24/7 Farm  News Coverage
October 01, 2014
FARM NEWS
Ex-rubber tapper Silva out to land Brazil presidency
Brasilia, Brazil (AFP) Sept 28, 2014
Brazilian presidential candidate Marina Silva only learned to read at 16 and endured a tough childhood as a rubber tapper in the Amazon before considering whether to become a Catholic nun. Instead, she became involved in politics, as a green campaigner, a senator and then a minister. Next month, the 56-year-old environmentalist hopes to become Brazil's first black and evangelical president. Socialist Party candidate Silva, neck-and-neck in the polls with incumbent and former Workers Party al ... read more
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WATER WORLD

Earth's water is older than the sun
Water was crucial to the rise of life on Earth and is also important to evaluating the possibility of life on other planets. Identifying the original source of Earth's water is key to understanding ... more
FARM NEWS

Sri Lanka seeks to trademark cinnamon spice success
Ten years after the Asian tsunami devastated Sarath Kumara's cinnamon plantation in Sri Lanka, forcing him to start over with nothing, the farmer faces a new threat from further afield. ... more
FARM NEWS

'Crazy' climate forces Colombian farmers to adapt
Once upon a time, farming was a blissfully low-tech business on Colombia's northern plains. ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

China's Ningxia matures as a quality wine producer
Just a few years ago barely anyone had heard of wines from Ningxia in China, but today the region is producing some of the country's best vintages and it doesn't plan on stopping there. ... more


FARM NEWS

Can genetic engineering help food crops better tolerate drought?
The staggering growth rate of the global population demands innovative and sustainable solutions to increase food production by as much as 70-100% in the next few decades. In light of environmental ... more
PV Operations & Maintenance USA 2014



Training Space Professionals Since 1970


Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
WATER WORLD

Star Trekish, rafting scientists make bold discovery on Fraser River
A Simon Fraser University-led team behind a new discovery has "...had the vision to go, like Star Trek, where no one has gone before: to a steep and violent bedrock canyon, with surprising results." ... more
FARM NEWS

Guilt-free doughnuts: UN summit hails palm oil pledges
Dunkin' Donuts and Krispy Kreme joined a raft of international food companies pledging Tuesday at a UN Summit to stop using palm oil, considered a major contributor to deforestation. ... 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

Biochar alters water flow to improve sand and clay
As more gardeners and farmers add ground charcoal, or biochar, to soil to both boost crop yields and counter global climate change, a new study by researchers at Rice University and Colorado College ... more
WATER WORLD

Treated wastewater from fracking potentially harmful
Concerns that fluids from hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," are contaminating drinking water abound. Now, scientists are bringing to light another angle that adds to the controversy. A new ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA

Termites evolved complex bioreactors 30 million years ago
Achieving complete breakdown of plant biomass for energy conversion in industrialized bioreactors remains a complex challenge, but new research shows that termite fungus farmers solved this problem ... more
Startup in the Land of the Rising Sun; A Japanese Solar Venture - by Bradley L. Bartz


WATER WORLD

Water-quality trading can reduce river pollution
Allowing polluters to buy, sell or trade water-quality credits could significantly reduce pollution in river basins and estuaries faster and at lower cost than requiring the facilities to meet compl ... more
FROTH AND BUBBLE

Researchers develop unique waste cleanup for rural areas
Washington State University researchers have developed a unique method to use microbes buried in pond sediment to power waste cleanup in rural areas. The first microbe-powered, self-sustaining ... 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

Wasp 'SWAT team' to the rescue of Indonesian cassava crop
An "eco-friendly SWAT team" of 2,000 tiny wasps was released in Indonesia Wednesday to battle bugs threatening to devour cassava crops, a major staple and source of income for millions. ... more
EL NINO

The Fickle El Nino of 2014
Prospects have been fading for an El Nino event in 2014, but now there's a glimmer of hope for a very modest comeback. Scientists warn that unless these developing weak-to-modest El Nino conditions ... more
TRADE WARS

Farmers protest planned $50-bn canal in Nicaragua
Hundreds of farmers Tuesday demonstrated against a new $50 billion waterway aimed at rivalling the Panama Canal, irate at plans to expropriate the land they work. ... more
FARM NEWS

OSI laying off hundreds from troubled China food plant
US food supplier OSI Group said Monday it had begun laying off more than 300 workers at a Shanghai plant shut down by Chinese authorities over expired meat sold to fast food giants. ... more
WATER WORLD

Artificial 'beaks' that collect water from fog: A drought solution?
From the most parched areas of Saudi Arabia to water-scarce areas of the western U.S., the idea of harvesting fog for water is catching on. Now, a novel approach to this process could help meet affe ... more

WATER WORLD

Nile River monitoring influences North-East Africa's future
Curtin University research that monitors the volume of water in the Nile River Basin will help to level the playing field for more than 200 million North-East Africans who rely on the river's water ... more
FARM NEWS

The future of global agriculture may include new land, fewer harvests
Climate change may expand suitable cropland, particularly in the Northern high latitudes, but tropical regions may becoming decreasingly suitable, according to a study published in the open-access j ... 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

More land, fewer harvests

FARM NEWS

Boosting global corn yields depends on improving nutrient balance

FLORA AND FAUNA

New branch added to European family tree

FARM NEWS

Moroccan city outlaws olive trees

FARM NEWS

Canada federal police hunt for bee killer

SHAKE AND BLOW

Rushed evacuations as Philippine volcano spews lava

WATER WORLD

Creation of Vuoksi River preceded significant cultural shift

FARM NEWS

Drought hits Brazil coffee harvest

FARM NEWS

Diversified farming practices might preserve evolutionary diversity of wildlife

FARM NEWS

Food safety fears see farming return to high-rise Hong Kong

EU tightens rules to prevent new horsemeat scandal

Globalization threatens benefits of an African 'green revolution'

Shift in Arabian Sea Plankton May Threaten Fisheries

It's the Pits: Ancient peach stones offer clues to fruit's origins

Dietary recommendations may be tied to increased greenhouse gas emissions

Taiwan oil supplier fined $1.67 mn over gutter oil

Hard times for 'red gold' divers in Morocco's El Dorado

McDonald's sales hit by China meat scandal

Paraguay Indians threaten pot growers with arrows

China's graft crackdown hits France's wine, spirits exports

Key Pacific panel agrees to 50% cut in young tuna catch

The coffee genome has finally been mapped

Hong Kong tests for tainted Taiwan cooking oil

Chinese firm serves up 'smart chopsticks' for food-wary diners

Gazans dig deep after ceasefire as water shortage bites

Research shows declining levels of acidity in Sierra Nevada lakes

Ozone pollution in India kills enough crops to feed 94 million in poverty

Rising risk of failed seasons as climate change puts pressure on Africa's farmers

EU court rules against France over nitrates water pollution

Chinese scientists' team efforts in dissecting rice complex agronomic traits in recent years

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