24/7 Farm  News Coverage
July 12, 2015
FARM NEWS
Research shows that genomics can match plant variety to climate stresses
Manhattan KS (SPX) Jul 10, 2015
A new study led by a Kansas State University geneticist has shown that genomic signatures of adaptation in crop plants can help predict how crop varieties respond to stress from their environments. It is the first study to document that these genomic signatures of adaptation can help identify plants that will do well under certain stresses, such drought or toxic soils, said Geoff Morris, assistant professor of agronomy at Kansas State University and a researcher affiliated with the university's F ... read more
Previous Issues Jul 10 Jul 09 Jul 08 Jul 07 Jul 06
WATER WORLD

Where does water go when it doesn't flow
More than a quarter of the rain and snow that falls on continents reaches the oceans as runoff. Now a new study helps show where the rest goes: two-thirds of the remaining water is released by plant ... more
FARM NEWS

Climate change puts squeeze on bumblebees
Global warming is putting the squeeze on bumblebees. In the most comprehensive study ever conducted of the impacts of climate change on critical pollinators, scientists have discovered that global w ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

UNICEF warns of child deaths in N. Korea drought
A serious drought in North Korea requires urgent action to prevent the deaths of children already weakened by widespread malnutrition, the UN children's fund, UNICEF, warned Thursday. ... more
SEED DAILY


WATER WORLD

Record-breaking heavy rainfall events increased under global warming
Heavy rainfall events setting ever new records have been increasing strikingly in the past thirty years. While before 1980, multi-decadal fluctuations in extreme rainfall events are explained by nat ... more


FARM NEWS

Recent ag pest stems from one large genetic shift
A new study involving a Kansas State University entomologist reveals that the genes of a fruit fly that has plagued American apple producers for more than 150 years is the result of an extremely rap ... more
The World's Largest Commercial Drone Conference and Expo - Sept 9 - Las Vegas Next Generation Integrated ISR 2015 - Washington DC - July 27-29 Nuclear Decommissioning And Used Fuel Market 2015 Turn key solar systems for domestic and commercial installations
Solar systems for home and business installations
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FARM NEWS

Probiotics - for plants
Recent research (and commercials) tell us probiotic products are good for our health, with benefits ranging from improved digestion to managing allergies and colds, Just as humans can benefit from t ... more
FARM NEWS

Reusable bag users more likely to buy veggies -- and junk food
Reusable shopping bags have interesting effects on consumers. Enter a grocery store armed with your own bags and you are, according to new research, more likely than the average shopper to do two things - buy organic produce and junk food. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
Low carbon taxes often fail to target emissions reduction
Finding the shadows in a fusion system faster with AI
Macquarie licenses precision silver recovery tech for solar panel recycling
FARM NEWS

Omega-3 breakthrough could help fish farms: UK scientists
Omega-3 fish oils can be grown in fields using genetically modified oilseed crops, British researchers said as they released trial results this week. ... more
FARM NEWS

Parched paddies strike Thai junta's economic weak spot
Ranong Rachasing would normally be in her fields at this time of year, toiling in ankle-deep water to make her rice paddies bloom through knowledge honed by years of cultivating Thailand's most celebrated export. ... more
WATER WORLD

Researcher discovers groundwater modeling breakthrough
A University of Wyoming professor has made a discovery that answers a nearly 100-year-old question about water movement, with implications for agriculture, hydrology, climate science and other field ... more
Nuclear Operations and Maintenance Efficiency Summit USA 2015
BIO FUEL

Scientists study ways to integrate biofuels and food crops on farms
We ask a lot of the land: feed the world with crops, power the world with bioenergy, retain nutrients so they don't pollute our water and air. To help landscapes answer these high demands, scientist ... more
WATER WORLD

Restored streams take 25 years or longer to recover
New research has found that the number of plant species growing just next to restored streams can take up to 25 years to increase above those channelized during the timber floating era. This is acco ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
France discussing 'unjustified' arrest of citizen in Mali
Trump rules out immediate Ukraine ceasefire
Russia hosts first military meeting with Sahel juntas; Mali junta accuses foreign powers of destabilisation plot
WOOD PILE

Rumors of southern pine deaths have been exaggerated
Researchers at the University of Georgia have a message for Southern tree farmers worried about unexplainable pine tree deaths: Don't panic. A new study published in Forest Ecology and Management an ... more
FARM NEWS

Rising fossil fuel energy costs spell trouble for global food security
Ongoing efforts to feed a growing global population are threatened by rising fossil-fuel energy costs and breakdowns in transportation infrastructure. Without new ways to preserve, store, and transp ... more
FARM NEWS

Use more forages in livestock farming
Small-scale livestock farming in the tropics can become more intensive yet sustainable if more and better forage is used to feed the animals being reared. This could benefit farming endeavours in ru ... more
WATER WORLD

Pact with devil? California farmers use oil firms' water
An efficient solution to a historic drought, or an environmentally risky pact with the devil? ... more
FARM NEWS

A tale of 2 (soil) cities
As we walk along a forest path, the soil beneath our feet seems like a uniform substance. However, it is an intricate network of soil particles, pores, minerals, soil microbes, and more. It is awash ... more
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WATER WORLD

Study reveals mechanism regulating methane emissions in wetlands
Though they occupy a small fraction of the Earth's surface, freshwater wetlands are the largest natural source of methane going into the atmosphere. New research from the University of Georgia ident ... more
FARM NEWS

Rapid authentication of edible oils and screening of gutter oils
The Food Safety and Technology Research Centre under the Department of Applied Biology and Chemical Technology of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) has developed a new method for rapid au ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
After repeated explosions, new test for Musk's megarocket
NASA seeks student entries for Human Exploration Rover Challenge
Signs of recent life on Mars could be detected using new simple test
FARM NEWS

Hacking the food chain, Silicon Valley style

FARM NEWS

French pride fizzes as UNESCO lists Champagne and Burgundy vineyards

WATER WORLD

Using NASA data to show how raindrops could save rupees

WATER WORLD

Watershed science calls for integrated research methods

FARM NEWS

Firefighters forced to kill 20 million bees escaped from truck crash

WATER WORLD

Californians struggle for 'normal life,' without water

WATER WORLD

Recycled water, salt-tolerant grass a water-saving pair

FARM NEWS

The secret weapons of cabbages: Overcome by butterfly co-evolution

FARM NEWS

Alamo, French champagne vineyards vie for World Heritage status

WATER WORLD

Discovery in the US of the invasive New Guinea flatworm

Genetic study of 'co-evolution' could provide clues to better food production

El Nino-spawned dry spell to cut Philippine rainfall: official

Designer wheat fails anti-aphid field test

Oslo creates world's first 'highway' to protect endangered bees

Ecosystem services and food security: Facilitating decisions for sustainable rice production

Decades-old frozen meat seized in China food scandal: report

Surprisingly few 'busy bees' make global crops grow

Desalination technology goes off the grid in India

Rainfall gives respite to drought-hit North Korea

Probe after GM jellyfish-lamb sold as meat in France

Tracking the viral parasites cruising our waterways

Londoners dream of swimming in the River Thames

Moroccan villagers harvest fog for water supply

Palm oil price change could save tigers, other species

Microbe mobilizes 'iron shield' to block arsenic uptake in rice

Precarious existence in shadow of Indonesian volcano

Trans fat ban tests food companies, bakers

Evolution study finds massive genome shift in one generation

Water reveals two sides of Myanmar's economic boom

EU lawmakers back animal cloning ban

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