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Forests


Two-Year Anniversary of Customer Experience Executive Order: Pt. 4 Partnering with Land Managers and Landowners

January 19, 2024 Simchah Suveyke-Bogin, Chief Customer Experience Officer for the Office of Customer Experience

Our nation's lands are vital to providing clean water, fish and wildlife habitat, sustainable wood, minerals, energy, jobs and places for Americans to enjoy the outdoors. USDA’s Forest Service is responsible for managing 193 million acres of grasslands and forests. For rural America to thrive, we...

Climate Equity Farming Food and Nutrition Forestry Initiatives Nutrition Security USDA Results

Introducing the New USDA Climate Hubs Web Portal

September 29, 2017 Dr. David Brown, USDA Southern Plains Climate Hub Director

Since 2014, the ten USDA Climate Hubs have been helping farmers, ranchers, forest landowners, resource managers, and rural communities plan for and manage weather- and climate-related risks and vulnerabilities. A key element of that effort has been the distribution of information resources via the...

Climate

Research Can Help the Economy and Inform Policy

February 16, 2017 Cody Sullivan, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development

When most people think of forests, science isn’t the first thing that comes to mind, but, perhaps, it should. That’s because the U.S. Forest Service Research and Development program oversees projects across many science disciplines including forestry, genetics, wildlife, forest products and wildfire...

Forestry Research and Science

Bringing Back Diversity in Eastern Forests for Landowners, Wildlife

December 29, 2016 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

What do biologists look for in a healthy forest? A diversity in the ages and composition of trees and occasional breaks in canopy to allow sunlight to reach understory plants. Healthy forests, just like healthy human populations, are sustained by a diversity of ages. Each group has a role to play in...

Conservation

Interactive Online Resource to Learn about Climate Change Adaptation

December 21, 2016 Kailey Marcinkowski, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The Climate Change Resource Center (CCRC) has recently released a new education resource on climate change adaptation responses to help the USDA Forest Service, USDA Climate Hubs, other agencies, and the general public learn more about responding to a changing climate. The CCRC is an online...

Initiatives Forestry

Southern Landowners Want to Help At-Risk Wildlife Species

November 30, 2016 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service, Office of Communication

Amid rising numbers of at-risk wildlife in the South, a new report from the American Forest Foundation (AFF) revealed private and family landowners in the South offer a solution to help at-risk wildlife species. Southern forests rank at the top in terms of biodiversity when measured by the number of...

Forestry

US Forest Service Every Kid in a Park Program Offers Field Trip Idea, Educational Resources - and a Free Holiday Tree Permit

November 03, 2016 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

For the second year, the U.S. Forest Service is part of the administration’s Every Kid in a Park program, an initiative to provide American fourth graders with a free pass to more than 2,000 federal land and water sites for them, their siblings and up to three adults. The pass includes access to 153...

Forestry

Looking to the Future and Learning from the Past in our National Forests

November 01, 2016 Randy Johnson, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development Program

Forests are changing in ways they’ve never experienced before because today’s growing conditions are different from anything in the past. The climate is changing at an unprecedented rate, exotic diseases and pests are present, and landscapes are fragmented by human activity often occurring at the...

Forestry

Pennsylvania Landowners Helping Indiana Bat through 'Spooky' Declines

October 26, 2016 Molly Hippensteel, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Pennsylvania

When most people think of bats, images of dark caves, vampires and Halloween come to mind. But actually, bats get a bad rap, and we often don’t know how important they are for controlling insects, pollinating plants, dispersing seeds and improving biodiversity. Many of our nation’s bats are facing...

Conservation Forestry

Five Ways Agroforestry Can Grow Forest Products and Benefit Your Land, Your Pockets & Wildlife

October 19, 2016 Jocelyn Benjamin, USDA-NRCS and Kate MacFarland, USDA National Agroforestry Center

Much of the beauty in American agricultural landscapes is complemented by the trees in those landscapes. We depend on these tree’s products every day–from the paper our children use in school, to many of the fruits we eat, the wood burning in our fireplaces, and the wildlife habitat created by those...

Conservation Forestry
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