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APHIS


USDA Launches a One Stop Shop for its "One Health" Approach to Zoonotic Threats

June 29, 2016 Dr. Steven Kappes, Co-Chair, USDA Agricultural Research Service; Dr. David Goldman, Co-Chair, USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service and Dr. Brian McCluskey, Co-Chair, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service - USDA One Health Joint Working Group

At USDA, we use a One Health approach that embraces the idea that problems arising at the intersection of the health of humans, animals, and the environment can be solved only through a coordinated multidisciplinary approach. This approach embraces the idea that a disease problem impacting the...

Conservation Health and Safety Animals Plants

USDA Signs Three International Agreements Supporting Animal Health and Global Trade

June 27, 2016 Donna Karlsons, APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

International trade is a key factor in the economic and financial stability of many countries. Trade restrictions resulting from an animal disease outbreak can have devastating economic effects. With this in mind, USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service signed three international...

Animals Plants Trade USDA Results

Climate Hubs Help APHIS Adapt to Climate Change

May 31, 2016 Scott Moore, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

All this month we will be taking a look at what a changing climate means to Agriculture. The ten regional USDA Climate Hubs were established to synthesize and translate climate science and research into easily understood products and tools that land managers can use to make climate-informed...

Animals Plants USDA Results

Biocontrol Staff Are Modern-Day MacGyvers in the Fight Against Invasive Beetle

May 23, 2016 Sharon Lucik, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS)

Emerald ash borer (EAB) beetle is an invasive wood boring beetle, first detected in July 2002 in southeastern Michigan. The pest attacks and kills ash trees and it is responsible for the death and decline of tens of millions of ash in 25 states. EAB lives under the bark and when people move EAB...

Animals Plants

Smokejumpers Help Ohio Fight Beetle Fire

May 05, 2016 Rhonda Santos, APHIS Public Information Officer

Smokejumpers are a unique breed. They are people who are willing to jump, really parachute, out of an aircraft to provide a quick attack on forest fires. While smokejumpers are highly trained, experienced firefighters, they are also expert tree climbers. These firefighters usually work in rugged...

Forestry Animals Plants

Rabies and Vampire Bats

May 04, 2016 Gail Keirn, Public Affairs Specialist, USDA, APHIS

All this month we will be taking a look at what a changing climate means to Agriculture. For APHIS, changes in environmental conditions will increase the likelihood of shifts in the distribution and nature of current domestic diseases, invasive species and agricultural pests. These changes will...

Animals Plants

Welcoming the U.S. Chief Veterinary Officer, Dr. Jack Shere

April 19, 2016 Lillian McIntyre, APHIS Intern

Dr. Jack Shere, a long-time employee of USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), was recently named USDA’s Chief Veterinary Officer leading APHIS’s Veterinary Services program. Dr. Shere joined APHIS in 1990 and has held a variety of field and leadership positions – serving as the...

Animals Plants

The Little-Known Threat to Wild Turkeys

April 04, 2016 Mike Bodenchuk, Texas State Director, APHIS Wildlife Services

Spring brings new life to the fields and forests and wild turkeys are one of the most interesting spectacles this time of year. Male turkeys gobble and strut to attract the attention of hen turkeys. Hens, in turn, go off and lay their eggs- one egg each day until the clutch is complete and the hens...

Animals Plants

FAS Opens Up New Market Opportunities for U.S. Dairy Cattle in Pakistan

March 30, 2016 Jocelyn Brown, Deputy Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service, Office of Capacity Building and Development

U.S. dairy cows are back in Pakistan for the first time in 17 years. More than 300 heifers arrived in Punjab Province on March 2, thanks to the efforts of USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS). It’s hoped the shipment will be the first of many from the United States and will provide a better...

Trade

How USDA & Partners Eradicated Oriental Fruit Fly from Florida

March 28, 2016 John Stewart, Fruit Fly Policy Manager for the Plant Protection and Quarantine Program of USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

There’s a good reason why USDA and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) constantly monitor more than 56,000 fruit fly traps they have strategically placed across Florida. An outbreak of exotic fruit flies—one of the most destructive pests of fruit and vegetables—could...

Animals Plants
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