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Val Hickerson sitting on a Port Orford cedar stump at a POC validation planting on his farm.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: June 9, 2003

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Mikki Coumas collecting larch for containerized seed orchard (CSO) grafting. Dorena Genetic Resource Center. Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: January 16, 2001

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

  

Sesquicentennial commemorations at Monocacy National Battlefield. NPS Photo.

Across the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests, we work on improving aquatic connectivity by removing barriers, decreasing sources of sediment, and increasing large woody debris in streams. Forests serve as great filters so water quality is excellent in mountain streams, but unpaved roads, trails, or campsites next to streams can allow sediment to get to the streams. Learn more at: www.fs.usda.gov/resources/conf/landmanagement/resourceman...

 

The Chattahoochee National Forest has 2,436 miles of perennial streams. About 1,770 miles (72 percent) are classified as cold water streams. The remaining 666 miles (28 percent) are classified as cool water streams.The highest diversity of fish of the 43 watersheds for the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests is the upper Conasauga watershed with 73 fish species, 9 of which are federally-listed threatened or endangered, or Forest Service sensitive.

 

Members of the 86th Civil Engineer Squadron search a wetland for life April 22, 2015, at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. The 86th CES conducted a survey of the wildlife and their habitats to determine Ramstein’s impact on the environment and natural habitats on the installation. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Armando A. Schwier-Morales)

Seedling killed by Phytophthora lateralis. Port Orford cedar root disease resistance test site, planted in 2000. Bill Creek, BLM Medford District, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: October 16, 2003

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Across the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests, we work on improving aquatic connectivity by removing barriers, decreasing sources of sediment, and increasing large woody debris in streams. Forests serve as great filters so water quality is excellent in mountain streams, but unpaved roads, trails, or campsites next to streams can allow sediment to get to the streams. Learn more at: www.fs.usda.gov/resources/conf/landmanagement/resourceman...

 

The Chattahoochee National Forest has 2,436 miles of perennial streams. About 1,770 miles (72 percent) are classified as cold water streams. The remaining 666 miles (28 percent) are classified as cool water streams.The highest diversity of fish of the 43 watersheds for the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests is the upper Conasauga watershed with 73 fish species, 9 of which are federally-listed threatened or endangered, or Forest Service sensitive.

 

Ribes sanguinium - an alternate host for white pine blister rust. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Jerry Barnes

Date: c.2002

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: Gerald Barnes collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program.

 

To learn more about the history of the DGRC, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Pine seedlings. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: 1968

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.

Source: Division of Timber Management, Insect and Disease Control Branch print collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.

 

For more about the Dorena Genetic Resource Center, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Champion Mine. Umpqua National Forest, Oregon.

 

Note: The last western white pine in this area was killed by blister rust in 1994.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: August 16, 2003

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC online photo collection: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Cone storage at Dorena Genetic Resource Center. Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: October 31, 2001

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

  

Bro Kinloch (left) and Delbert Albin.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: c.2002

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

4655 – Austrade Staff Daniela Assis, Patrick Hanlon, Martin Ferreyra

at LADU - Latin America Down Under - a METS networking event held at Sheraton on the Park, Sydney, May 2014

Seed orchard. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: 1968

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.

Source: Division of Timber Management, Insect and Disease Control Branch print collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.

 

For more about the Dorena Genetic Resource Center, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Ribes leaf infected with blister rust used as inoculum. Dorena Genetic Resource Center. Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo and caption by: Jerry Barnes

Date: c.2002

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: Gerald Barnes collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program.

 

To learn more about the history of the DGRC, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

L-R: Dean Davis (R5), Sally Long, Bob Danchok. White pine blister rust resistance field testing by the Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: c.2000

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC online photo collection: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

4647 - Delegation at the Austrade Business Lounge at LADU 2014

 

Western larch cones in potted orchard. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: June 8, 2006

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Upper portion of Schnebly HIll formation known as Sycamore Pass member, up to 700 feet of red to orange Permian sandstone containing high-angle cross-beds. Oak Creek, AZ 2/14/14

Laura Berdeen pollinating Port Orford cedar in the greenhouse. Dorena Genetic Resource Center, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Richard Sniezko

Date: March 20, 2003

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Sesquicentennial commemorations at Monocacy National Battlefield. NPS Photo.

Richard Heinberg the US Senior Fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, widely regarded as one of the world's foremost Peak Oil educators, has published an article on Aljazeera discussing humanity’s choices to either compete or cooperate in future resource management. Heinberg states “The world's governments engage continually in both cooperative and competitive behavior, though sometimes extremes of these tendencies come to the fore - with open conflict exemplifying unbridled competition. Geopolitics typically involves both cooperative and competitive strategies, with the long-term goal centered on furthering national interest… If the path towards increasing competition leads to both internal and external conflict, then the result - for winners and losers alike, in a "full" world seeing rapid resource depletion - will most probably be economic and ecological ruin accompanied by political chaos… Yet this is not the only outcome available to world leaders and civil society. A cooperative strategy is at least theoretically feasible - and its foundations already exist in institutions and practices developed during recent decades.”

Scott Kolpak. Dorena Genetic Resource Center. Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Unknown

Date: c.2003

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, Umpqua National Forest, Dorena Genetic Resource Center.

Source: DRGC digital photo collection; courtesy Richard Sniezko, Cottage Grove, Oregon.

 

Dorena Genetic Resource Center (DGRC) is the USDA Forest Service's regional service center for genetics in the Pacific Northwest Region. Dorena houses disease resistance breeding programs for five-needled pines and Port-Orford-cedar, a native plant development program, and the National Tree Climbing Program. For additional photos of the DGRC program, see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/landmanagement/resourcemanageme...

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

4903- Day 2 Morning Panel inclding Austrade General Manager

Grame Barty at LADU, Sydney May 2014

Marine Recreation Specialist Susanna Musick and Virginia Saltwater Fishing Tournament Director Lewis Gillingham lead a workshop to train recreational fishers for the Virginia Game Fish Tagging Program at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) Monday, July 20, 2020 in Gloucester Point, VA.

 

The Virginia Game Fish Tagging Program, now in its 25th year, trains and maintains an experienced group of 200 anglers who volunteer to to properly tag and release their fish catch.

 

(Photo by Madeleine Jepsen | Virginia Sea Grant)

Bloomberg business interview taken in the AUstrade Business Lounge at LADU - Latin America Down Under 2014, Sydney May 2014

Taken at LADU - latin America Downunder - a mjor Australian METS networking event , held at the Sheratorn on the Park Hotel, Sydney May 2014

4987 - South American delegation attending LADU Sydney May 2014

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