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forest health


After the Fire - Wood Waste Put to Work

July 24, 2019 Carla Bamesberger, Rocky Mountain Research Station, USDA Forest Service

Biochar, or wood waste, is a porous carbon substance that results from burning wood in the absence of oxygen. It is typically created when burning chunks of wood are covered by ash, soil or a lid, which insulates the coals and starves them of oxygen. This fire remnant provides a valuable addition to...

Forestry Research and Science

Moss Study Helps Identify Pollution Hotspots

May 18, 2016 Yasmeen Sands, Pacific Northwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

In December 2013 when Sarah Jovan and Geoffrey Donovan, two scientists with the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Research Station in Portland, Oregon, crisscrossed the northwest area of their city they had no idea they were onto something big. Armed with a ladder and collection equipment, the...

Forestry

Saving Our Forest Heritage in a Vault

December 16, 2015 Gary Man and Randy Johnson, U.S. Forest Service

Trees are often referred to as the lungs of the earth, providing not only the oxygen we need to breathe but a filter to clean our air and water. Trees from forested lands provide timber for our homes, food for people and wildlife, protection from weather extremes and, in urban and rural settings...

Forestry

Job Corps Students, Alumnae 'Pay it Forward,' Helping Each Other Learn Leadership Skills

December 08, 2015 Michaela Hall and Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

Preparing for a career involves many steps, plus individual motivation as well as help from those who’ve gone before you. That’s what a group of 60 Harpers Ferry Job Corps students explored recently during a recent training session related to job preparedness for the U.S. Forest Service. Their...

Initiatives Forestry

Responding to Oak Wilt and Climate Change on the Menominee Nation Forest

September 09, 2015 Arthur Blazer, Deputy Undersecretary, Natural Resources and Environment

Standing in a disturbed patch of forest, Menominee forester Jeff Grignon looks around and explains, “My role is to regenerate the forest, maintain the forest, create diversity, and look toward the future.” This task is becoming increasingly challenging as growing forest health issues intersect with...

Conservation Forestry

Working Together to Restore the Colorado Front Range

September 02, 2015 Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

It started with a call from a concerned landowner living on Pine Country Lane, nestled in the foothills just west of Denver. The landscape spread out before them was scarred from previous high-severity fires, the homeowners told their local Conservation District. Their home was sitting at the top of...

Forestry

Working with Beavers to Restore Watersheds

July 15, 2015 Cathy Dowd, Research and Development, Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest

The Methow Beaver Project is a bit uncommon as far as forest health restoration projects go, because it relies on one of nature’s greatest engineers – the beaver. Beavers build dams on rivers and streams, and build homes (“lodges”) in the resulting bodies of still, deep water to protect against...

Forestry

Genetic Studies Reveal a Tree's History to Ensure its Future

July 02, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

It can reach heights of 200 feet and live 500 years, and occupies landscapes across the western United States. Some say its bark has an unforgettable smell resembling vanilla or even cinnamon, and this tree is one tough cookie. It grows in a variety of soils and climates and survives fires that...

Forestry

Much Ado about Fisher

May 15, 2015 Rachel LaMedica and Chamise Kramer, U.S. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region

Located at the base of the Ashland Creek Watershed, the city of Ashland, Oregon, is home to nearly 21,000 people and a bustling tourist industry that revolves around world-class theatre experiences. Rogue Valley residents and tourists actively and passionately recreate in the Ashland municipal...

Forestry

Forest Service Unveils Web Application Identifying At-Risk Forests

January 15, 2015 Frank Krist, Forest Health Protection, U.S. Forest Service

As our nation’s forests grow older and denser they are at greater risk of attack by pests, which can devastate some of more cherished national wildlands. Healthy forests not only provide a beautiful setting for our outdoor activities, they are at lower risk for catastrophic wild fires, and are more...

Forestry
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