24/7 Farm  News Coverage
July 08, 2016
FARM NEWS
Feeding the world by rewiring plant mouths
Stanford CA (SPX) Jul 08, 2016
Plants have tiny pores on their leaves called stomata - Greek for mouths - through which they take in carbon dioxide from the air and from which water evaporates. New work from the lab of Dominique Bergmann, honorary adjunct staff member at Carnegie's Department of Plant Biology and professor at Stanford University, reveals ways that the systems regulating the development of stomata in grasses could be harnessed to improve plant efficiency and agricultural yield. More than 30 percent of all the ca ... read more

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FARM NEWS

Zimbabwe farmers benefit from China agricultural technology transfer
Zimbabwean farmers and students are benefiting from the China-Aid Agricultural Technology Demonstration Center (CATDC), 27 km north-west of Harare, where they are getting knowledge on how to improve ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

California droughts caused mainly by changes in wind, not moisture
Droughts in California are mainly controlled by wind, not by the amount of evaporated moisture in the air, new research has found. The findings were published in Geophysical Research Letters, ... more
FARM NEWS

Characteristics improving bean resistance to drought identified
The common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is the most important food legume in the tropics. It is an inexpensive source of proteins and minerals for almost 400 million people, mainly from Africa and L ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

A new tool to study plant cell biomechanics
We know that within every living plant there are millions of cells working together in a wonderfully complex harmony. But what we don't know is, within each of these cells, what exactly is going on. ... more


FARM NEWS

Decoding the genome of the olive tree
The olive was one of the first trees to be domesticated in the history of mankind, probably some 6,000 years ago. A Mediterranean emblem par excellence, it is of vital importance to the Spanish and ... more

Transition from Operations to Decommissioning by Preparing a Safe, Cost-Effective Shut Down and Waste Management Strategy


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FARM NEWS

New study compares transportation energy efficiency of local and conventional food
Two researchers at the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture find that farmers located closer to city centers seem to have a locational advantage in transportation over their long distanc ... more
WATER WORLD

Climate change is affecting North American fish
Climate change is already affecting inland fish across North America - including some fish that are popular with anglers. Scientists are seeing a variety of changes in how inland fish reproduce, gro ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
AI helps automate nuclear reactor licensing process at INL
Battery sharing model boosts savings for local energy communities
Bifacial CuInSe2 solar cells achieve record efficiency on transparent substrates
FARM NEWS

Study finds that plant growth responses to high carbon dioxide depend on symbiotic fungi
Research by an international team of environmental scientists from the United Kingdom, Belgium and United States, including Indiana University, has found that plants that associate with one type of ... more
FARM NEWS

Conservation key to curbing emissions from palm oil agriculture in Africa
As oil palm production expands from Southeast Asia into Central Africa, a new Duke University-led study warns that converting Africa's tropical forests into monoculture palm plantations will cause a ... more
FARM NEWS

New farming strategies can help prevent soil runoff while maintaining high crop yields
Soil and nutrient loss and runoff from agricultural fields are major problems environmentally and economically in the U.S. and globally. After heavy spring rains, soil and water runoff containing fe ... more
2nd Integrated Air and Missile Defense - Securing the Complex Air Domain: Requirements for Sustainable, Global, and Reliable Solutions to Next Generation Air & Missile Threats - 28-30 September, 2016 | Washington D.C. The World's Largest Commercial Drone Conference and Expo - Sept 7-9 - Las Vegas
Cryogenic Buyer's Guide
EL NINO

El Nino brings sharks, other marine life to California coast
Shark encounters and sightings along California's coast are at their highest level in decades, scientists say, warning that warmer waters mean beachgoers will have to be on the lookout for the predators all summer. ... more
FARM NEWS

Herbicides used widely on federal, tribal wildlands, study says
Although the amount of herbicides used on croplands is reported and known, recent research reveals huge amounts of the plant-killing chemicals are used on public and tribal wildlands as well, according to a new study. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Kremlin cautions 'lots of work' ahead before Ukraine peace deal
Eutelsat strikes global satellite internet deal with UK govt
US promises Philippine president to ramp up deterrence on China
FARM NEWS

Could ancient wheat be the future of food?
Researchers believe untapped consumer markets exist for ancient foods such as einkorn, emmer, and spelt, which fed large swaths of the world's population for thousands of years but disappeared almos ... more
WATER WORLD

Stanford scientists find 'water windfall' beneath California's Central Valley
California's drought-stricken Central Valley harbors three times more groundwater than previously estimated, Stanford scientists have found. Accessing this water in an economically feasible way and ... more
FARM NEWS

Four newly identified genes could improve rice
A Japanese research team have applied a method used in human genetic analysis to rice and rapidly discovered four new genes that are potentially significant for agriculture. These findings could inf ... more
FARM NEWS

Nobel winners slam Greenpeace on GMO crops
About a third of living Nobel laureates - 108 at last count - have signed an open letter Thursday which attacks Greenpeace for campaigning against genetically modified crops, especially one called Golden Rice. ... more
FARM NEWS

'Amazing protein diversity' is discovered in the maize plant
The genome of the corn plant - or maize, as it's called almost everywhere except the US - "is a lot more exciting" than scientists have previously believed. So says the lead scientist in a new effor ... more

EL NINO

Beach replenishment helps protect against storm erosion during El Nino
A team of researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego compared sand levels on several San Diego beaches during the last seven winters. The El Ninos o ... more
WATER WORLD

For nature, gravel-bed rivers critical feature in western North America
Gravel-bed river floodplains are some of the most ecologically important habitats in North America, according to a new study by scientists from the U.S. and Canada. Their research shows how broad va ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
UCF researchers developing new methods to passively mitigate lunar dust for space exploration
NASA Research Shows Path Toward Protocells on Titan
NASA to launch SNIFS, Sun's next trailblazing spectator




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FARM NEWS

U of T Mississauga professor discovers new origins for farmed rice

SINO DAILY

Last words: language of China's emperors in peril

WATER WORLD

Rains or not, India faces drinking water crisis

WATER WORLD

The new system that uses sound to alleviate water shortage

WATER WORLD

Blame flows freely as West Bank taps run dry

FLORA AND FAUNA

Kenya's jumbo 'ele-fence' to stop human-wildlife conflict

FARM NEWS

Crop breeding is not keeping pace with climate change

FARM NEWS

How squash agriculture spread bees in pre-Columbian North America

FARM NEWS

Immense species richness of bacterial-eating microorganisms discovered in soil

FARM NEWS

Better soil data key for future food security

How water droplets freeze

Lawsuit in Flint water crisis targets French, US companies

Tracking the aluminum used to purify tap water

Invasive species could cause billions in damages to agriculture

Getting water to refugees in arid Niger; a Herculean task

Improving poor soil with burned up biomass

17 bids for Red Sea-Dead Sea canal project: Jordan

700-year-old West African soil technique could help mitigate climate change

Neolithic paddy soil reveals the impacts of agriculture on microbial diversity

Australian cattle 'sledgehammered' in Vietnam abattoirs

Ancient West African soil technique could mitigate climate change

New 'water-oozing' nanorods could be used to harvest H2O

Canada wrongly detained, abused Afghan prisoners: military police

EU closes in on hormone-disrupting chemicals

Sunflower pollen protects bees from parasites

El Nino drives fastest annual increase on record of carbon dioxide

Scientists use underwater robots to study India's monsoon

El Nino made a nuisance of itself in 2015

Supporting pollinators could have big payoff for Texas cotton farmers

An eco-friendly approach to reducing toxic arsenic in rice



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