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Flushed Away...Probing For Antibiotic Presence in Our Food Supply

February 17, 2017 Dennis O'Brien, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

It’s a question with major public-health implications: Could antibiotics and other widely used medications get into our food supply when they are flushed into our sewers? To try to answer that question, researchers from USDA and Penn State University (PSU) assessed whether some commonly used...

Research and Science

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

Western Water Threatened by Wildfire

February 08, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service

By Tom Fry, Western Conservation Director, American Forest Foundation Tom Fry is the Western Conservation Director of the American Forest Foundation (AFF). AFF and the U.S. Forest Service hold a long-standing partnership in pursuit of protecting and conserving the important forest benefits that come...

Forestry

Protecting Clean Water While Respecting Agriculture

May 27, 2015 USDA Office of Communications

Today the Environmental Protection Agency released its new Clean Water Rule to help provide greater clarity on certain aspects of the Clean Water Act. The Clean Water Act has successfully reversed the effects of harmful pollution in America's waters for over 40 years. However, recent Supreme Court...

Conservation

New Film to be Shown at USDA: Restoring the South's Brook Trout--Raise a Glass of Water to the Return of a Regional Icon

March 18, 2015 Nat Gillespie, Fisheries Program, U.S. Forest Service

For a community of brook trout in the southern Appalachian mountains, there are signs that the good times are coming back. To some, these native inhabitants might even appear to be waving a welcome home sign. Their numbers almost vanquished, they are as much a cultural emblem of these rugged and...

Forestry

An Amphibian Only a Mother (or Biologist) Could Love Needs your Attention

February 26, 2015 Nat Gillespie, Fisheries Program, U.S. Forest Service

Hiding beneath a pile of rocks in a clear mountain stream flowing from the Pisgah National Forest in North Carolina lurks North America’s largest salamander, the Eastern hellbender. It is also locked in battle between its perilous decline and valiant struggle for survival. Sediment from runoff...

Forestry

Armchair Travelers Get a Close-Up Look of Southern Appalachian Waters

December 04, 2014 Nat Gillespie, Wildlife, Fish, Watershed, U.S. Forest Service

Deep into the Cherokee National Forest on the headwaters of the Conasauga River, an innovative river conservation program brings thousands of citizen snorkelers to the vibrant waters of Southern Appalachia. Now armchair travelers can enjoy this experience via a six-minute online film. “A Deeper...

Forestry
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