Zon Webgids www.ext.colostate.edu/ Cornell Cooperative extension Aims to improve new York State new mexico State University Cooperative extension service http://zoek.versatel.nl/odp/index.cgi?/Science/Agriculture/Education/Cooperative
Cooperative Extension Directors NMSU Cooperative extension service new mexico State University PO Box 30003 MSC 3AE EMail extension@wsu.edu Web Page http//ext.wsu.edu/ http://www.colostate.edu/Orgs/WAAESD/Extension.html
New Mexico State University - Department Of Entomology Monthly column in the new mexico cooperative extension newsletter Crop Pest Reporter, 1979. Round headed broom snakeweed borer. new Mex. coop. ext. Ser. http://taipan.nmsu.edu/eppws/profs/drichman.html
CSREES - USDA - Urban Program Resources Mississippi State University extension service virgilc@ext.msstate.edu. Missouri new mexico. new York D. Merrill Ewert Cornell Cooperative extension http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/part/urban_part_contacts.html
Blister Beetles In Alfalfa new mexico State Cooperative extension service. Las Cruces, NM. Guide A3201-4. NMSU Cooperative ext. service, Agri. Sci. Center at Artesia. http://www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_circulars/circ536.html
Extractions: New Mexico State University This Publication is scheduled to be updated and reissued 12/01. This is a text version only and does not contain the graphic elements of Circular 536. To view the photographs and other graphics, please access the PDF file of Circular 536 or contact the Department of Agricultural Communications for a hard copy. Several valuable horses and other livestock have died after being fed alfalfa hay contaminated with bodies or parts of blister beetles. This publication provides information on the veterinary and agronomic importance, distinguishing features, biology, and the distribution and control of this group of insects. Recommendations for the purchase and use of alfalfa hay by horsemen and other livestock owners are also given. Blister beetles get their common name from the irritating reaction of their body fluids with animal skin or delicate membranes. These fluids contain cantharidin, a potent blistering agent, present in varying amounts in most blister beetle species. Fluids are released when the beetle is crushed or handled roughly. Cantharidin is a stable chemical and a long-term health threat to nearly all livestock, particularly horses, that are fed contaminated hay. Storing infested hay does not significantly reduce the amount of cantharidin in the hay. Research reports indicate cantharidin toxosis can be induced in dairy and beef cattle, goats and sheep; other reports include rabbits, hedgehogs, rats, mice and dogs. Cases of human death have been reported also. However, horses appear to be more susceptible to the toxic effects of this potent chemical than other livestock.
Community Nutrition Action Program State Contacts Nutrition Specialist coop. ext. 5717 Corbett Hall, Room 300 University of Maine new mexico State University Gerald Thomas HallRm 363 Knox St. http://schoolmeals.nal.usda.gov/Training/states.html
Extractions: Eligibility Age: Three-years to twenty-one-years The New Mexico Technology Assistance Program (NM TAP) is New Mexico's Tech Act Program under federal funding. NM TAP established the ABLE (Assistive Bank of Loan-able Equipment) statewide loan bank to provide a way for special education students from three-years to twenty-one years and their families to try out communication devices and other assistive devices. To be eligible for an equipment loan, the student's school district or Regional Education Cooperative must have signed a Cooperative Agreement with NM TAP and the need for the assistive technology device must be documented in the student's Individualized Education Program (IEP). Equipment trials can take place in the school, home, community and work setting. Ability Center
Sources Extension Resource Materials Cooperative Extension service Auburn University Duncan Hall Auburn, AL 368495614 new mexico State University Las Cruces, NM 88003 (505) 646-3015 http://web1.msue.msu.edu/msue/imp/modtd/33629843.html
USEPA - SEA - What's New University of new Hampshire Cooperative extension service ceinfo.unh.edu PUBLICATIONS Virginia Cooperative extension service www.ext.vt.edu http://www.epa.gov/seahome/farmasyst/states.htm
Extractions: Software for Environmental Awareness Serving Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin and 35 Tribes Contact Us Print Version Search: EPA Home SEAHOME Titles Topics ... Links All the links on this page are to sites outside the EPA. "Links to Web sites outside the U.S. EPA Web site are for the convenience of the user. The Standards of Ethical Conduct do not permit the U.S. EPA to endorse any private sector Web site, product, or service. The U.S. EPA does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at this location. This link is being provided consistent with the intended purpose of the EPA Web site." AL AK AS AZ ... WY www.uwex.edu/farmasyst
Tourism: The Economic Impact Of Visitors To Your Community Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, How many tourists will a new project bring to the community? http://www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/publications/freepubs/WREP-144.html
Extractions: University of Wyoming Source: Adapted from California Economic Practices Manual (chapter 1). Impact studies that examine the economic effects within a community of development projects such as a new hotel are usually confined to a fiscal analysis of local government costs and revenues. But increasing emphasis on the total environment-social, biological, and business-calls for an appraisal of broader impacts within the community for a wholistic perspective. Economic impact studies need to provide information about the effects on jobs, income, or housing, as well as how a project will affect the community's overall environment. The effects a project has on various groups within a community (i.e. its distribution effects) are often more important than its economic efficiency. An economic impact assessment can become a useful tool for a community to use in working out what is most economically effective considering the goals for family income, distribution of benefits and costs, fiscal impacts, benefits over time, etc. The approach to setting up such a study will depend on the situation, the community, and the analyst's judgment. The study is not the final word on whether a particular choice should be made; it simply presents alternatives and their effects. The purpose of an economic study is to put some practical problems in proper perspective for a public decision-making process. Frequently, decisions must be made with less information than any community would desire.
Berkeley Electric Cooperative- Your Touchstone Energy Partner Berkeley Electric Cooperative welcomes you to our service area. Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, new Hampshire, new Jersey, new mexico http://www.becsc.com/index.cfm?page=bp&id=9
Housing Education And Research Association Montana State University ext. service 109 Taylor Hall Bozeman MT 59717 Rutgers Cooperative extension 71 Lipman Drive new Brunswick, NJ 08901 http://www.housingeducators.org/Consumers/Statecontacts.shtml
Endorsers Of Asset Building Erica J. Henize, Otero Youth Empowerment Assn, Alamogordo, new mexico Flossie A. Thurston, Langston University Cooperative ext., Langston, Oklahoma http://www.search-institute.org/9-11home/endorsers.html
Extractions: We endorse "An Affirmation of Asset Building in a Time of Uncertainty" and will seek to embody its intent through our asset-building efforts in our relationships, families, communities, and organizations. We will be resources to each other and will help each other keep these commitments. (Organizations and communities are listed for identification purposes only.) Mary Ackerman, , Search Institute, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Grandparents Raising Grandchildren - State Contacts Cooperative Extension service, The University of Georgia Child Development Family Life Specialist, new mexico Cooperative Extension service http://www.uwex.edu/grg/memsc.html
Services Optométriques (O.P.T..) Inc. - Complete Profile Marketing/COOP program. service Name, Securo Vision Inc. Nevada; new Hampshire; new Jersey; new mexico; new York; North Carolina; North Dakota; Ohio http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/ccc/search/navigate.do?language=eng&portal=1&estblmntN
Natural Resources Extension Professionals Conference Chris Waddill, Dean and Director, Florida Cooperative Extension service, University of Florida, Monitoring for Ranchers in new mexico Range, Riparian, http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/nrep/
Extractions: The Cooperative Extension Service was established to provide a non-traditional approach of applying research knowledge to help resolve community issues. Extension has developed a strong tradition and an excellent reputation for serving the same clientele base extremely well. However, this tradition is now preventing Extension from effectively addressing many other issues that have emerged during the past century. The theme to be explored during this conference is whether another rapid (revolutionary) or a more gradual (evolutionary) rate of change should occur to make Extension more relevant in todays communities and the role of natural resource extension programming in this revision. Who Should Attend Natural resource extension professionals and those who work with or would like to partner with these educators in environmental education, fisheries, wildlife, range, forestry, forest products, toxicology, ecotourism, water conservation and quality, sea grant, public policy, nature interpretation, watershed planning, ecological economics, rural development and other related disciplines. The primary audience consists of three groups: 1) Extension personnel at state 1862, 1890 and 1994 Land Grant Institutions (county faculty, county directors, district directors, specialists, department chairs, state program leaders and state directors); 2) National program leaders, and other staff with the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service; 3) Natural resource educators from other governmental agencies and private not-for-profit organizations.
ATTRAnews - May/June 2005 the late 1980s, says Francis Schiflett of Uvas Valley Farms in Deming, new mexico. Oklahoma Coop ext., OSU, and Oklahoma Conservation Commission http://attra.ncat.org/newsletter/attranews_0505.html
Extractions: Water shortages are coming to a farm near you, perhaps sooner than you think. How can you improve your system? Farmers nationwide are finding ways to protect the water that runs through their farms. This issue of ATTRAnews looks at innovative conservation practices that save water, improve water quality, and increase the water-holding capacity of your soil. To learn more, you can call ATTRA's sustainable agriculture specialists at 800-346-9140. In this issue: By Karen Van Epen, NCAT Program Specialist
Extractions: FOR ENDANGERED SOUTHWESTERN BIRD In compliance with a court order, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reproposed 1,556 miles within the100-year floodplain of waters in California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico as critical habitat for an endangered migratory bird, the southwestern willow flycatcher, which was listed as endangered in 1995. The Service designated 599 river miles of flycatcher critical habitat in New Mexico, Arizona and California in 1997. Since the initial designation, the existence of additional breeding locations in southwestern Colorado, and southern Nevada and Utah has been recognized. In
Extractions: Laura Romin (UT) 801-975-3330 ext 142 DRAFT MEXICAN SPOTTED OWL ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL REPORTS AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC REVIEW The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) has released draft reports on the potential economic and environmental impacts of a proposed designation of critical habitat for the Mexican spotted owl. The owls habitat varies from canyon to mountain forest habitats across a range that extends from southern Utah and Colorado, through Arizona and New Mexico, to the mountains of central Mexico. The public is invited to submit comments on the proposed designation or the draft reports by April 26, 2004. In addition, an informational meeting will be held on April 20 in Las Cruces, New Mexico from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Corbett Center on the New Mexico State University, Jordan and University Streets. When specifying any particular area as critical habitat, the