24/7 Farm  News Coverage
August 07, 2009
Plastic hive is the bee's knees
London (AFP) Aug 5, 2009
A new plastic beehive was launched in Britain on Wednesday to encourage people to keep bees in their gardens or on rooftops to help boost declining honeybee populations. The bees seemed to like their ultra-modern home as they buzzed happily in and out of the postbox-like slot in the grey and yellow 'beehaus' on the roof of state-backed conservation agency Natural England's London offices. ... read more

Namibian officials grill photographer over seal cull
Windhoek (AFP) Aug 5, 2009
A South African photographer accused of documenting Namibia's annual seal cull was held Tuesday for nearly seven hours without charge, less than a month after the arrest of two journalists. The detention took place in Henties Bay, a small town 400 kilometres (250 miles) west of the capital, where two journalists were arrested and fined last month for filming the yearly clubbing of seal pups. ... more
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    Clinton says farm investment top US priority
    Nairobi (AFP) Aug 5, 2009
    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Wednesday for a new approach to food aid, saying one that aims to boost agriculture is a key part of the new US administration's foreign policy. In Nairobi at the start of an African tour, Clinton toured a farm institute where she heard of efforts to increase crop yields, improve the role of women and develop seeds that can withstand the continent ... more

    Water crisis in parched northern China
    Yixian, China (AFP) Aug 4, 2009
    The river has dried up, the well yields only dust, and Li Yunxi is hard pressed to irrigate his plot of land, even though he lives right next to the largest water project in history. The elderly farmer watches in despair as his corn crop wilts under the scorching northern China sun, knowing that a fresh, abundant stream is only a stone's throw away. "We ordinary people don't dare use tha ... more

    Tree-killing fungus threatens avocados
    Homestead, Fla. (UPI) Aug 3, 2009
    A tree-killing fungus near Florida's Everglades National Park could harm the area's $12.7 million avocado industry, agriculture officials said. "At this point, if your tree becomes infected, it will die,' state Agriculture and Consumer Services spokesman Mark Fagan told The Miami Herald. Scientists recently discovered a case of laurel wilt disease, carried by the invasive redbay ... more

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  • Predatory snail wrecks California oysters

  • 22 dead or missing in Philippines floods, landslides: govt

  • Our Smashing Solar System

  • Organic food not healthier, says British study

  • WTO takes up China-US dispute over poultry

  • Israeli project protects coastal aquifer
  • .
    Thai Hill Farmers Help Preserve Genetic Diversity Of Rice
    St. Louis MO (SPX) Aug 03, 2009
    Rice is one of the most important crops worldwide, as it feeds over half of the world's population. Domesticated rice is an important supply of the world's rice. However, these strains are genetically static and cannot adapt to changing growing conditions. Traditional varieties, or landraces, of rice are genetically evolving and provide a pool of traits that can be tapped to improve crops ... more

    Infrared cameras reveal ancient city
    Venice, Italy (UPI) Aug 1, 2009
    An ancient Italian city destroyed by Attila the Hun and now hidden underground has been mapped for the first time via infrared photography, officials said. Infrared aerial photography, combined with 3D reconstruction techniques, has revealed Altinum's spectacular coastal architecture, complete with bridges, walls, canals, houses and large public buildings, the Italian news agency ANSA r ... more

    Many Marine Ecosystems Can Recover Under Appropriate Management
    Woods Hole MA (SPX) Aug 03, 2009
    An international team of scientists with divergent views on ocean ecosystems has found that efforts to rebuild many of the world's fisheries are worthwhile and starting to pay off in many places around the world. Their study puts into perspective recent reports predicting a total collapse of global fisheries within 40 years. In a paper published in the July 31 issue of Science, study ... more

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  • Wind Energy On The NSW South Coast

  • Heavy rains flood Shanghai: state media

  • World's fisheries at risk of collapse, but recovery is possible: study

  • Egypt blocks Nile water deal

  • Canadian groups dispute green light for GM corn

  • Calif. marsh returns to life after century

  • NASA And NOAA's GOES-14 Satellite Takes First Full Disk Image
  • Using Satellites To Study Lyme Disease
  • TerraSAR-X Image Of The Month: Ship ID In Kiel Fjord And Baltic Sea
  • Nile countries delay water sharing pact for six months
  • Bangladeshi capital flooded by record July monsoon
  • Monaco seeks global bluefin tuna trade ban
  • Genetically altered crops grow 'in secret'
  • Earth Observation Satellite UK-DMC2 Ready For Launch

  • Launch Of UAE Satellite Postponed
  • ESA And EUMETSAT Sign GMES Framework Agreement
  • Free electricity for drought-hit Bangladesh farmers
  • Rainfall To Decrease Over Iberian Peninsula
  • US in key environment meeting with Mekong countries
  • Getting To The Bottom Of Rice
  • Nepal mulls toilets-for-passports scheme
  • UK-DMC2 Ready For Launch

  • Purer Water Made Possible By Sandia Advance
  • Genetically modified rice crucial in drought battle: report
  • Warming Climate Threatens California Fruit And Nut Production
  • Drought threat for Bangladesh as monsoon fails
  • Corn Yield Stability Varies With Rotations And Fertility
  • Obama should push China on pork and beef: US senator
  • Climate change: Bye-bye, black sheep?
  • Exploring The Moon, Discovering Earth



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