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Forestry


Wood-to-Energy Recovery Act Funds Bring Jobs, Energy Savings to Maine

July 27, 2011 R. "Fitz" Fitzhenry, U.S. Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry

In August 2009, a total of $11.4 million in U.S. Forest Service Recovery Act funds were made available to the State of Maine for grants to help rural, economically depressed counties support the conversion of heating systems to wood/dual-fuel heating systems for an estimated 15 public buildings.

Initiatives Energy Forestry

Answering the Call: Making Science More Accessible for Forest Planners in the East

July 26, 2011 Emrys Treasure, Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

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 the USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. In forests, climate change ramps up stress already occurring from extreme weather events, disease and insect outbreaks...

Forestry Research and Science

The Forest Service Feds Feed Families

July 25, 2011 Deidra L. McGee, Public Affairs Manager, Office of Communication

One in six Americans lives in hunger every day, as millions of Americans struggle to put food on the table for their families. Traditionally, summer is a time when food banks and charities encounter decreases in donations and increases in the need for assistance.

Forestry

US Forest Service Finds that Forests Play Huge Role in Reducing Carbon and Higher Global Temps

July 14, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Forests absorb carbon like a giant sponge into what scientists call a carbon sink. This fact is well known throughout the scientific community. However, what scientists weren’t sure of until now is the amount of carbon forests can store. For years scientists knew a large amount of carbon was somehow...

Forestry

New Guide to Managing Invasive Plants in the South

July 12, 2011 Teresa Jackson, Public Affairs Specialist, Forest Service Southern Research Station

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 the USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. Nonnative plants have hitchhiked their way into flower beds, gardens, and yards of landowners in the South for decades...

Forestry Research and Science

US Forest Service Helps Young Adults Bring Awareness to National Forests Though a Cross-Country Adventure

July 07, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The original slogan of the trekking group GreenXC read: Share a Ride, Tell a Story, Save a Park. Now they added and a National Forest (as in the U.S. Forest Service). This is because these young folks (all under 30), embarking on this bold transnational ride-share journey that departs July 27 th...

Forestry

US Forest Service Research of Black Fingers of Death Fungus May Lessen the Intensity of Wildland Fires

June 29, 2011 Robert Hudson Westover, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA Forest Service

The long battle to mitigate and potentially eliminate cheatgrass, one of the American West’s most menacing invasive weeds, has just taken a positive step forward. U.S. Forest Service research, conducted by ecologist Susan Meyer, has demonstrated in field trials that the fungal pathogen known...

Forestry Research and Science

Faces of the Forest Celebrates David Ferrell

June 24, 2011 Kathryn Sosbe, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

David Ferrell seems to rebound from setbacks with a vengeance. During his first semester of college, his mother fell ill and he had to drop out to help take care of her and his four younger siblings. Back home, Ferrell met Charles Minor, a local Virginia man who would become a lifelong influence and...

Forestry

Alaskan Tlingit Elder Leaves Long-Lasting Legacy

June 24, 2011 Deidra L. McGee, Forest Service Public Affairs Manager

The Forest Service fondly remembers the contributions of Dr. Walter A. Soboleff, a centenarian deeply revered and Tlingit elder, who died last month at the age of 102. Located in Alaska, the Tlingit are a Native society that developed a complex hunter-gatherer culture in the temperate rainforest of...

Forestry

Recovery Act Gives Picturesque Alaskan Visitor Center a Boost

June 23, 2011 By Deidra L. McGee, Forest Service Public Affairs Manager

The Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center located on the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska is a site to see for many tourists. This recently renovated Center is a popular cruise ship destination giving a boost to the local economy. Tourism spending in the Juneau, Alaska area is expected to...

Forestry
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