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Wildlife


Taking the Bait: USDA Safeguards Wildlife Against the Rabies Virus

September 25, 2023 Alisha McDowell, APHIS Public Affairs Specialist (detailed)

Rabies, one of the oldest known diseases, remains a significant wildlife-management and public-health challenge. September 28 th will mark the 17 th annual World Rabies Day, a global health observance started in 2007 to raise awareness about the disease and enhance prevention and control efforts...

Animals

The Buzz About Pollinators

June 22, 2022 Casey C. Keel, Public Affairs Specialist, Research, Education, and Economics

It’s National Pollinators Week! As an annual celebration supporting pollinators and pollinator health, we want to highlight USDA’s ongoing investments in pollinator health, crop production, and conservation. USDA’s investments help ensure the continued health of pollinators and their contribution to...

Research and Science

USDA-ARS Scientist Enlists Cattle to Create Fire Breaks

May 05, 2022 Scott Elliott and Kim Kaplan, Agricultural Research Service

According to rangeland experts, wildfires in the western Great Basin region scorched more than 14,600 square miles in just 10 years—nearly the land mass of Maryland and Delaware combined.

Research and Science

Keeping the Wolves at Bay

August 03, 2021 Bryan Potts, Writer-Editor, APHIS Executive Communications

It’s often said that, “good fences make good neighbors.” And in Wisconsin, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's Wildlife Services (WS) helped a sheep producer prove that saying true again. Using funds allocated for nonlethal livestock protection, WS designed and built a fence for the...

Animals

APHIS Wildlife Biologists Aid Squirrel Recovery on the Delmarva

October 22, 2020 Margaret “Marnie” Pepper, District Supervisor, APHIS-Wildlife Services, Chesapeake Bay Nutria Eradication Project/Detector Dog Program

Many claim that 2020 has been a year of chaos and calamity, but for one rare squirrel, it might be a year of hope and new beginnings. The Delmarva Fox Squirrel (DFS) is a subspecies of fox squirrel found on the eastern shore of Maryland, Southern Delaware and Virginia. This pudgy, slow squirrel with...

Animals Conservation

On Farms and Ranches, Every Day is Earth Day

April 22, 2019 Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation Bill Northey

At USDA, we celebrate Earth Day 2019 by offering big thank-yous to farmers, ranchers, and forest landowners for all they do. Every day, we recognize their efforts to conserve natural resources while producing food, fiber, and fuel for people in their communities and around the world. They’re doing...

Conservation Farming

USDA and Partners Work to Eliminate Invasive Nutria From Maryland’s Eastern Shore

July 02, 2018 Tanya Espinosa, Public Affairs Specialist, APHIS

Word has it that legendary actress Greta Garbo could be seen wearing nutria fur coats back in the day, and nutria fur coats can still be found in vintage clothing stores around the world. Nutria, sometimes called swamp rats, were first introduced into the United States in the 1800s to be used in the...

Animals

Feral Swine Eradication in Havasu National Wildlife Refuge: Protecting Endangered Species from Feral Swine Damage

April 17, 2018 Jeanine Neskey, Extension Specialist, USDA, APHIS

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge was established by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1941, as a refuge and breeding ground for migratory birds and other wildlife. The refuge encompasses 37,515 acres of riverine, riparian, wetland, and desert upland habitats protecting one of the last remaining natural...

Animals

Don’t Spoil Summer Fun by Forgetting Safety

June 16, 2017 Larry Moore, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The Forest Service has 193 million acres of beautiful national forests and grasslands for all of us to visit and summer is a great time to do get outside and enjoy them. The water is more comfortable for a swim, the weather is warmer, and in most places, the kids are out of school.

Forestry

Healthy Culverts Make for Healthy Drinking Water

April 10, 2017 Larry Moore, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Culverts provide an abundance of benefits to us every day. They allow us to pass over water, and for fish and wildlife to pass beneath us. And they allow us to go about our daily lives and ideally, for fish and wildlife to do the same. But when they’re badly designed, the results can be disastrous...

Forestry
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