The positive economic and environmental impacts of active land management in the Manti-La Sal National Forest, Utah. They provide the largest timber sales in Manti-La Sal Forest history.
A Forest Service partnership that results in the salvage and re-use of urban wood from deconstructed rowhomes in Baltimore, focusing on the ways of diverting waste, creating jobs and economic value...
This is an instructional video designed to accompany K-12 curriculum developed by RMRS in collaboration with the Blackfeet Community College, Browning, MT. In this recorded interview, Blackfeet eld...
Mini-documentary about a partnership that results in the salvage and re-use of urban wood from deconstructed rowhomes in Baltimore, focusing on the ways that this project/partnership diverts waste,...
The National Forests are for you to explore, and discover. Go. Play. Discover. There are 193 million acres of rivers, mountains, forests for you to enjoy– #It’sAllYours! Video edited by Charity Par...
Winter is a great time to get out on your National Forest and play! There are many opportunities to enjoy the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest in the winter including skiing, snowshoeing and sno...
U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station researchers explain how their work and scientific findings on the Kings River Experimental Watersheds, located on the Sierra National Forest, ...
Forester on the Street is a production by the U.S. Forest Service intended to educate people about their national forests and grasslands. The segment will send Forest Service employees to a different city every month to talk to people about significant events or interesting trivia. May brought the Forester on the Street team to Sacramento, California, where they asked passers-by who stewards their national forests and grasslands, and what significant threats those lands face.
Writer/Host– John Heil Videographer/Director – Paul Robbins Jr. Producer – Ann Dunsky
i-Tree Canopy offers a quick and easy way to produce a statistically valid estimate of land cover types (e.g., tree cover) using aerial images available in Google Maps. The latest version of Canopy also estimates values for air pollution reduction and capturing atmospheric carbon. Canopy can be used by urban forest managers to estimate tree canopy cover, set canopy goals and monitor canopy change over time. Canopy can also be used to estimate inputs for use in i-Tree Hydro and elsewhere where land cover data are needed.