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The National Agricultural
Library (NAL) has launched its redesigned website (http://www.nal.usda.gov)
as a gateway connecting users swiftly with the services of NAL and with
the billions of pages of agricultural information within NAL collections
and information resources.
NAL is part of the Agricultural Research Service, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.
Designed with customer preferences in mind, the new NAL site brings a
fresh look and faster access to the rich array of agriculture-related
information available through NAL.
Visitors to the front page of the newly designed site can browse
information on popular agricultural topics--from Animals and Livestock to
Rural Community Development--supported by the NAL site's new navigational
taxonomy. Each follow-on web page leads quickly to more carefully selected
information, designed to answer questions frequently asked by visitors to
the site and to NAL.
The site offers several web pages with information focused on the needs of
specific audiences, including kids and teens, librarians and USDA
employees.
Visitors can use other areas of the redesigned site to access NAL's most
popular library services, see where NAL representatives are exhibiting or
appearing, or get information about some of the most current concerns in
agriculture.
NAL's website currently receives an average of 4.3 million "hits" each
month from people seeking agricultural information. This usage is expected
to increase in response to the site's user-friendly design, enhanced
searching capabilities scheduled for early 2006, and the redesign of
subsidiary sites during the next few months.
Through April 2006, NAL will introduce redesigned websites on food safety,
water quality, invasive species, human nutrition, alternative farming
systems, animal welfare and technology transfer. New searching
capabilities will mean that NAL databases can be searched at the same time
as NAL web pages.
The redesign of NAL's websites implements USDA web standards and meets
U.S. Office of Management and Budget guidelines for focusing on customer
needs.
Source: ARS News Service
December 1, 2005
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