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APHIS


Taking Hack-tion for Food, Farmers and America

June 04, 2013 Shayla Mae Bailey, AMS Public Affairs

This past weekend, civic hackers across the country took action—or hack-tion—when they gathered together to use their coding, designing and tech-making powers for good. Armed with a passion for data and working under a framework that focused their energies on solving civic problems, over 11,000...

Food and Nutrition Farming Technology

After Oklahoma Tornado, USDA Assists in Pet Rescues

May 31, 2013 Dwight Cunningham, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

“His name is Zeke,” read the Facebook posting after the May tornado that devastated Moore, Okla. “He’s a male boxer, almost 6 months old. Wearing green collar. Last seen near NW 63rd and Portland. He is fawn, black mask with white marking on face, chest and paws. We miss him very much. Please return...

Animals Plants

Global Event Hatches Backyard Poultry Software

May 24, 2013 Dwight Cunningham, Public Affairs Specialist, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Coming one day to a smartphone or tablet computer near you: An application that helps backyard poultry farmers protect their birds from disease. It might even help make them profitable, if you want. That’s the plan after a team of Animal Plant Health and Inspection Service (APHIS) officials...

Animals Plants Technology

USDA Continues to Provide Assistance to Oklahoma Tornado Survivors

May 24, 2013 Wayne Maloney, USDA Office of Communications

USDA personnel continue to assist the State of Oklahoma and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in the wake of the tornadoes and heavy rains that occurred this week. Earlier this week, USDA announced that it was working to assist Oklahomans who were left homeless by providing FEMA with a...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Rural

All That Glitters Is Not Gold ....

May 20, 2013 Lisa Peraino, Plant Health Safeguarding Specialist

In this case it is green, a brilliant emerald green, and it is chomping its way through America's forests. The emerald ash borer (EAB), Agrilus planipennis, may look pretty, but it is killing our ash trees in our forests and backyards. This is Emerald Ash Borer Awareness Week (May 19-25) and the...

Animals Plants

A Symbol of Strength, Perseverance and Dignity Shared Between Friends

May 16, 2013 Lisa Peraino, Plant Health Safeguarding Specialist

Imagine sitting at your desk one day and answering the ringing phone, only to hear the US State Department’s Office of Protocol on the other end. That is precisely what happened to Michael Perry, Export Specialist for the USDA’s Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) when he was told...

Trade

Feral Swine: Ripping and Rooting Their Way across America

April 30, 2013 Gail Keirn, APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

Feral swine have been called the “rototillers” of nature. Their longs snouts and tusks allow them to rip and root their way across America in search of food. Unfortunately, the path they leave behind impacts ranchers, farmers, land managers, conservationists, and suburbanites alike. April, Invasive...

Animals Plants

Students Aid Invasive Species Control While Learning

April 25, 2013 Brian Archuleta, Wildlife Services, Roswell District Supervisor

USDA Wildlife Services (WS) employees in New Mexico have been fabricating the traps and tools for their jobs for many years. As feral swine management work began in the state, naturally we began to build our own traps and gates to contain this invasive and damaging mammal.

Animals Plants

Let Me Be Clear: Plain Writing Matters

April 25, 2013 Jerold Mande, Senior Official for Plain Writing; Senior Advisor, Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services

“Clear, direct and easy to understand” may not be the first words most Americans associate with government publications and documents, but that is changing. Thanks to the Plain Writing Act, signed into law by President Obama in 2010, all federal agencies must now put their readers first when writing...

Health and Safety Animals Plants

Can We Eradicate the Asian Longhorned Beetle?

April 23, 2013 Rhonda Santos, APHIS Public Affairs Specialist

This past March, almost 11 years after being found in New Jersey, federal and state agriculture officials are finally able to say that the state’s long-running battle against the non-native Asian longhorned beetle (ALB) is over. New Jersey is the second state to declare itself free from the invasive...

Animals Plants
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