24/7 Farm  News Coverage
December 17, 2015
EL NINO
How NASA Sees El Nino Effects From Space
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 16, 2015
This winter, weather patterns may be fairly different than what's typical - all because of unusually warm ocean water in the east equatorial Pacific, an event known as El Nino. Because of El Nino, California is expected to get more rain, while Australia is expected to get less. Since this El Nino began last summer, the Pacific Ocean has already experienced an increase in tropical storms and a decrease in phytoplankton. El Nino is an irregularly occurring weather phenomenon created through an abnor ... read more
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WATER WORLD

Tropical groundwater resources resilient to climate change
Tropical groundwater may prove to be a climate-resilient source of freshwater in the tropics as intense rainfall favours the replenishment of these resources, according to a new study published in E ... more
FARM NEWS

Millet: The missing link in transition from hunter-gatherer to farmer
New research shows a cereal familiar today as birdseed was carried across Eurasia by ancient shepherds and herders laying the foundation, in combination with the new crops they encountered, of 'mult ... more
FARM NEWS

Plasticulture system offers alternative for cabbage producers
In Florida, a major fresh-market cabbage producing state, cabbage production currently relies on bare ground and subirrigation systems. Because of the large volume of water these systems need for ir ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

Biochar suitable substrate for soilless hydroponic tomatoes
As the use of soilless, hydroponic growing methods becomes more prevalent among crop producers, researchers are looking for new materials that can help growers save money, produce healthy plants, an ... more


FARM NEWS

Chinese wineries seek inspiration in foreign cups
In a country renowned for forgery, winemaker Jose Hernandez worries China's burgeoning viniculture industry will suffer from blatant copying of Bordeaux's output. ... more

Your World At War


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WATER WORLD

New process turns decades into hours for mining-water purification
Cleaning up the water left over from mining operations can literally take generations - 25 to 50 years on average - leaving billions of gallons of the precious resource locked up and useless. ... more
WATER WORLD

Deep core of African lake gives insight to ancient lake levels, biodiversity
Syracuse Earth sciences professor Christopher Scholz and former Ph.D. student Robert Lyons have an unprecedented glimpse into the past of a lake with explosive biodiversity. Along with colleagues fr ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
New transmitter could make wireless devices more energy-efficient
Solar tracking panels support high quality rice yields in Japan agrivoltaics trial
U.S. increases bounty to $50M for Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro
EPIDEMICS

Pigs that are resistant to incurable disease developed at University of Missouri
Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS) virus was first detected in the U.S. in 1987. Pigs who contract the disease have extreme difficulty reproducing, don't gain weight and have a hig ... more
FARM NEWS

Scientists create first map of the wheat epigenome
Scientists at the University of Liverpool have carried out the first ever genome-wide survey of heritable molecular changes that regulate gene activity in wheat, in what could become a new tool to i ... more
WATER WORLD

Models overestimate rainfall increases due to climate change
Lawrence Livermore researchers and collaborators have found that most climate models overestimate the increase in global precipitation due to climate change. Specifically, the team looked at 2 ... more
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WATER WORLD

Nature, not humans, has greater influence on Colorado River Basin
Researchers have found that the water supply of the Colorado River basin, one of the most important sources for water in the southwestern United States, is influenced more by wet-dry periods than by ... more
WATER WORLD

US Pacific Northwest's extreme rainfall tallied by NASA's IMERG
As moisture from the tropics has been streaming into the Pacific Northwest by the "Pineapple Express" NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission and a cadre of other satellites have been ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Trump, Putin agree to meet next week in Alaska
Iran will not allow Trump-backed corridor linking Azerbaijan to exclave; Russia cautious
Trump says Armenia, Azerbaijan commit to end fighting 'forever'
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

Plant growth enhanced by increased CO2 with significant variations
Elevated concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide enhance photosynthesis and plant growth. Although these growth effects can be sustained in the long term, the magnitude of effects fluctuate gre ... more
FARM NEWS

Feeding food waste to pigs could save vast swathes of threatened forest and savannah
A new study shows that if the European Union lifted the pigswill ban imposed following 2001's foot-and-mouth disease epidemic, and harnessed technologies developed in East Asian countries for 'heat- ... more
WOOD PILE

Irish police go hi-tech to combat Christmas tree thieves
Fed up with roaming gangs stealing their Christmas trees, farmers and police in Ireland have turned to smartphones and helicopter patrols to ensure they can keep delivering festive cheer to customers. ... more
FARM NEWS

QUT scientists unlock secrets of Aussie 'resurrection' grass
A native Australian grass that 'plays dead' during droughts and selectively culls its own cells to survive could provide genetic keys to help world food crops like chickpea withstand global climate ... more

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FARM NEWS

Global food system faces multiple threats from climate change
Climate change is likely to have far-reaching impacts on food security throughout the world, especially for the poor and those living in tropical regions, according to a new international report tha ... more
WATER WORLD

Quenching the water demands of today's megacities
Municipal water problems of yesteryear: The well's going dry. Dig deeper. Municipal water problems of today: Megacities with millions of thirsty residents and water guzzling infrastructures exhaust ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
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From Click to Compromise: How One Download Can Infect Your Mac with a Trojan


FARM NEWS

First fossil peaches discovered in southwest China

FARM NEWS

Herbicide drift affects adjacent fields, delays flowering

WATER WORLD

Microwaves improve green workings of materials used to clean wastewater

FARM NEWS

Peru's unpaid agrarian bonds: My family's quest

WATER WORLD

Water-clearning photocatalysts work better after being microwaved

FARM NEWS

Chemicals that make plants defend themselves could replace pesticides

WATER WORLD

New membrane may solve fresh water shortages

FARM NEWS

Central America tests drought-resistant 'miracle' beans

WATER WORLD

Waters are more polluted than tests say

FARM NEWS

Honduran army goes to war against invading bugs

Study suggests bees aren't the be all and end all for crop pollination

High concentration of CO2 protects sorghum against drought

Red clover genome to help restore sustainable farming

To save the earth, better nitrogen use on a hungrier planet must be addressed

Italy farmers call for Christmas blacklist of planet-polluting food

Climate change threatens Tunisia olive farming

African leaders urge world to save drought-hit Lake Chad

French chefs cook up a storm for climate

China's carbon footprint grows with the good life

Better catalysts will remove carcinogenic chlorine compounds from water

Brazilian farmers learn to love Amazon's trees again

Trade may not help a warming planet fight its farming failures

Powerful new global arena needed to confront coming water challenges

Warming ocean worsened Australia's fatal 2011 floods

2015 and 1997 El Ninos: Deja vu, or Something New

How crop prices and climate variables affect yield and acreage

World's biggest clone factory raises fears in China

'Resurrection plants' offer hope as climate turns hostile

Small landscape changes can mean big freshwater gains

South American origins and spread of the Irish potato famine pathogen


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