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Arkansas


USDA Builds Conservation Partnerships to Restore Forests, Clean Water and Reduce Wildfire Risk

February 24, 2016 Ellita Willis, U.S. Forest Service

Protecting our National Forests and surrounding lands against a myriad of threats is not an easy feat. That’s why joining forces with the right ally is a powerful strategy. In 2014, U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell and Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) Chief Jason Weller formed a...

Conservation Forestry

Conservation Partnerships Improve Illinois River

February 16, 2016 Creston Shrum, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Thanks to conservation partnerships, two segments of the Illinois River are off Arkansas’s impaired waters list. Surface erosion and agricultural activities along the river caused high levels of turbidity – or water haziness. Improvement in these conditions from the 2006 listing, led to ten segments...

Conservation

Preserving "Heirloom" Collections - Microbial, That Is

September 15, 2015 Jan Suszkiw, Agricultural Research Service

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 USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. As a plant pathologist with USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Rice Research Unit in Beaumont, Texas, Toni Marchetti...

Animals Plants Research and Science

Community Eligibility: Navigating Speed Bumps on the Way to Success

August 31, 2015 Janna Raudenbush, Public Affairs Specialist, Food and Nutrition Service

When the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act authorized the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP), schools in high-poverty areas gained another important tool to fight childhood hunger. By the end of school year 2014-15, the first year CEP was available nationwide, more than half of all eligible schools...

Food and Nutrition

USDA Conservation Innovation Grant Helps Rice Growers Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Voluntarily Participate in California's Carbon Market

July 10, 2015 Kari Cohen, Special Assistant to the Deputy Chief of Science and Technology, NRCS

Imagine a rice farmer in Arkansas altering his water management techniques to deliver water more efficiently and use fewer days of flooding, allowing for more precise water and nutrient management while maintaining consistent yields. After a decision by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), in...

Conservation

Restoring Fire to Oklahoma's Priority Forest Landscapes

July 10, 2015 Paul Ross, Office of Communications, U.S. Forest Service

(This post was written by George Geissler, State Forester of Oklahoma Forestry Services) Forest Action Plans represent the first-ever comprehensive assessment of America’s forest resources across all lands—public, private, rural, and urban—and offer proactive strategies that state forestry agencies...

Forestry

Tapping into the Economic Potential of Local Food Through Local Foods, Local Places

July 01, 2015 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Cross-posted from the White House Rural Council blog: At USDA, we understand the enormous market potential of local food. Industry estimates suggest that local food sales in America have nearly doubled in recent years, jumping from $5 billion in 2008 to $11.7 billion in 2014. We’ve invested more...

Food and Nutrition Farming

Arkansas Woman Graduates from Youth Loan to Become FSA's 13,000th Microloan Recipient

June 29, 2015 Tanya Brown, FSA Outreach Marketing Editor

At age 18, Dakota Williams knows exactly what she wants to do with her life — own a farm and raise cattle. “[Farming] is all I’ve ever known. I’m a third generation farmer, working the same land as my grandparents and I don’t want to see it end,” said Dakota. A member of the Cherokee tribe, Dakota...

Conservation

The Mississippi River: Mending the Mighty from North to the Gulf

June 23, 2015 Jody Christiansen, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

The mighty Mississippi – it’s a river with a history of romance and enchantment. Native Americans depended on the Mississippi River for food and water, and world explorers came in search of its riches. Over time, farmsteads dotted the land, and small towns grew to large cities. Today, we see the...

Conservation

Conserving Monarch Butterflies and their Habitats

June 16, 2015 Carita Chan, U.S. Forest Service Research & Development

With more than 80 percent of the world’s flowering plants relying on pollinators, their importance to natural ecosystems and agriculture cannot be overstated. However, populations of pollinators, including bird, bat, butterfly, beetle and bee species, have been declining around the world...

Forestry
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