Skip to main content
Skip to main content

APHIS


Do YOU Have a Plan for Your Pets Should Disaster Strike?

September 12, 2014 Tanika C. Whittington, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Legislative and Public Affairs

Let’s face it—there’s nothing quite as frightening as when a natural disaster strikes. Even fictional movies about natural disasters leave you on the edge of your chair. Whether in the movies or real life, the important lesson is—planning ahead can save…you or your family’s…life. It’s National...

Animals Plants

Recovering a Native: USDA Agencies Help with Endangered Ferret Reintroductions

September 12, 2014 Gail Keirn, USDA APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

You can hear the chattering and scurrying from far away as six endangered black-footed ferrets restlessly wait in their travel carriers. These animals are the first of more than thirty scheduled for release this fall onto 34 square miles of prairie habitat at the Soapstone Prairie Natural Area and...

Animals Plants

Citrus Trees: Move It AND Lose It

August 25, 2014 Abby Yigzaw, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS)

Soon, citrus producing states across America, including Arizona, California, Florida, Louisiana and Texas, will be full of fresh citrus. But gone are the days of sharing the fruit trees or seeds with friends and family out of state or even in the next county. It’s no longer as simple as packing it...

Animals Plants

Volunteers Help Americans Eat More Greens

August 19, 2014 Justice Wright, Public Affairs Specialist for Research, Education, and Economics

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. Most of us were reminded every night to eat the veggies on our childhood dinner plates. And for good reason, too. Veggies...

Food and Nutrition Farming Research and Science

Learning All Summer Long with WINS Interns at USDA

August 08, 2014 Ed Avalos, Under Secretary of Marketing and Regulatory Programs

With over 3 million students graduating college during the 2013-2014 school year, what sets you apart from your peers? The answer: internships. Internships provide an immeasurable benefit to both the intern and to organizations like USDA. In addition to gaining valuable work experience, internships...

Initiatives

Virginia Tech Demonstrates New Method to Treat Ash Firewood

August 04, 2014 Devin J. Wanner, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry, U.S. Forest Service

The shiny green one-half-inch-long, one-eighth-inch-wide emerald ash borer has destroyed tens of millions of ash trees in the U.S. since the beetle’s discovery in 2002 in Detroit. The real Ash trees comprise around seven percent of the trees in eastern U.S. forests. In urban areas, ash trees make up...

Forestry Animals Plants

Preventing Disease Spread through International Collaboration

June 04, 2014 Jessica Mahalingappa, APHIS, International Services

Two departments, one mission. That’s the reality for scientists working at Plum Island Foreign Animal Disease Laboratory in New York. The island—owned and operated by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)—is critical to the USDA, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s (APHIS) mission to...

Animals Plants Trade

Celebrating 90-Plus Years of USDA's International Activities

June 02, 2014 Allan Mustard, Agricultural Minister-Counselor, U.S. Embassy New Delhi, India

The modern Foreign Service is celebrating its 90 th anniversary this year, as is the American Foreign Service Association. In 1924, President Calvin Coolidge signed the Foreign Service Act into law, combining the United States diplomatic and consular services to create the United States Foreign...

Trade

A New Weapon in the Fight to Protect America's Ash Trees is Under Evaluation

May 21, 2014 Sharon Lucik, USDA, APHIS, Plant Protection and Quarantine

May 18-24, 2014 is Emerald Ash Borer Awareness Week In our efforts to preserve and protect American ash trees from the damaging and invasive emerald ash borer (EAB) beetle, APHIS is working diligently to find and implement solutions that have the potential to successfully conserve this beautiful...

Animals Plants

Boston Beats the Asian Longhorned Beetle

May 20, 2014 Patty Douglass, APHIS State Plant Health Director for Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island

One of the things I consider a highlight of my career and that I will always remember is our successful response to the July 2010 detection of the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB) in Boston, Massachusetts. As I attended the May 12 ceremony commemorating the eradication of the ALB infestation in Boston...

Animals Plants
Subscribe to APHIS