24/7 Farm  News Coverage
October 14, 2015
FARM NEWS
Covering the bases with cover crops
Washington DC (SPX) Oct 08, 2015
Most of us think that farmers grow and harvest crops for food. That's true for many crops: they either feed humans or farm animals. However, there's another category of crop that has a vital function in agricultural systems. "Cover crops are usually planted between the regular crop production periods," says Hanna Poffenbarger. Poffenbarger is a graduate student in the department of agronomy at Iowa State University. She researched cover crops in her graduate work at the University of Maryland. "Th ... read more
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FARM NEWS

Forage crop promising as ecologically friendly ornamental groundcover
A new, ecologically friendly groundcover for warm-weather landscapes is on the horizon. Rhizoma peanut, a warm-season perennial native to South America, has been used almost exclusively as a forage ... more
FARM NEWS

Colorful caterpillar chemists
Scientists at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) in Panama compared the diets of two caterpillar species, expecting the one that exclusively consumed plants containing toxic chemical ... more
FARM NEWS

Accurate timing of migration prolongs life expectancy in pike
Animal migration is a spectacular phenomenon that has fascinated humans for long. It is widely assumed that appropriate timing of migratory events is crucial for survival, but the causes and consequ ... more
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FARM NEWS

Fertilizing and recycling Si in Vietnamese fields
Recent research showed that silicon (Si) is an important nutrient enhancing the endurability of rice plants, however, what controls on Si availability in soils still remain poorly studied. Researche ... more


FARM NEWS

Trade in invasive plants is blossoming
Goldenrod, Himalayan balsam, Chinese windmill palm: three plants, one problem. All are native to continents other than Europe, but were introduced to Switzerland as garden or ornamental plants. At s ... more
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FARM NEWS

Plant biosensor could help African farmers fight parasitic 'witchweed'
Engineering and biology professors at the University of Toronto have developed a new strategy for helping African farmers fight a parasitic plant that devastates crops. Plants in the genus Str ... more
FARM NEWS

Australia wheat board Iraq 'kickback' chairman in court
The former chairman of an Australian wheat firm that allegedly paid sanctions-busting bribes to secure UN oil-for-food programme contracts in Saddam Hussein's Iraq appeared in court Monday more than a decade after the scandal erupted. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
Last chance saloon for global plastic pollution treaty
Diatoms shown to absorb and store uranium inside cells
Dual-level hybrid storage design boosts solar efficiency and reduces costs
FARM NEWS

N. Korea food production could drop 14%: FAO
North Korea's staple food production could plummet by 14 percent this year because of bad weather, sparking fears of exacerbating chronic food shortages in the impoverished nation, according to the UN agricultural agency. ... more
FARM NEWS

Wild plants call to carnivores to get rid of pests - could crops do the same
Rose gardeners have a lot to say about aphids. Some may advise insecticides as a way to manage an infestation, but others will swear by live ladybugs (natural predators of aphids). The latter is mor ... more
EL NINO

Scientists warn El Nino coral damage could be worst ever
Scientists Thursday warned the world faced mass global coral bleaching next year driven by the warming effects of the El Nino weather phenomenon, and it could be the worst on record. ... more
Nuclear Operations and Maintenance Efficiency Summit USA 2015
FARM NEWS

Plant pest reprograms the roots
Microscopic roundworms (nematodes) live like maggots in bacon: They penetrate into the roots of beets, potatoes or soybeans and feed on plant cells, which are full of energy. But how they do it prec ... more
WATER WORLD

New water-tracing technology to help protect groundwater
UNSW Australia researchers have used new water-tracing technology in the Sydney Basin for the first time to determine how groundwater moves in the different layers of rock below the surface. The stu ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Another baked Alaska -- Trump and Putin
Pakistan establishes new missile force after India conflict, PM says
Israeli military says approved plan for new Gaza offensive
FARM NEWS

Climate-linked insurance a boon for poor farmers
Poor farmers the world over are increasingly falling prey to natural disasters, droughts and torrential rain largely due to climate change. But there is some good news as well. ... more
FARM NEWS

Tillage timing influences nitrogen availability and loss on organic farms
In the battle against weeds, tillage is one of the strongest weapons at the disposal of organic or ecologically based farmers. But, depending on when it is used, tillage can also be a strong driver ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

60 mn people in sub-Saharan Africa risk famine: Red Cross
Some 60 million people across sub-Saharan Africa are already going hungry and the situation could deteriorate dramatically as climate phenomena hike the risk of drought, the Red Cross said Monday. ... more
FARM NEWS

Researchers find key link in understanding agriculture pests
Invisible to the naked eye, plant-parasitic nematodes are a huge threat to agriculture, causing billions in crop losses every year. Plant scientists at the University of Missouri and the University ... more
FARM NEWS

The Danish nitrogen budget in a nutshell
Cutting food waste, improving the recycling of nitrogen in food production and new agricultural technologies are some of the methods that can be used to reduce nitrogen emissions to the environment. ... more
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WATER WORLD

The 'water mafias' that suck Karachi dry
The moment they saw the city water tanker stop in their neighbourhood, Mohammed and Nayla rushed towards it. That day, the water was free - a rare event in Karachi, where organised gangs siphon it off to sell to thirsty residents. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

7.5 million going hungry as Ethiopia crisis worsens
The number of hungry Ethiopians needing food aid has risen sharply due to poor rains and the El Nino weather phenomenon with around 7.5 million people now in need, aid officials said Friday. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
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FARM NEWS

Root microbiome engineering improves plant growth

FARM NEWS

Plants with jobs

FARM NEWS

ASU study finds weather extremes harmful to grasslands

FARM NEWS

Africa could be the answer to delaying peak grain

FARM NEWS

Bumblebees' adaptation to climate change could hasten population decline

FARM NEWS

The origin and spread of 'Emperor's rice'

FARM NEWS

Chinese court charges 10 mired in OSI meat scandal

FARM NEWS

15 EU nations opt to stay GMO-free

FARM NEWS

Study shows insect diversity decreases in gardens with non-native plants

FROTH AND BUBBLE

Malaysia again shuts schools as Indonesian smoke thickens

On menu for world leaders - trash, and a message

Secret unlocked to rice seed survival when underwater

Total Eclipse of the Harvest Moon

Scientists develop rice variety with high folate stability

CentrAm coffee growers struggle to adapt to climate change

Bordeaux winegrowers hail 'magnificent' harvest

Rare Champagne grapes flourish with global warming

Villagers in Zimbabwe skip meals to save scant food

Harvesting clues to GMO dilemmas from China's soybean fields

A new analysis and approach to watershed management

New Nepal constitution leaves revolution 'unfinished'

Cattle disease spread by vets, not cows

Variety the spice of life for Mumbai's tiffin carriers

UK food recycling cafes go global in fight against waste

The world's nitrogen fixation, explained

El Nino and La Nina will exacerbate coastal hazards across entire Pacific

Activist against palm oil shot dead in Guatemala

Horse owners can battle flies with wasps, not pesticides

The structural memory of water persists on a picosecond timescale

East Ukraine faces winter water shortage threat

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