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Farm Bill


USDA Hosts Stakeholder Forum on the Benefits and Opportunities of the New Farm Bill Program Designed to Expand the Market for Bio-based Products

July 15, 2015 Lilian Salerno, Administrator, Rural Business Service, USDA

This Thursday, July 16, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and I, along with staff from my Rural Business Energy Division, will have the honor to host a national stakeholder forum on the improvements to, and opportunities available, under the new Biorefinery, Renewable Chemical, and Biobased Product...

Energy Rural

USDA Employee Named "Recovery Champion" for Oregon Chub Conservation Efforts

July 09, 2015 Tracy Robillard, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Oregon

The Oregon Chub is making waves in history. This February, it became the first fish to be delisted from the Endangered Species List because of recovery (not extinction). This success is directly attributable to more than 20 years of hard work by USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)...

Conservation

Conservation Program Pre-Proposals Due July 8

July 02, 2015 Sylvia Rainford, Natural Resources Conservation Service

This summer, 40 organizations from Michigan, Ohio and Indiana will work together to help agricultural producers reduce phosphorus runoff that ends up in the western Lake Erie basin, affecting water quality and contributing to algae blooms. This is an example of how the Regional Conservation...

Conservation

Big Data for Small Producers - USDA Market News Now Covers 85 Farmers Markets

June 30, 2015 Craig A. Morris, Agricultural Marketing Service Livestock, Poultry, and Seed Program Deputy Administrator

Farmers markets are an important part of local and regional food systems. Nationwide, 150,000 farmers and ranchers are selling their products directly to consumers to meet the growing demand for local food. Many sell their products at farmers markets, which can be a catalyst for future growth...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming Technology

Saving the Nation's Wetlands

June 25, 2015 Andrew James, Natural Resources Conservation Service, National Program Manager for Wetland Easements

Wetlands are one of nature’s most productive ecosystems. They clean and recharge groundwater; reduce the damaging impacts of floods; enhance wildlife habitat; sequester carbon; and create diverse recreation opportunities such as hunting, fishing, birdwatching and canoeing. Thousands of landowners...

Conservation

APHIS Partners with Pennsylvania to Fight the Spotted Lanternfly

June 22, 2015 Kevin Shea, APHIS Administrator

Last year, an invasive pest known as the spotted lanternfly was found in the United States for the first time ever in Berks County, Pennsylvania. Tucked away in Pennsylvania Dutch Country, Berks County may seem an unlikely location to find a foreign pest, but with today’s global economy unwanted...

Animals Plants

Updated USDA Program Enables Farmers and Ranchers to Help Monarch Butterflies

June 19, 2015 Justin Fritscher and Jocelyn Benjamin, Natural Resources Conservation Service

An update to one of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) key conservation programs will enable farmers and ranchers to aid the imperiled monarch butterfly. This year, NRCS updated its Conservation Stewardship Program to include incentives for farmers and ranchers who plant milkweed...

Conservation

Wisconsin: Pollinator Week Highlights Addition of Bee-Friendly Prairie Habitat

June 19, 2015 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin

James MacDonald owns 120 acres of rural land in Green County, Wisconsin. Through USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), James expanded relic prairie on his land, including planting 3 acres of native pollinator mix through EQIP financial...

Conservation

Protecting Pollinators through Habitat Conservation is Critical to Preserving Food Supply

June 17, 2015 Ashton Ebarb, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Earth Team Volunteer

“They’re in a happy mood today,” Jim Pratt, a local apiarist, said. At a comfortable 62 degrees, honeybees buzz with a clear objective: collect nectar and pollen, for honey and pollination. “Pollinators, like honeybees, support food crops,” Pratt said, explaining why for 20 years he’s raised...

Conservation

Working Trees for Islands Showcases Power of Agroforestry

June 12, 2015 Kate MacFarland, USDA, National Agroforestry Center

Do you grow fruits and vegetables in your backyard or community garden? Do some of them come from trees? Breadfruit, or ‘ulu, is an easy-to-grow, productive, nutritious, and starchy staple crop grown in many Pacific Islands, including Hawaii. It can be roasted, baked, boiled, fried or pounded into...

Forestry
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