USDA Forest Service’s Post

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Agroforestry can provide jobs and increase economic well-being in rural communities. Within a landscape, agroforestry can create transition zones that help reconnect agriculture, people, and communities, creating a multi-functional and more sustainable landscape. Within a watershed, agroforestry practices can resemble a living patchwork quilt that connects headwater forests through agricultural lands to urban areas and on to the sea; providing cleaner water for communities - both locally and downstream - and other public benefits, such as those mentioned above. Read how urban communities are adapting agroforestry practices to benefit people: https://lnkd.in/gFQ8mc4f USDA

  • A man walks through squares of gardens in an urban setting.
(USDA Forest Service Photo by Preston Keres)
  • Coastal Roots Farm, a small urban farm in San Diego, California, is able to maximize production by utilizing vertical space through alley cropping. (USDA Forest Service photo by Katherine Favor)
  • One of the 71 school food forests that are part of The Education Fund’s Food Forests for Schools program. (USDA Forest Service photo by Katherine Favor)
  • Urban and community agroforestry sites can serve as places for community members to connect with each other and the natural world. (USDA Forest Service photo by Katherine Favor)
  • Local neighbors come together to plant a new food forest on county park land in San Antonio, Texas. (USDA Forest Service photo by Katherine Favor)
Deidre Brown

Deidre Brown foundation aka the foundation copyright

2mo

Looks like bathsalts and population eating faces

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Wesley Rummage

Enviromental Studies at University of Tennessee, Knoxville

1mo

Interesting

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Marla S. Powers

Environmental Planner, Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe

2mo

Love this!

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