24/7 Farm  News Coverage
August 21, 2014
FARM NEWS
Seafood substitutions can expose consumers to unexpectedly high mercury
Manoa (SPX) Aug 21, 2014
New measurements from fish purchased at retail seafood counters in 10 different states show the extent to which mislabeling can expose consumers to unexpectedly high levels of mercury, a harmful pollutant. Fishery stock "substitutions"-which falsely present a fish of the same species, but from a different geographic origin-are the most dangerous mislabeling offense, according to new research by University of Hawai'i at Manoa scientists. "Accurate labeling of seafood is essential to allow con ... read more
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FARM NEWS

Tide turns for shark fin in China
A sprawling market floor in Guangzhou was once a prime location for shark fin, one of China's most expensive delicacies. But now it lies deserted, thanks to a ban from official banquet tables and a celebrity-driven ad campaign. ... more
FARM NEWS

France fights back Asian hornet invader
They slipped into southwest France 10 years ago in a pottery shipment from China and have since invaded more than half the country, which is fighting back with drones, poisoned rods and even chickens. ... more
FARM NEWS

Japan to resume Fukushima rice exports
Japan is to restart exports of rice grown in Fukushima for the first time since foreign sales were halted due to fears of contamination by the nuclear disaster there, officials said Tuesday. ... more
SEED DAILY


CLIMATE SCIENCE

Urgent action needed to tackle Sahel's lack of rainfall: UN
A dearth of rainfall in the Sahel could have "severe consequences" for food and agriculture across the region, a UN official said Tuesday, urging urgent action to tackle droughts. ... more


FARM NEWS

'Safer' pesticide could create toxic mercury: study
A compound in pesticides that replaced another banned for its harmful effects, may threaten humans and wildlife by reacting with mercury in natural water to form a toxic chemical, researchers said Tuesday. ... more
spacecraft sub-system supplier
CubeSats, SmallSats and MicroSats





Startup in the Land of the Rising Sun; A Japanese Solar Venture - by Bradley L. Bartz



Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
FARM NEWS

Activists urge EU to scrap science advisor job
Nine major charities urged the European Commission on Tuesday to scrap a science advisor position it says puts too much power over sensitive policy into the hands of one person. ... more
FARM NEWS

Pangolins under threat in Gabon as demand surges in Asia
Hunted for generations for its tasty meat, the scaly-skinned pangolin is under threat in Gabon as demand for the small mammal surges in Asia, where it is used in traditional medicine. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
AALTO plans Zephyr stratospheric hub in northern Australia and seeks local payload partners
Ancient guano drove Chincha coastal power
UAH lands first DARPA award for biological sciences department
FARM NEWS

Trees and shrubs invading critical grasslands, diminish cattle production
Half of the Earth's land mass is made up of rangelands, which include grasslands and savannas, yet they are being transformed at an alarming rate. Woody plants, such as trees and shrubs, are moving ... more
FARM NEWS

Make your mobile device live up to its true potential - as a data collection tool
Leaf measurements are often critical in plant physiological and ecological studies, but traditional methods have been time consuming and sometimes destructive to plant samples. Researchers at the Un ... more
WATER WORLD

Mosul dam: A life source in northern Iraq
The Mosul dam is the biggest in Iraq and a strategic site that provides water and electricity to more than a million people in the north of the country. ... more
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

WATER WORLD

Showers dry up as water shortages add to Gaza misery
Feriel al-Zaaneen hasn't had a shower in more than a month. Like thousands of Palestinians, she doesn't have enough water to wash, adding to the miseries of life in war-battered Gaza. ... more
WATER WORLD

Donetsk queues for water as fighting shuts off supply
Anastasiya clutches two empty five-litre bottles as she joins a queue of Donetsk residents buying water in the rebel-held east Ukrainian city where supplies were abruptly cut off by shelling damage. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Sidekick autonomy software guides YFQ-42A test mission for CCA program
Infleqtion lists shares on NYSE as neutral atom quantum firm
Top Chinese gaming companies continue to challenge
FARM NEWS

Shipwreck yields 200-year-old bottle of drinkable booze
Divers exploring a 200-year-old shipwreck - the F53.31 shipwreck - in the Baltic Sea's Gulf of GdaƄsk, off the coast of Poland, surfaced with a sealed stoneware bottle earlier this summer. Now, scientists at J.S. Hamilton Poland, a lab testing facility, have confirmed that the bottle contains alcohol. ... more
FARM NEWS

Statistical model predicts performance of hybrid rice
Genomic prediction, a new field of quantitative genetics, is a statistical approach to predicting the value of an economically important trait in a plant, such as yield or disease resistance. The me ... more
TRADE WARS

Bald ambition: Chinese county exports human hair to Africa
Long, black and lucrative: sacks bulging with human hair spill onto the streets of a rural county whose farmers have helped make China the world's biggest exporter of products made from the material. ... more
WATER WORLD

Water's reaction with metal oxides opens doors for researchers
A multi-institutional team has resolved a long-unanswered question about how two of the world's most common substances interact. In a paper published recently in the journal Nature Communicati ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

History of fire and drought shapes the ecology of California
Fire season has arrived in California with vengeance in this third year of extended drought for the state. A series of large fires east of Redding and Fresno, in Yosemite, and on the Oregon border p ... more

CLIMATE SCIENCE

Drought and war in E.Africa put 14 million people at risk: UN
Poor rains and multiple conflicts across eastern Africa have put over 14 million people in need of food aid, three years since extreme drought devastated the region, the United Nations said Friday. ... more
FARM NEWS

Drought hits Central America's crops, cattle
The last raindrop fell three months ago, forcing Carlos Roman to take his cattle further and further away to find water and keep them alive in Nicaragua's northeastern farmlands. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Chandra Finds X-ray Dot That May Unlock Mystery of Little Red Dots in the Early Universe
Halter Smart Cattle Collars Go Direct-To-Satellite Expanding Virtual Fencing To Remote Ranches
Freeze-Dried Synthetic Platelets Proven Shelf-Stable for Battlefield and Remote Trauma Care
FARM NEWS

Dhaka's residents fight back over vanishing green spaces

FARM NEWS

Ohio lawmakers hope fertilizer licensing helps curb algae growth

WATER WORLD

Third day of tap water drinking ban in US city

FARM NEWS

China holds six from OSI unit in food scandal: company

FARM NEWS

Prehistoric dairy farming at the extremes

CLIMATE SCIENCE

Amid drought, California declares war on lush lawns

FARM NEWS

Once Mexico's booze of 'drunks,' mezcal earns respect

FARM NEWS

Asia agribusiness giants tie up to boost China-Australia trade

WATER WORLD

Worldwide water shortage by 2040

FARM NEWS

McDonald's Japan unveils 'tofu nuggets' after China meat scandal

Climate change and air pollution will combine to curb food supplies

Climate experts estimate risk of rapid crop slowdown

Generating a Genome to Feed the World

New hope for powdery mildew resistant barley

Why did the Peking Duck cross the country?

McDonald's holds the beef in China meat scandal

By 2050 temperatures might be helpful to growth of forage plants

Filter bed substrates, plant types recommended for rain gardens

McDonald's Japan halts sales of Chinese chicken after scandal

Insecticides Similar to Nicotine Widespread in Midwest

Water, water - not everywhere: Mapping water trends for African maize

US food firm sorry over China 'bad meat' scandal

'Shocking' underground water loss in US drought: study

Meat turns up the heat

The microbes make the sake brewery

Rising temperatures hinder Indian wheat production

Parched West is using up underground water

China detains five in expired meat scandal: police

New water balance calculation for the Dead Sea

The Real Price of Steak

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