June 26, 2009 24/7 Farm  News Coverage Terra Daily Advertising Kit
Rainfall, Timing Of Manure Application Affect Carbon Losses
Madison WI (SPX) Jun 26, 2009
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) losses from tile drains are an underquantified portion of the terrestrial carbon cycle. This is particularly important in the eastern corn belt where tile drainage dominates the agricultural landscape. Specific land management practices, such as manure application, can play a large role in the export of DOC as soluble organic carbon is applied to or injected ... read more

How Can The World's Fisheries Be Sustainable
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 26, 2009
According to the most recent report on the status of the world's fisheries by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, fisheries supply at least 15% of the animal protein consumed by humans, provide direct and indirect employment for nearly 200 million people worldwide and generate $US85 billion annually. This same report indicates that 28% of the world's fisheries stocks are ... more
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    Six dead in Czech floods: emergency services
    Prague (AFP) June 25, 2009
    Severe floods after torrential downpours killed six people in the Czech Republic, emergency services said on Thursday. Hundreds of people were evacuated and houses swept away by rising floodwaters in the east of the country, where authorities have declared a state of emergency. Several villages were cut off on Thursday. A 55-year-old woman was swept away by a swollen river at Novy Jicin ... more

    Massive Imbalances In Global Fertilizer Use
    Stanford CA (SPX) Jun 26, 2009
    Synthetic fertilizers have dramatically increased food production worldwide. But the unintended costs to the environment and human health have been substantial. Nitrogen runoff from farms has contaminated surface and groundwater and helped create massive "dead zones" in coastal areas, such as the Gulf of Mexico. And ammonia from fertilized cropland has become a major source of air pollution ... more

    Domestication Provides Insights Into Crop Origin And Evolution
    Washington DC (SPX) Jun 26, 2009
    Without the process of domestication, humans would still be hunters and gatherers, and modern civilization would look very different. Fortunately, for all of us who do not relish the thought of spending our days searching for nuts and berries, early civilizations successfully cultivated many species of animals and plants found in their surroundings. Current studies of the domestication of ... more

    Colombia coca crop down as trends shift
    Bogota, Colombia (UPI) Jun 25, 2009
    Cocaine production in Latin America fell last year because of declining demands in global markets, tougher law enforcement, and shifting trends in the production and consumption of narcotics. Cooling markets have also led to a reduction in the value of the coca leaf -- the raw ingredient in the production of cocaine -- causing some farmers to stop growing the crop. The downturn ... more

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  • Low Apalachicola River Flow May Hurt Gulf Fisheries


  • Next Gen Cellulosic Ethanol Research And Demonstration Plant


  • Czech floods turn deadly: report


  • Traditional Dutch fishermen turn to innovation for sustainability
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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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    US winding down Afghan poppy destruction: envoy
    Washington (AFP) June 24, 2009
    The United States is winding down efforts to destroy poppy in Afghanistan, the US regional envoy said Wednesday, after criticism that the zealous US approach has pushed peasants toward the Taliban. Richard Holbrooke, the special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, said that President Barack Obama's administration was making "significant adjustments" from the previous George W. Bush team in a ... more

    Water key element in Mideast peace
    Ramallah, West Bank (UPI) Jun 24, 2009
    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Israel must address the vital issue of water in the West Bank if meaningful peace talks are to take place. Israel's leaders said nothing, but Abbas had touched on one of the most sensitive issues in the seemingly endless negotiations, which have been in abeyance for the last few years, and one on which any expectation of a comprehensive ... more

    Greens urge boycott of Kenya flowers
    Naivasha, Kenya (AFP) June 23, 2009
    Green campaigners in Kenya, one of the world's top flower exporters, called Tuesday for a boycott of flowers from some 30 farms contributing to the degradation of Lake Naivasha. The executive director of the Indigenous bio-diversity environmental conservation association (IBECA), James Kahora, said his group would travel to Europe to promote the "Save Lake Naivasha" campaign. ... more

    China wine-lovers go for French reds
    Bordeaux, France (AFP) June 23, 2009
    Much to the glee of French winemakers, China confirmed its passion for red wine within the first 24 hours of the opening of the world's largest wine exhibition here, Vinexpo. Barely had the first visitors hit the stands when Hong Kong luxury goods company A&A International announced its acquisition of an historic wine estate near Bordeaux, Chateau Richelieu, a 17-hectare property surrounded ... more

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  • Bangladesh soap opera aims to help farmers


  • ADB chief urges investments in water infrastructure


  • EU seeks to catch up with Asia on fish farming, despite critics


  • Brazil's Amazon ownership plans resisted
  • .
    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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  • JPL Wind Watcher Blows Into Second Decade
  • Norway's fish farms thrive under ecologists' watchful eye
  • City in Brazil's Amazon faces worst floods in 56 years
  • Warmer ocean brings fewer fish in SAfrica's sardine run: scientist
  • China export taxes cut on grain, other products
  • Inbicon Takes Step Into Cellulosic Ethanol Future
  • Tropical Singapore an oasis for water research
  • Tibet drought worst in 30 years: Chinese state media

  • Eat a camel, save Australia
  • Turkey to double Euphrates water flow: Iraqi VP
  • LockMart Solar X-Ray Imager To Be Launched On NOAA GOES-O Spacecraft
  • TerraSAR-X Passes Two Year Mark
  • Meteorite Grains Divulge Earth's Cosmic Roots
  • Scientists Search For A Pulse In Skies Above Earthquake Country
  • Threatened cheetahs thrive in Namibia conservation project
  • Warming may outstrip Africa's ability to feed itself: study

  • Is This The Beginning Of The End Of Plant Breeding
  • Olympics bid helped Beijing's water
  • Trimble Extends Its Precision Agriculture Solutions Business
  • Climate change hits China's poor hardest: activist groups
  • Pennsylvania Safeguards Additional Farmland For Future Agriculture Production
  • Dairy Farms Now Use Less Land, Feed And Water
  • Cornell Recycles Half Its Garbage Into High-quality Compost
  • Meteorite Grains Divulge Earth's Cosmic Roots



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