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Conservation


Charles E. Bessey Nursery Showcases its 'Babies' - Seedlings That Will Become 'Forests of the Future'

June 27, 2014 Cyd Janssen, Nebraska National Forests, U.S. Forest Service

Two million seedlings will grow up one day to become the forests of our future. The vision for all of those trees is part of the mission of the Charles E. Bessey Nursery, part of the Nebraska National Forests and Grasslands, and the oldest federal seedling nursery in the nation. Working with the...

Forestry

Small Farmers Share Land, a High Tunnel and Knowledge

June 25, 2014 Diane Petit, NRCS Massachusetts

When Jim and Nancy Faulkner bought their small farm in Boxborough, Mass. in 2009, the place was a mess. Buildings were falling down, the soil was poor and the land was covered with invasive plants. Nonetheless, they wanted to turn it into a sustainable farm. Help came from two very different...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

For American Chestnut Trees, People Help in the Art of Pollination

June 24, 2014 T.K. Yelton, NRCS

Nature has transformers! With time and the help of bees, butterflies, birds and other critters, some flowers change into seeds. Sometimes, flowers in trees transform into nuts. But sometimes these transformers need help. That’s where a Conservation Innovation Grant from USDA’s Natural Resources...

Conservation

Memphis Girl Wins National Smokey Bear & Woodsy Owl Poster Contest

June 20, 2014 Tiffany Holloway, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

Joyce Qin has some pretty proud grandparents. They made their first trip from China to Washington, D.C., to watch U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell honor the 11-year-old Memphis-area student as the national winner of the 2014 Smokey Bear and Woodsy Owl Poster Contest. “Joyce competed against 30...

Conservation Forestry

People's Garden in Illinois Provides Food, Sanctuary for Pollinators

June 20, 2014 Jody Christiansen, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

What’s the buzz going on in Princeton, Ill.? A food fest for our pollinator friends, that’s what. This is a People’s Garden designed specifically for pollinators such as bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. The idea came to Ellen Starr, area biologist with the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation...

Conservation Initiatives

Pollinator Protection: Conservation Helps Rare Butterfly

June 19, 2014 Elisa O'Halloran, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Every year, millions of tourists fly from central Mexico into the United States, first stopping in the deep American South and then continuing northward even into parts of southern Canada. How all of this is done without passports, customs agents or airplanes? This is the annual journey made by...

Conservation

Final Yearly Snowpack Forecast Divides West into a Wet North and Dry South

June 18, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Every winter Westerners look to the mountains and may not realize they’re peering into the future. More snow cap means more water come spring and summer. Many lives and livelihoods depend on nature’s uneven hand. Thanks to USDA’s National Water and Climate Center, what used to be speculation is now...

Conservation

The More Conservation for the Illinois and Macinaw Rivers - the Better

June 10, 2014 Tim Malone, District Conservationist, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

Rivers are special places, and for me, the Illinois and Macinaw rivers in central Illinois are my special places. Both rivers eventually send their waters to the Mississippi River, and the area provides habitat for wildlife as well as recreational opportunities like hunting and fishing. But the...

Conservation

Conservation Work in Arkansas Makes Positive Impact Downstream

June 09, 2014 Ann Mills, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment

I recently toured several farms near Stuttgart, Ark. with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s acting Assistant Administrator for Water Nancy Stoner, state officials and conservationists. We met farmers working to clean and conserve water using conservation efforts, including the Mississippi River...

Conservation

USDA Helps Landowners Manage for Soil Health, Buffer Drought Effects

June 06, 2014 Ciji Taylor, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Soil health is always important, but extreme weather in the last few years has shown landowners just how important managing for it really is. “The vital part of soil is topsoil, which unfortunately is also the part most susceptible to the effects of weather. That’s what makes protecting it so...

Conservation
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