24/7 Farm  News Coverage
November 22, 2015
WATER WORLD
Small landscape changes can mean big freshwater gains
Madison WI (SPX) Nov 22, 2015
A typical bird's-eye view of the Midwest offers a patchwork landscape covered mostly by agriculture but mottled with forest, wetland, grassland, buildings and pavement. This pattern influences the quality and supply of the many natural benefits the landscape provides people, including freshwater. A new opportunity for improving the health and supply of Wisconsin's lakes, waterways and groundwater has emerged from a recent study in the journal Ecosphere by the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Wate ... read more
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BIO FUEL

How crop prices and climate variables affect yield and acreage
When corn prices increase farmers reap higher yields by making changes. According to a recent University of Illinois study, about one-third of the yield increase derives from more intensive manageme ... more
FARM NEWS

South American origins and spread of the Irish potato famine pathogen
Using some ancient DNA detective work, a new study led by University of California Berkeley postdoctoral researcher Mike D. Martin and University of Copenhagen professor Tom Gilbert has linked the c ... more
WATER WORLD

Researchers discover sediment size matters in high-elevation erosion rates
When it comes to sediment in the High Sierra, size does matter, according to two University of Wyoming researchers. For the past four summers, Cliff Riebe, a UW associate professor in the Department ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

FDA okays GM salmon for sale in the United States
On Thursday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a bid to sell genetically modified salmon in the United States. The company AquaBounty has sought FDA approval for their salmon products for the last 20 years. ... more


FARM NEWS

Going native - for the soil
Prairie gardens offer Midwestern suburban dwellers an alternative option to the traditional grass lawn. Their combination of native grasses, like tall and wispy bluestem and sideoats, and forbs, suc ... more

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WATER WORLD

Study is first to map Earth's hidden groundwater
Groundwater: it's one of the planet's most exploited, most precious natural resources. It ranges in age from months to millions of years old. Around the world, there's increasing demand to know how ... more
WATER WORLD

Study finds High Plains Aquifer peak use by state, overall usage decline
A new Kansas State University study finds that the over-tapping of the High Plains Aquifer's groundwater beyond the aquifer's recharge rate peaked in 2006. Its use is projected to decrease by roughl ... 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

High yield crops a step closer in light of photosynthesis discovery
Crops with improved yields could more easily become a reality, thanks to a development by scientists. Researchers studying a biological process that enables tiny green algae to grow efficiently have ... more
WOOD PILE

Brazil cut C02 emissions through less deforestation: NGO
Brazil cut carbon emissions slightly last year, thanks mainly to a drop in deforestation which offset rises from the farming, energy and industrial sectors, said a report released Thursday. ... more
FARM NEWS

Australia blocks sale of huge cattle estate to foreigners
Australia on Thursday blocked the sale of one of the world's largest cattle estates to foreign entities, ruling it was not in the national interest with part of the holdings in a weapons testing area. ... more
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WATER WORLD

A 'blood rain' infiltrates villages of Spain
The rainwater that fell in some of the villages of Zamora (Spain) last autumn brought along a strange traveller: a green microalgae that turns a reddish colour when in a state of stress. Once this m ... more
WATER WORLD

Global energy demand has adverse effects on freshwater of less developed nations
Global energy demand from developed nations has an adverse impact on freshwater resources in less developed nations according to a new study. While current energy policy focuses on preventing greenh ... 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

Honduran army goes to war against invading bugs
For Honduran soldiers fanning out in the pine forest, their chainsaws roaring, the enemy is like no other: numbering in the thousands, invading a sizeable chunk of their country and causing incalculable environmental damage. ... more
WATER WORLD

NASA adds up rainfall from 2 historic Yemen tropical cyclones
One week ago to the day Cyclone Chapala, the first Category 1 cyclone to strike Yemen in recorded history made landfall in Yemen, then a second tropical cyclone named Megh made landfall. The Global ... more
FARM NEWS

Early farmers exploited beehive products at least 8,500 years ago
Humans have been exploiting bees as far back as the Stone Age, according to new research from the University of Bristol published in Nature. Previous evidence ... more
WATER WORLD

Nanopores could take the salt out of seawater
University of Illinois engineers have found an energy-efficient material for removing salt from seawater that could provide a rebuttal to poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge's lament, "Water, water, every ... more
FARM NEWS

No more brown apples
Everybody knows this phenomenon: After slicing an apple, it loses its appetising white colour very quickly, which does not only scare off children. Although browned fruit is not harmful, we unwillin ... more
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FARM NEWS

Emissions set to soar as love of steak takes off in Asia
Climate change is the last thing on Maya Puspita Sari's mind as she tucks into a steak and splurges on ice cream, products that were once a luxury but are now a growing staple in the diets of millions of Indonesians. ... more
FARM NEWS

Cattle dying in South Africa as drought deepens
In the middle of a desiccated lake bed in South Africa's North West province, a seven-month-old calf is too weak to get up. It is doomed to die from thirst and hunger. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Trump orders space regulations eased in win for Musk
Europe Ariane 6 rocket launches a weather satellite
ULA launches USSF-106 for US Space Force aboard Vulcan rocket
FARM NEWS

Wheat disease-resistance gene identified, potential to save billions

CLIMATE SCIENCE

'Regional disaster' warning as S.Africa suffers drought

EL NINO

El Nino worst in over 15 years, severe impact likely: UN

FARM NEWS

Managed bees spread and intensify diseases in wild bees

FARM NEWS

Mongolian herders reined in by government

FARM NEWS

Breeding higher yielding crops by increasing sugar import into seeds

FARM NEWS

Protecting plants from stealthy diseases

FARM NEWS

EU downplays cancer risk from weedkiller in win for Monsanto

CLIMATE SCIENCE

East Africa hunger to worsen as El Nino strikes: UN

WATER WORLD

Shipping fears as Rhine falls to lowest level in 40 years

China's Singles Day sparks baby formula shortage in Australia

Kenya army involved in sugar smuggling racket: report

Wildfires may double erosion across western US watersheds by 2050

Ground-level ozone reduces maize and soybean yields

Stanford researchers develop new way to measure crop yields from space

Pineapple genome offers insight into photosynthesis in drought-tolerant plants

Vibrating bees tell the state of the hive

New test for ancient DNA authenticity throws doubt on Stone Age wheat trade

Cracking the problem of river growth

Cow-calf grazing practices could mitigate greenhouse gas emissions

Johannesburg limits water use as drought worsens

Climate change is good news for English wine

Researchers uncover the history of rice cultivation

The global connections between El Nino events and drought

Mooving manure beyond drug-resistant bacteria

How plant cell compartments 'chat' with each other

Faster digestion in kangaroos reduces methane emissions

Colombia drought threatens one of world's top coffees

Los Angeles wants backyard cisterns to collect rain water

Researchers advance understanding of mountain watersheds

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