March 06, 2009 24/7 Farm  News Coverage Terra Daily Advertising Kit
Wild birds likely caused HK H5N1 outbreak: official
Hong Kong (AFP) March 5, 2009
An outbreak of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus at a Hong Kong farm last year which led to the slaughter of 90,000 chickens was likely spread by wild birds, an investigation found Thursday. The December outbreak was the first discovered at a Hong Kong poultry farm in six years, and raised fears about the city's biosecurity measures and whether the deadly H5N1 virus had mutated. "As with ma ... read more
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    Raytheon Technology Protects Crops From Frost
    Tewksbury MA (SPX) Mar 06, 2009
    Raytheon Company is taking the fight to the frost with a new system using radio frequency technology. Raytheon's Tempwave radiant heating system offers a more efficient way to warm crops and avoid the adverse effects of frost on the growing season. The Tempwave system delivers energy directly to a crop without heating the intervening air. It works to prevent freeze damage in both radiatio ... more

    Farmers Saving The Economy Again, But For How Long
    Canberra, Australia (SPX) Mar 06, 2009
    "The national account figures are a timely reminder of how fundamental our farm sector is to our economy, with agricultural production and growth - in seasonally adjusted terms up 10.9% this quarter on top of last quarter's 13.4% - yet again, helping to stave off recession," National Farmers' Federation (NFF) President David Crombie said. "Mining booms come and go, but Australian agricultu ... more

    Scientists Expose Buried Fault That Caused Deadly 2003 Quake
    Pasadena CA (SPX) Mar 05, 2009
    Using satellite radar data, NASA-funded scientists have observed, for the first time, the healing of subtle, natural surface scars from an earthquake that occurred on a "buried" fault several miles below the surface-a fault whose fractures are not easily observed at Earth's surface. Reporting in of Nature, geophysicist Eric Fielding of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Cali ... more

    Jordan's Fossil Water Source Has High Radiation Levels
    Durham NC (SPX) Mar 05, 2009
    Ancient groundwater being tapped by Jordan, one of the 10 most water-deprived nations in the world, has been found to contain twenty times the radiation considered safe for drinking water in a new study by an international team of researchers. "The combined activities of 228 radium and 226 radium - the two long-lived isotopes of radium - in the groundwater we tested are up to 2000 percent ... more

    Chinese dairy maker buys scandal-hit milk firm: industry association
    Beijing (AFP) March 4, 2009
    A leading Chinese dairy brand has bought part of the assets of Sanlu Group, the firm at the centre of a huge contaminated milk scandal that rocked the nation, an industry association said Wednesday. Beijing's Sanyuan Group and one of its subsidiaries paid 616.5 million yuan (90 million dollars) for some of Sanlu's assets at a court auction, the Dairy Association of China said in a statement. ... more

      wind:
  • TRC Completes EIS For Proposed Cape Wind Project

    eo:
  • GOES-O Satellite Arrives At KSC For Final Pre-Launch Testing

    climate:
  • Wenchuan Earthquake Mudslides Emit Greenhouse Gas
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    Earth News, Earth Sciences, Climate Change, Energy Technology, Environment News  
    Underwater animals fart greenhouse gas: study
    Berlin (AFP) March 3, 2009
    Humans and farm animals were known to emit harmful greenhouse gases through digestion, but German researchers said Tuesday that aquatic worms and bugs are also culprits, releasing laughing gas. Scientists at the Max Planck Institut and Denmark's Aarhus University found that mussels, freshwater snails and other underwater creatures release nitrous oxide - laughing gas - when nitrate is pres ... more

    Sudan inaugurates massive Nile dam
    Merowe, Sudan (AFP) March 3, 2009
    Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir inaugurated a massive hydroelectric project on Tuesday that has displaced tens of thousands of people and is the largest to be built on the Nile in 40 years. The more than two-billion-dollar (1.590-billion-euro) Chinese-engineered Merowe Dam will eventually double Sudan's power capacity to about 1,250 megawatts. Two of its 10 turbines, which were built by Fr ... more

    Chinese courts to accept milk-scandal cases: report
    Beijing (AFP) March 3, 2009
    Chinese courts are now ready to accept lawsuits by families of children sickened in last year's tainted milk scandal, state media said Tuesday, quoting a top official. The report in the newspaper China Daily follows months of delays in which lawyers for plaintiffs told AFP they were warned not to sue over the scandal, which embarrassed China by exposing chronic holes in food-safety mechanism ... more

    Doubling A Gene In Corn Results In Giant Biomass
    Champaign IL (SPX) Mar 04, 2009
    University of Illinois plant geneticist Stephen Moose has developed a corn plant with enormous potential for biomass, literally. It yields corn that would make good silage, Moose said, due to a greater number of leaves and larger stalk, which could also make it a good energy crop. The gene known as Glossy 15 was originally described for its role in giving corn seedlings a waxy coating that ... more

    Financing Confirmed For Navajo Wind Energy's Joint Venture Wind Farm
    Atlanta GA (SPX) Mar 04, 2009
    Navajo Wind Energy has announced that it has received a confirmation letter of financing from Xiyas Development Capital for the Company's 50% joint venture partnership interest in the CSRI Xuzhou Nantung wind farm project. This financing is in addition to the funding announced on January 20, 2009 and is debt based, which will not affect the capital structure of the Company. As previo ... more

      ethanol:
  • Study Critiques Corn-For-Ethanol's Carbon Footprint

    eo:
  • Three ESA Earth Science Missions Move To Next Phase

    eo:
  • Earth-Observing Landsat 5 Turns 25

    farm:
  • Svalbard Marks First Anniversary
  •  
    Energy News - Technology - Business - Environment  
    Saving Wheat Crops Worldwide
    Canberra, Australia (SPX) Mar 03, 2009
    CSIRO Plant Industry scientists and international collaborators have discovered the key to overcoming three major cereal diseases, which in epidemic years cost wheat growers worldwide in excess of AUS$7.8 billion. In a paper published today in the prestigious journal Science, scientists from CSIRO Plant Industry, the University of Zurich and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center ... more

    EU nations refuse to force members to farm GM maize
    Brussels (AFP) March 2, 2009
    EU nations refused Monday to force Austria and Hungary to allow the cultivation of Monsanto genetically modified maize, defying a call from the European Commission, the Czech EU presidency said. Only five of the 27 European Union nations - Britain, Finland, the Netherlands, Sweden and Estonia - supported the EU executive's bid to force the two member states to lift their ban. In Vienna ... more

    UN report warns fishing industry on climate change
    Rome (AFP) March 1, 2009
    The fishing industry must do more to confront the effects of climate change as well as get a grip on the perennial problem of overfishing, said a UN report to be published Monday. The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture (SOFIA) report said responsible fishing practices must be more widely implemented and called for new strategies to cope with climate change. "Climate change is alrea ... more

    New Zealand Breeding Program Creates New Red Raspberry Variety
    Motueka NZ (SPX) Mar 03, 2009
    A horticultural research team from New Zealand and Canada has introduced a new red raspberry cultivar. 'Moutere' is a new floricane fruiting red raspberry (Rubus idaeus L.) created in a planned breeding program at The Horticulture and Food Research Institute of New Zealand Limited (recently renamed The New Zealand Institute of Plant and Food Research Limited (Plant and Food Research). ... more

    Modern Lifestyle Prevents Tooth Decay
    Washington DC (SPX) Mar 03, 2009
    New research has found that modern lifestyle habits may play a bigger role than food alone, when it comes to tooth decay. A review of the scientific evidence over the past 150 years found that the effects of fluoride toothpaste, good oral hygiene and health education, may override the effects of food alone on tooth decay. The research is published online in a Supplement to the journal Obes ... more

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      farm:
  • Federal Research Program Should Realign Climate Change Priorities

    drought:
  • Drought Review Must Deliver For All Farmers

    farm:
  • Color Test Enhances Tomato Analyzer Software

    farm:
  • Soybean Oil Reduces Carbon Footprint In Swine Barns
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