Johnson County Conservation District

Johnson County Conservation District Improve, protect, and conserve natural resources on private lands by providing assistance to farmers and other land owners

Snuck in a little time and some pictures of our local 4H kids learning out to broil chicken/turkey for competitions.
03/30/2026

Snuck in a little time and some pictures of our local 4H kids learning out to broil chicken/turkey for competitions.

03/19/2026
Johnson and Pope County 4H
03/10/2026

Johnson and Pope County 4H

We are teaming up with UAEX-Johnson County 4-H to host a BBQ Chicken and Turkey Broiler Workshop on Thursday, March 26th from 10AM-2PM at Arkansas Tech University. 🍗🍀

This is a hands-on demo style workshop - please do not bring any equipment.

Our presenter, Dr. Crystal Ahrens Rouillier,
ATU Assistant Professor of Animal Science, will be teaching us how to send your grilling game to the next level!

WHEN? Thursday, March 26th, 2026
TIME? 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
WHERE? Arkansas Tech University - Room TBA

Complete your registration in ZSuite by Monday, March 23rd to claim your spot.

02/12/2026

***State Agencies Urge Public to Avoid Contact With
Wild Birds Due to Avian Influenza!***

LITTLE ROCK, AR – Arkansas agriculture and health agencies are urging the public to avoid contact with wild birds, especially birds that appear sick or are found dead, due to detections of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in Arkansas.

Testing has confirmed HPAI in wild birds and in backyard and commercial flocks statewide. Wild birds, particularly migrating waterfowl, are the primary source of virus spread to domestic poultry and other birds.

Agencies warn that handling sick or dead wild birds, or bringing them into homes, barns, or vehicles, can spread the virus and pose risks to people, pets, and domestic flocks.

Key Guidance for the Public
• Do not touch, move, or attempt to rescue wild birds that appear sick or are found dead.
• Do not bring wild birds into your home, vehicle, barn, or coop for any reason.
• Keep your distance from wild birds, especially waterfowl, that appear lethargic or disoriented.
• Keep pets away from wild birds and carcasses.
• Avoid areas where large numbers of wild birds are congregating when possible.
• Hunters and bird watchers should take precautions, including wearing gloves when handling birds or equipment, washing hands thoroughly after contact, and avoiding consumption of birds that appear sick or were found dead.

Who to Call
• Wild bird activity: Report concentrations of sick or dead wild birds, or other unusual activity, to the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission at agfc.com/education/avian-influenza/.
• Backyard or commercial poultry: Report suspected or confirmed poultry illness or deaths to the Arkansas Department of Agriculture’s sick bird hotline at (501) 823-1746.

Biosecurity for Bird Owners

Poultry growers should follow basic biosecurity practices to reduce the risk of HPAI. These include washing hands and footwear before and after contact with birds, restricting visitors to poultry areas, limiting exposure to wild birds, and quarantining new birds for at least two weeks before introducing them to existing flocks.

Human Health Precautions

Although human cases of HPAI are rare, people exposed to infected birds or contaminated environments should wash hands thoroughly with soap and water and wear appropriate protective equipment if handling birds is necessary. Anyone who develops flu-like symptoms after exposure to birds or other animals potentially infected with HPAI should contact the Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) Zoonotic Disease Section at (501) 280-4136 or [email protected]. ADH can coordinate appropriate testing and, if indicated, post-exposure antiviral treatment. To help prevent unnecessary exposure to others and ensure proper evaluation, individuals are encouraged to contact ADH before seeking in-person medical care.

# # #

About the Arkansas Department of Agriculture

The Arkansas Department of Agriculture is dedicated to the development and implementation of policies and programs for Arkansas agriculture, forestry, and natural resources to keep its farmers and ranchers competitive in national and international markets while conserving natural resources and ensuring safe food, fiber, and forest products for the citizens of the state and nation. For more information, visit agriculture.arkansas.gov/.

02/12/2026

We are teaming up with UAEX-Johnson County 4-H to host a BBQ Chicken and Turkey Broiler Workshop on Thursday, March 26th from 10AM-2PM at Arkansas Tech University. 🍗🍀

This is a hands-on demo style workshop - please do not bring any equipment.

Our presenter, Dr. Crystal Ahrens Rouillier,
ATU Assistant Professor of Animal Science, will be teaching us how to send your grilling game to the next level!

WHEN? Thursday, March 26th, 2026
TIME? 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
WHERE? Arkansas Tech University - Room TBA

Complete your registration in ZSuite by Monday, March 23rd to claim your spot.

New Sterile Fly Dispersal and the latest on the control of the New World Screwworm!
02/10/2026

New Sterile Fly Dispersal and the latest on the control of the New World Screwworm!

02/09/2026

Join us for the 21st Annual Tri-County Forage Production Meeting on Thursday, March 5, at 9:00 AM at the Union Bank Community Center in Paris.
Register by Monday, March 2nd, by calling Logan County Extension Service 479-963-2360 or 479-675-2787

Invasive species like the Pasture Mealybug, Feral Hogs, Spotted Lanternfly, and New World Screwworm threaten our nationa...
02/02/2026

Invasive species like the Pasture Mealybug, Feral Hogs, Spotted Lanternfly, and New World Screwworm threaten our national food security and natural ecosystems. It is important to educate not only on Capitol Hill but also locally through your Conservation Districts. On behalf of the NACD Invasive Species Subcommittee we would like to invite you to join our efforts through outreach using social media and your local connections to spotlight the economic and ecological impacts of invasive species during National Invasive Species Awareness Week (NISAW) February 23-27, 2026.

Ways to participate:
Use this social media toolkit: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ome00vMpVy6tKq_aRue8ThSDw4Ul3Z1D or interview one of your board members, employees, or partners about invasive species and their impact or what they are doing to stop them, promoting your own programs along the way, and don't forget to post with the hashtags , , and
Join and promote one of the free daily webinars here:https://naisma.org/programs/nisaw/
Share NACD's post on Instagram or Facebook.

Stronger together,
NACD Invasive Species Subcommittee

Chair: Bill Simshauser

Vice Chair: Michael Aguon

Arkansas: Cathy Sidenstricker

Pennsylvania: Sarah Carlson

Indiana: Roger Wenning

Pennsylvania: Piper Sherburne

New Jersey: Raymond Cywinski

Tennessee: Kirk Daniel

South Dakota: Trevor Williams

Wyoming: Ryan Fieldgrove

Guam: Glenn Dulla

Oklahoma: Excell Lafayette, Jr

Virginia-DO: Scott Cameron

South Carolina: Michael Stewart

North Dakota: Keith Bartholomay

Kansas: Daryl Donohue

NGLI: Patricia Brown

Past President: Billy Wilson

Advisor: Stacey Conly

National Invasive Species Awareness Week (NISAW) is an international event dedicated to raising awareness about invasive species, the threats they pose.

USDA Shifts Sterile Fly Dispersal Efforts to Defend U.S. BorderImmediate and Decisive Actions Will Better Protect U.S. A...
02/02/2026

USDA Shifts Sterile Fly Dispersal Efforts to Defend U.S. Border

Immediate and Decisive Actions Will Better Protect U.S. Animal and Public Health

Washington, D.C., January 30, 2026—The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is announcing a shift in its 100 million per week sterile fly dispersal efforts to stop the northern spread of New World screwworm (NWS). USDA will reallocate aircraft and sterile insects to reinforce coverage along the U.S.-Mexico border. The new dispersal area, or polygon, will include operations about 50 miles into Texas, along the U.S. border with the state of Tamaulipas, Mexico. Mass production and targeted dispersal of sterile insects are critical components of an effective strategy to fight NWS. Other tools including import protocols and surveillance continue to support these robust efforts to keep NWS out of the United States.

“At Secretary Rollins’ direction, our highest priority is protecting the United States from screwworm,” said Dudley Hoskins, Under Secretary of Marketing and Regulatory Programs for USDA. “The northernmost active case of NWS in Mexico is still about 200 miles away from the border, but we’ve seen cases continue to spread in Tamaulipas and further south in Mexico, so we are proactively shifting our polygon as we make every effort to prevent NWS from reaching our border.”

Sterile Fly Dispersal

Sterile insect technique, when paired with surveillance, movement restrictions, and education and outreach, is an effective tool for controlling and eradicating New World screwworm. Female New World screwworm flies only mate once in their lives, so if they mate with a sterile male, they lay unfertilized eggs that don’t hatch. Releasing sterile flies just outside of affected areas helps ensure flies traveling to new areas will only encounter sterile mates and will not be able to reproduce. In this instance, USDA will release sterile flies north of the current active NWS cases in Mexico in a proactive effort to create a sterile reproduction buffer zone if the fly moves north from Mexico.

Because it is important to continue ongoing surveillance efforts while releasing sterile insects, it is possible that sterile NWS flies could be caught and/or reported within Texas. To ensure officials can tell the difference between sterile and wild NWS flies, USDA will dye the sterile pupae, and the dye will transfer to the sterile flies when they hatch. The fluorescent dye will glow under UV light and may also be visible to the naked eye. If a sterile fly is captured in a trap, this dye will allow animal health officials to quickly rule the fly out as a threat.

USDA will continue to deploy its intensive NWS response efforts including implementing import protocols, ongoing surveillance and trapping efforts along the border, investing in NWS innovation, and supporting robust response activities in Mexico and Central America.

Import Requirements and Protocols

Sterile insects are an important tool, but USDA’s import requirements and protocols add another line of defense for NWS and other foreign animal diseases that threaten U.S. livestock. Earlier this week, the importance of those protocols was highlighted when a horse from Argentina was presented for routine importation at an equine import quarantine facility in Florida. Upon examination, APHIS identified an open wound with larvae on the animal and promptly collected and shipped samples to the National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) in Iowa. The horse was immediately treated with medication to kill any larvae in accordance with standard, long-standing import protocols. This morning, NVSL confirmed that the larvae were New World screwworm larvae. Accordingly, the animal will remain in quarantine until it has been reexamined and determined to be free of NWS.

This is an example of these long-standing import protocols working as designed. While this situation does not appear to be associated with the NWS outbreak in Mexico that USDA is currently fighting, it underscores the need for vigilance in all of USDA’s coordinated efforts to fight NWS.

Surveillance, Monitoring, and Reporting

USDA continues to lead intensive surveillance and monitoring systems along the U.S. border. Teams continue to check 121 NWS-specific traps across high-risk areas of border states and leverage thousands of fruit fly/insect traps aligned all along the Southern border. To date, more than 42,000 flies from traps in all locations have been submitted to APHIS NVSL for identification, with no NWS detections to date. APHIS Wildlife Services is also leading a coordinated effort to inspect wildlife for signs of NWS infestation. To date, they’ve inspected more than 9,300 wild animals across 39 different species and 131 U.S. counties and found no signs of NWS infestations.

Even though there has been no detection of NWS inside the U.S. and the northernmost active case of NWS is still about 200 miles away from the border, USDA is asking U.S. animal owners to continue to remain vigilant by checking their pets and livestock for signs of NWS and immediately reporting anything suspicious to their state animal health officials or USDA area veterinarian in charge. Signs of NWS infestation include draining or enlarging wounds and signs of discomfort. Also look for screwworm larvae (maggots) and eggs in or around body openings, such as the nose, ears, and genitalia or the navel of newborn animals.

Adult screwworm flies are about the size of a common housefly or slightly larger, with a metallic green or blue body, orange eyes, and three dark stripes down its back. NWS maggots can infest livestock and other warm-blooded animals, including people. They most often enter an animal through an open wound and feed on the animal’s living flesh.

While NWS is not common in people, if you notice a suspicious lesion on your body or suspect you may have contracted screwworm, seek immediate medical attention.

For more information on NWS and USDA’s efforts, visit Screwworm.gov.

01/30/2026

Delayed opening today Friday 1/30….doors will be open at 10:00am!

01/29/2026

Due to inclement weather, the Johnson County conservation District – NRCS office will be closed today. If you need immediate assistance, please call Holly Jones at 479-779-1925

01/27/2026

The Johnson County conservation district and the NRCS office will be closed today Tuesday 1/27/26 due to inclement weather. If you need immediate assistance you can reach Holly Jones at 479-779-1925.

Address

1619 W Main Street, Ste C
Clarksville, AR
72830

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 4pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 4pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 4pm
Thursday 7:30am - 4pm
Friday 7:30am - 4pm

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