Blog

Christmas Comes Early for Eagle Cam Viewers

What’s better than a camera that gives viewers worldwide a rare glimpse inside a bald-eagle nest? That’s easy – two cameras. And with the launch today of the latest rendition of the Pennsylvania Game Commission’s Eagle Cam, those cameras are running round the clock, with the video they capture being streamed in real time to what undoubtedly will be a million or more viewers around the globe This is the third year the Game Commission has installed its Eagle Cam to help teach all of us more about nature and wildlife, and the newly launched run is shaping up to
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Largest Addition to PA State Forest System in 65 Years

A significant young forest restoration project continues to expand on the 25,000-acre Clermont Tract in northern Pennsylvania’s McKean County. With guidance from the Wildlife Management Institute and funding from the Wildlife For Everyone Endowment Foundation, conservationists planted 12,400 seedlings in 2015, the project’s sixth year. The planting is part of an ongoing effort to improve wildlife habitat and to monitor wildlife populations, including the American woodcock and other young forest species. Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) recently acquired the 27-square-mile property, which will be added to the adjacent Elk State Forest. The Clermont Tract represents the largest
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Forest Service Releases Updated Tool that puts Ecology in Hands of Public

The U.S. Forest Service today launched the updated version of the increasingly popular, free software i-Tree. This version includes a major new function that simulates future tree population totals, canopy cover, tree diversity and tree values by species based on user information. i-Tree and its growing suite of tools make it possible for anyone to analyze individual trees, parcels, neighborhoods, cities or an entire state. “The i-Tree enhancements will provide the public with helpful scientific information about the trees across the U.S.,” said U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell. “With i-Tree you won’t have to imagine how trees enhance your communities
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New Program Rates Bird-Smart Glass Products For Homeowners And Architects

Collisions with glass windows kill hundreds of millions of birds each year in the United States, but thanks to American Bird Conservancy’s new Bird-Smart Glass Program, a list of 18 tested, proven products is now available to help homeowners and architects identify simple but effective solutions to stop birds from hitting windows. Over the last six years, ABC has led testing efforts to identify a range of products that are scientifically proven to minimize the frequency with which birds collide with windows—but are also affordable and aesthetically suitable. The result, to date, is 18 products found to be effective in significantly reducing
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Life after Hemlock: Restoring Riparian Forests in the Southern Appalachians

In the last decade, the hemlock woolly adelgid, a tiny sap-sucking insect native to Japan, has swept through southern Appalachian forests, leaving dead hemlocks in its wake. Hemlock branches no longer shade streams or tower over shrubs, and their loss has affected streamside, or riparian, forests. “Without hemlock, more sunlight reaches the forest floor,” says U.S. Forest Service scientist Chelcy Ford Miniat. The species that has benefited the most from the increased light is an evergreen shrub, rosebay rhododendron (Rhododendron maximum), which is now growing twice as fast as expected. Although rhododendron’s showy flowers are appreciated by nature-lovers, its unchecked
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Forest Service Report Highlights Restoration Progress

The U.S. Forest Service has increased the pace and scale of forest restoration by nine percent since 2011, according to a report released today.  The significant progress comes in the face of mounting challenges to the agency including record droughts, longer wildfire seasons and the increasing percentage of the agency’s budget spent fighting wildland fires. Despite the gains, at least 65 million National Forest System acres are still in need of restoration work. The rising cost of wildfire suppression, as fires have become more intense and more expensive to fight in recent years, has taken funding away from restoration, watershed
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