June 17, 2009 24/7 Farm  News Coverage Terra Daily Advertising Kit
Is This The Beginning Of The End Of Plant Breeding
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 16, 2009
No human is a clone of their parents but the same cannot be said for other living things. While your DNA is a combination of half your mother and half your father, other species do things differently. The advantage of clonal reproduction is that it produces an individual exactly like an existing one-which would be very useful for farmers who could replicate the best of their animals or crops ... read more

Climate Change Models Find Staple Crops Face Ruin
Nairobi, Kenya (SPX) Jun 16, 2009
A new study by researchers from the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and the United Kingdom's Waen Associates has found that by 2050, hotter conditions, coupled with shifting rainfall patterns, could make anywhere from 500,000 to one million square kilometers of marginal African farmland no longer able to support even a subsistence level of food crops. ... more
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    Local fare gets top billing in 'locavore' food trend
    Vancouver, Canada (AFP) June 15, 2009
    The succulent braised rabbit served up at Raincity Grill comes garnished with a mound of curled wild lettuce, harvested from the mountains surrounding Vancouver. In fact, the rabbit itself -- and nearly every other menu item at this trendy beachside restaurant -- is from a nearby farm or producers' market. This west coast Canadian city is a mecca for so-called "locavores" who eat ... more

    Agriculture 2.0 Conference Showcases Alternative Agriculture Entrepreneurs
    Philadelphia PA (SPX) Jun 16, 2009
    SPIN-Farming together with NewSeed Advisors is co-hosting Agriculture 2.0, The Conference for Innovators and Investors, on September 17 at the Marriott Financial Center in New York City, to introduce a select group of alternative agriculture entrepreneurs to the investment community. Roxanne Christensen, co-author of the SPIN-Farming online learning series, says SPIN-Farming has inspired ... more

    Abrupt Global Warming Could Shift Monsoons And Hurt Agriculture
    Corvallis OR (SPX) Jun 16, 2009
    At times in the distant past, an abrupt change in climate has been associated with a shift of seasonal monsoons to the south, a new study concludes, causing more rain to fall over the oceans than in the Earth's tropical regions, and leading to a dramatic drop in global vegetation growth. If similar changes were to happen to the Earth's climate today as a result of global warming - as ... more

    Iraq faces summer water shortage disaster
    Baghdad (UPI) Jun 15, 2009
    Iraq is headed for an agricultural disaster this summer unless Turkey releases more water from dams on the Euphrates River, an Iraqi minister warned. Water Resources Minister Abdul-Latif Jamal Rasheed told media outlets that officials from Iraq and Turkey, where the Euphrates originates and flows through Syria, must sit down to settle the long-running dispute over river water volumes. ... more

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  • Hatchery Fish May Hurt Efforts To Sustain Wild Salmon Runs


  • Maybe It's Raining Less Than We Thought


  • Congressmen And Corn Farmers Call On EPA To Reconsider Ethanol Rules


  • Malaysia offers to help Indonesia as haze season looms
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    TECH SPACE
    X-MAT introduces X-FOAM: A game-changing ceramic foam for extreme environments
    Orlando, FL (SPX) Dec 01, 2025
    X-MAT has announced the release of X-FOAM, a 1,300°C ceramic foam engineered for use in harsh environments demanding high thermal insulation and structural performance. ... more
    Bible 1.0: How Ancient Canon Became Our First Large Language Models
    Sydney, Australia (SPX) Dec 14, 2025
    Modern large language models are treated as something radically new: vast statistical machines trained on almost everything humans have written, and able to regenerate knowledge on demand. Yet in structural terms, humanity has worked with something similar for millennia. ... more
    Digital twin successfully launched and deployed into space
    Davis CA (SPX) Dec 08, 2025
    A dynamic digital twin designed by UC Davis researchers was launched into Earth's orbit last week aboard a SpaceX rocket. The innovation, which will model the current condition and predict the futur ... more

    ROBO SPACE
    AI advances robot navigation on the International Space Station
    Stanford CA (SPX) Dec 09, 2025
    Imagine a robot about the size of a toaster floating through the tight corridors of the International Space Station, quietly moving supplies or checking for leaks - all without an astronaut at the c ... more
    Indian dance mudras yield advanced synergies for robotic hand control
    Los Angeles CA (SPX) Dec 12, 2025
    Researchers at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County extracted building blocks from precise hand gestures in Bharatanatyam, a classical Indian dance form. Their analysis revealed a richer set ... more
    MIT engineers design an aerial microrobot that can fly as fast as a bumblebee
    Boston MA (SPX) Dec 05, 2025
    In the future, tiny flying robots could be deployed to aid in the search for survivors trapped beneath the rubble after a devastating earthquake. Like real insects, these robots could flit through t ... more

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    GOES-O Moves Ever Closer To Launch
    Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Jun 11, 2009
    The GOES-O spacecraft, encapsulated in the Delta IV fairing, was rolled out of the Astrotech Facility, Titusville, Fla. and transported to the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS) on June 7, 2009. GOES is an acronym for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite. GOES-O was removed from the Astrotech facility and shipped in the silent of the night, as to minimize the impact ... more

    Food Security And The Income Gap
    Niigata, Japan (SPX) Jun 11, 2009
    The income gap between the "haves" and the "have-nots" must be taken into account when considering the issue of food security across Asia, according to a report to be published in the International Journal of Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology. Lily Kiminami, Professor in Regional, Rural and Development Economics in the Institute of Science and Technology, at Niigata University ... more

    Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Found In Fertilizer
    Uppsala, Sweden (SPX) Jun 11, 2009
    Vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE) have been found in sewage sludge, a by-product of waste-water treatment frequently used as a fertilizer. Researchers writing in the open access journal Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica point out the danger of antibiotic resistance genes passing into the human food chain. Leena Sahlstrom, from the Finnish Food safety Authority, worked with a team of ... more

    16 dead or missing as flood season hits China
    Beijing (AFP) June 10, 2009
    Torrential rains pummelling south China have left 16 dead or missing this week, destroyed thousands of houses and forced the evacuation of more than 172,000 people, the government said Wednesday. The government ordered flood prevention measures amid mounting fatalities and economic losses resulting from heavy downpours. "The southern region of our nation has entered the flood season ... more

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  • New Tool To Visualize Past, Future Lunar Eclipses


  • Syria declares emergency for drought-hit northeast


  • ESA Extends Envisat Satellite Mission


  • Sky's the limit for Singapore gardens
  • .
    24/7 News Coverage
    NASA Earth science faces rollback as Mission to Planet Earth era winds down
    OPERA satellite data sharpens US crop and water management
    Alen Space begins SATMAR satellite validation over Bay of Algeciras
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  • Egypt pig killings could affect tourism: welfare group
  • Marine Harvest Called On To Reform Environmental Performance
  • NASA Research Reveals Scale Of Ozone Soybean Damage
  • Soy Industry Adopts Environmental Standards
  • US Farm-Raised Catfish Featured At Sustainable Seafood Event
  • Who Will Pay For Ocean Acidification
  • Using Space Technology To Monitor Offshore Oil And Gas Fields
  • Atlantic striped bass focus of Md. warning

  • Ethanol Production Could Jeopardize Soil Productivity
  • E-Fuel Leads Organic Fuel Revolution
  • TerraSAR-X Views L'Aquila After The Earthquake
  • DMCii Satellite Imaging Monitors Indonesian Forests
  • Thousands of China milk sites closed: state media
  • Segregation needed for gene crops in Europe: scientists
  • Governor's Garden Highlights Urban Gardening Options
  • Google tool tracks flu in Australia, New Zealand

  • Livestock industry fuelling destruction of Amazonia: Greenpeace
  • Farm aid could cut climate change, poverty: FAO
  • Satellite poop trail leads way to Antarctic penguins
  • Satellite data to aid hurricane forecasts
  • Drought-hit LA, San Diego impose water ban
  • Scania Testing Unique Hybrid Buses In Stockholm
  • Meteorite Bombardment May Have Made Earth More Habitable
  • US state mows with goats to go gently on environment



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