and-coming conservation practice offered by USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) helps farmers and ranchers manage water on their land, keep water clean and better cope with extreme weather like drought. Drainage water management enables landowners to determine when and how...

Conservation

Rural Development Helps Restore Water Supply to Town of Gifford after Devastating Tornado

April 14, 2014 Colleen Callahan, Director, Illinois State Office, USDA Rural Development

Four months after a tornado ripped through the town of Gifford, Illinois, destroying its water tower, 70 homes, and damaging 40 others, visible and emotional aftereffects remain. On November 17, the day the tornado touched down, I called my colleague and Gifford resident Molly Hammond, who wistfully...

Rural

USDA Research Tradition Going Strong in the 21st Century

April 01, 2014 Sean Adams, USDA Agricultural Research Service Information Staff

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. During the month of April we will take a closer look at USDA’s Groundbreaking Research for a Revitalized Rural America...

Research and Science

Acting Local, Growing Global for Good Food

March 27, 2014 Anne L. Alonzo, Agricultural Marketing Service Administrator

For over a century, my hometown of Chicago has been a cultural, financial, and agricultural hub. And as a hub, it has a long history of supporting innovation and opportunity. From the first cattle drives came the great Chicago Stockyards that supplied meat to the nation. From the early trading of...

Food and Nutrition Farming Trade

Expanding Healthy, American-Produced Food Offerings to Our Schools - USDA's Pilot Program for Greek-Style Yogurt

March 12, 2014 Laura Castro, USDA's Food and Nutrition Services Director of Food Distribution

The USDA Foods program offers a wide variety of nutritious, 100 percent domestically produced food to help the nation’s schools feed our children and support U.S. agriculture. Each state participating in the National School Lunch Program annually receives a USDA Foods entitlement, which may be spent...

Food and Nutrition
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