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Re-establishing Tribal Biodiversity through Agroforestry

November 17, 2014 Kate MacFarland, U.S.D.A. National Agroforestry Center and Colleen Rossier, University of California-Davis

The Karuk and Yurok Tribes traditionally managed entire watersheds and ecosystems on their ancestral lands to meet their dietary, cultural and spiritual needs. The Tribes are now working with University of California -Berkeley, University of California -Davis, the U.S. Forest Service and other...

Conservation Forestry

Milwaukee Welcomes the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, Salutes Veterans

November 13, 2014 Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

Despite the rain and freezing temperatures, there was warmth and good cheer in the hearts of everyone who came out to catch a glimpse of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree and help transform Milwaukee’s Cathedral Square Park into Community Spirit Park on Veteran’s Day. The fanfare also helped to honor...

Forestry

Volunteers Clear Weeds to Benefit Rocky Mountain Elk Habitat, Celebrate 50th Year of the Wilderness Act

November 12, 2014 Anne Janik, Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre and Gunnison National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

The Raggeds Wilderness, a nearly 65,000-acre area on the Gunnison and White River National Forests near Paonia, Colorado, is prime elk habitat with herd numbers in the hundreds. Acres of undisturbed coniferous forests are interspersed with open slopes of wet meadows thick with grasses and sedges, a...

Forestry

A U.S. Forest Service Ranger Sees Wilderness as the Ultimate Yardstick

November 07, 2014 Kathryn Sosbe, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

For most of his 16 years with the U.S. Forest Service, Dave Warnack spent them boots-on-the-ground. That’s to say that he does not just talk the talk. “Wilderness will be the ultimate index by which I measure my status, progress and overall place in the world,” Warnack says in the film “ Wilderness...

Forestry

Quick Response Codes Tell the Story of the Uwharrie Trail

November 05, 2014 Jeanie Slade, Volunteer Intern, U.S. Forest Service National Forests in North Carolina

Hikers of a popular trail in North Carolina’s Piedmont region can now have a personally guided tour, with no other person present. Boy Scout Chris Moncrief has created a listening tour for hikers along the Uwharrie National Recreation Trail using Quick Response (QR) codes. QR codes are machine...

Forestry

U.S. Forest Service Harvests 2014 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree in Minnesota

October 31, 2014 Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

On a cold afternoon in late October, about 500 people, including local area third graders who had made ornaments for it, gathered to witness the cutting of the 88-foot, 13,000-pound 2014 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree on the Chippewa National Forest in north central Minnesota. To help stay warm and...

Forestry

O Halloween, Arachnophobia, Entomophobia, and Why Insects Exist

October 30, 2014 Paul Ross, U.S. Forest Service

They squirm, crawl, scurry and swarm … and they’re all around us. More than 900,000 species of insects and arachnids are found around the world, and some people would rather not come into contact with even one of the often misunderstood critters. The fear for me came when I was 7 years old during...

Forestry

Life in the Colorado Wilderness: Journal Entry Reflects Rangers' Experiences in Retracing Arthur Carhart's First Journey to Trappers Lake

October 29, 2014 Kate Jerman, White River National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

In 1919, landscape architect Arthur Carhart made his first journey to Colorado’s Trappers Lake and the Flat Top Wilderness. His idea of keeping natural areas of beauty free from development inspired the Forest Service to be the first natural resource agency to push for designated wilderness areas...

Forestry

Working the Night Shift - Bats Play an Important Role in Pollinating Crops

October 29, 2014 Pattie Thomas, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Most people associate pollination with bees and birds but often forget the work of their furry colleagues: bats. Bats take the night shift, playing a major role in pollinating crops and spreading seeds. One important bat is the Mexican long-nose bat, which dwells in large colonies. Their range...

Conservation Forestry

Under Secretary Bonnie Tells World Congress of Scientists Their Work will Light the Way to Better Forest Management

October 29, 2014 Carita Chan, Research and Development, U.S. Forest Service

Confronting climate change will be substantially cheaper and easier if we conserve forests, and the key to that is expert knowledge and science, Undersecretary of Natural Resources and the Environment Robert Bonnie told thousands of attendees at the recent 24 th World Congress of the International...

Conservation Forestry

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