24/7 Farm  News Coverage
October 31, 2014
FARM NEWS
Himalayan Viagra fuels caterpillar fungus gold rush
St. Louis MO (SPX) Oct 31, 2014
Overwhelmed by speculators trying to cash-in on a prized medicinal fungus known as Himalayan Viagra, two isolated Tibetan communities have managed to do at the local level what world leaders often fail to do on a global scale - implement a successful system for the sustainable harvest of a precious natural resource, suggests new research from Washington University in St. Louis. "There's this mistaken notion that indigenous people are incapable of solving complicated problems on their own, but thes ... read more
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WATER WORLD

International donors pledge $3bn to save shrinking Aral Sea
Leading international donor organisations have pledged $3 billion to help save the shrinking Aral Sea - the worst man-made ecological catastrophe ever. ... more
WATER WORLD

Uzbekistan calls for help over disappearing Aral Sea
Uzbekistan on Wednesday called for more international help over the shrinking of the Aral Sea, after recent images showed part of the lake had dried up completely. ... more
FARM NEWS

World losing 2,000 hectares of farm soil daily to salt damage
Every day for more than 20 years, an average of 2,000 hectares of irrigated land in arid and semi-arid areas across 75 countries have been degraded by salt, according to a study by UN University's C ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

Salt-loving plants key to sustainable food production
Farmland is vanishing in part because the salinity in the soil is rising as a result of climate change and other man-made phenomena. In an Opinion piece publishing in the Cell Press journal Trends i ... more


WATER WORLD

Desert Streams: Deceptively Simple
Volatile rainstorms drive complex landscape changes in deserts, particularly in dryland channels, which are shaped by flash flooding. Paradoxically, such desert streams have surprisingly simple topo ... more
PV Operations & Maintenance USA 2014

Training Space Professionals Since 1970

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

No-till agriculture may not bring hoped-for boost in global crop yields
No-till farming, a key conservation agriculture strategy that avoids conventional plowing and otherwise disturbing the soil, may not bring a hoped-for boost in crop yields in much of the world, acco ... more
WATER WORLD

New Insights on Carbonic Acid in Water
Though it garners few public hDrones help show how environmental changes affect the spread of infectious diseasess, carbonic acid, the hydrated form of carbon dioxide, is critical to both the health ... 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
ABOUT US

Europeans lactose intolerant for 5,000 years after agriculture began
By analysing DNA extracted from the petrous bones of skulls of ancient Europeans, scientists have identified that these peoples remained intolerant to lactose (natural sugar in the milk of mammals) ... more
WATER WORLD

Businesses struggle on drought-hit Californian lake
It is a vast bowl of sand and rocks. It could be a lunar landscape, were it not surrounded by pine trees and dotted with shipwreck-like jetties and beached boats. ... more
FARM NEWS

Chewing too much hassle? Japan's got just the thing
Are you worried that you're just not chewing enough to keep your mind and body in tip-top condition? Then never fear: Japan has invented something to help you count your bites. ... more
Startup in the Land of the Rising Sun; A Japanese Solar Venture - by Bradley L. Bartz


FARM NEWS

Plant communities produce greater yield than monocultures
Although monocultures can be cultivated efficiently, they are anything but sustainable: environmental damage to soil and water caused by monoculture cultivation is becoming increasingly evident. ... more
FARM NEWS

Building a bridge from basic botany to applied agriculture
One of the planet's leading questions is how to produce enough food to feed the world in an increasingly variable climate. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations predicts that f ... 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
WATER WORLD

Lake Erie increasingly susceptible to large cyanobacteria blooms
Lake Erie has become increasingly susceptible to large blooms of toxin-producing cyanobacteria since 2002, potentially complicating efforts to rein in the problem in the wake of this year's Toledo d ... more
FARM NEWS

Stomping out grape disease one vineyard at a time
Cracking the genetic code of a common disease affecting grape production could improve vineyard management and help protect the multibillion-dollar industry that includes raisins, juice, jam/jelly, ... more
WATER WORLD

Rivers flow differently over gravel beds
River beds, where flowing water meets silt, sand and gravel, are critical ecological zones. Yet how water flows in a river with a gravel bed is very different from the traditional model of a sandy r ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

1934 drought was worst of the last millennium
The 1934 drought was by far the most intense and far-reaching drought of the last 1,000 years in North America, and was caused in part by an atmospheric phenomenon that may have also led to the curr ... more
OIL AND GAS

Colombian farmers sue oil giant BP for environment damage
A case in which 100 Colombian farmers are suing British oil giant BP for environmental damage opened in the High Court in London on Wednesday. ... more

CLIMATE SCIENCE

Drought-hit US town learns to live without water
In front of the local fire station, Pete Rodriguez stands next to his pick-up truck, filling about a dozen buckets from a vast tank. ... more
WATER WORLD

Scientist explains why freezing lakes sound like 'Star Wars' movies
Cory Williams, actor and YouTube personality, makes a living by filming videos of himself. Lately, those videos have involved exploring Alaska, and his most recent one included the discovery of the acoustic wonders of a freezing lake. ... 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

Are there enough fish to go around?

WATER WORLD

Mineralization of sand particles boosts microbial water filtration

FARM NEWS

Money grows on trees with great walnuts of China

FARM NEWS

Drop in China, HK demand dries up Bordeaux wine sales

FARM NEWS

Centuries-old 'Chinese' fishing tradition fades on Indian shores

FARM NEWS

Brazil beef exports soar on Chinese, Russian demand

WATER WORLD

Rivers recover natural conditions quickly following dam removal

FARM NEWS

Price gap between more and less healthy foods grows

WATER WORLD

River flow by design

FARM NEWS

Automated imaging system looks underground to help improve crops

Malaysia's Sime Darby to acquire PNG palm oil leader

NMSU researchers address water sustainability for viable farming

New estimates for carbon emissions from cropland expansion in China

China food giant buys into Italian olive oil maker

Costa Rica promises to compensate sickened banana workers

Study: Genetics drive coffee habits

The Shebaa Farms, a tug-of-war Mideast conflict zone

Asian carp DNA detected in Lake Michigan tributary

Natural gene selection can produce orange corn rich in provitamin A for Africa, U.S.

Fall in monsoon rains driven by rise in air pollution

NYT says it's sorry for cartoon mocking India's Mars mission

Ivory Coast buoyed by record agricultural harvest

No sign of health or nutrition problems from GMO livestock feed

Modi wields broom in new 'Clean India' push

Terra satellite shows how much the Aral Sea has dried up

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