24/7 Farm  News Coverage
July 29, 2016
WATER WORLD
World's deepest blue hole found in South China Sea
Sansha City, China (UPI) Jul 28, 2016
A diving expedition has revealed the South China Sea's Dragon Hole, or Longdong, to be the deepest blue hole in the world. According to state news service Xinhua, Chinese researchers measured the depth of Longdong at 987 feet, besting the previous record held by Dean's Hole in the Bahamas by 324 feet. The entrance to the Dragon Hole measures 426 feet wide. Blue holes are ocean sinkholes, named so for their rich, dark blue color accentuated by the lighter hues of the surrounding shallows. ... read more

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FARM NEWS

To keep soil health, scientists say mix up plant species
Soil health is deteriorating around the globe. A combination of commercial agricultural practices, global warming and pollution are draining nutrients and encouraging the accumulation of contaminants. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

Aid agencies seek $1.2 billion to fight southern Africa drought
Humanitarian agencies said Thursday that they need $1.2 billion in critical aid for seven drought-stricken countries in southern Africa, as the El Nino weather phenomenon continues to devastate crops across the region. ... more
EL NINO

Latest El Nino weather pattern is over: UN
The latest El Nino weather phenomenon, which was one of the most powerful on record, has ended but could be replaced by its stormy sister La Nina in the coming months, the UN meteorological agency said Thursday. ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

Towards smarter crop plants to feed the world
Plant scientists at Lancaster University, with support from the University of Illinois, have made an important advance in understanding the natural diversity of a key plant enzyme which could help u ... more


WATER WORLD

Exploring one of the largest salt flats in the world
A recent research report about one of the largest lithium brine and salt deposits in the world in Chile's Atacama Desert by geoscientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst is the first to ... more

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


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FARM NEWS

Measure of age in soil nitrogen could help precision agriculture
What's good for crops is not always good for the environment. Nitrogen, a key nutrient for plants, can cause problems when it leaches into water supplies. University of Illinois engineers developed ... more
WATER WORLD

Dirty to drinkable
Graphene oxide has been hailed as a veritable wonder material; when incorporated into nanocellulose foam, the lab-created substance is light, strong and flexible, conducting heat and electricity qui ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
World's major courts take growing role in climate fight
Hong Kong leads most stocks higher, yen gains as Ishiba vows to stay
Japan sees bright future for ultra-thin, flexible solar panels
FARM NEWS

Ancient rice DNA data provides new view of domestication history
Rice, or Oryza sativa as its scientifically known, feeds more than a third of the globe. Yet the majority of rice crops that supply 90 percent of the world come from just two domesticated varieties, ... more
WATER WORLD

Water resilience that flows
Communities around the world are familiar with the devastation brought on by floods and droughts. Scientists are concerned that, in light of global climate change, these events will only become more ... more
FARM NEWS

Plasma technology can be tapped to kill biofilms on perishable fruit, foods
Seeing fruit "turn bad and going to waste" inspired a team of researchers in China to explore using atmospheric pressure nonequilibrium plasma - already widely used for medical purposes - as a novel ... 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
WATER WORLD

Cities face dramatic increase in water treatment spending when watersheds are developed
A new global study has found that one in three large cities spend 50 percent more on water treatment costs as a result of damage to the ecological quality of their watersheds. This study found ... more
FARM NEWS

Grain drain, Laos' sand mining damaging the Mekong
Grain by grain, truckload by truckload, Laos' section of the Mekong river is being dredged of sand to make cement - a commodity being devoured by a Chinese-led building boom in the capital. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Iran accuses Europeans of not respecting 2015 nuclear deal as fresh talks confirmed
Putin meets Khamenei's top nuke adviser; Iran says Europe has no grounds to trigger sanctions
What's in the EU's two-trillion-euro budget bazooka?
FARM NEWS

Ivory Coast banana growers on the comeback trail
Two years after devastating floods, banana planters in Ivory Coast have staged a comeback, eyeing an increase in production and new markets for the popular fruit. ... more
WATER WORLD

Mines hydrology research provides 'missing link' in water modeling
Groundbreaking research on global water supply co-authored by Colorado School of Mines Hydrology Professor Reed Maxwell and alumna Laura Condon, now assistant professor of civil and environmental en ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

Stanford researchers reveal cost-effective path to drought resiliency
Strained by drought in recent years, California desperately needs more resilient water supplies. An affordable solution that provides a wide range of benefits is within reach, according to a new Sta ... more
EL NINO

African children to suffer as El Nino winds down: NGO
Millions of children will suffer disproportionately from the failed harvests and devastated livelihoods left behind by the El Nino weather phenomenon, Save the Children warned Tuesday. ... more
EARLY EARTH

After the age of dinosaurs came the age of ant farmers
A group of South American ants has farmed fungi since shortly after the dinosaurs died out, according to an international research team including Smithsonian scientists. The genes of the ant farmers ... more

FARM NEWS

More for less in pastures
Getting more for less is an attractive concept. But it isn't that easy when it comes to producing more food on less land with fewer resources. R. Howard Skinner has been researching this idea ... more
FARM NEWS

Top cocoa grower I.Coast stung by caterpillar invasion
Cocoa crops in the world's top producer, Ivory Coast, are being ravaged by caterpillars but authorities are playing down the new scourge, saying they have it under control. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Pope calls Buzz Aldrin to mark 1969 moon landing
Boeing looks for Starliner fixes despite costs, ISS age
ISS update: Crew-11 enters quarantine three weeks before launch




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FARM NEWS

ANU leads effort to develop drought-proof crops

CLIMATE SCIENCE

Groundwater discharge to upper Colorado River Basin varies in response to drought

ABOUT US

Genomes from Zagros mountains reveal different Neolithic ancestry

FARM NEWS

How plants can grow on salt-affected soils

WATER WORLD

Massive sewage spill forces closure of Los Angeles beaches

FARM NEWS

Scientists sequence genome of 6,000-year-old barley

FARM NEWS

Subtropical Cornwall climate could mean exotic new crops

FARM NEWS

Crop roots enact austerity measures during drought to bank water

FARM NEWS

Researchers build trenches to curb nitrogen runoff, algae growth

WATER WORLD

Beavers may restore imperiled streams, fish populations

After decades of clean up attempts, world's lakes still suffer from phosphorus pollution

A culinary expedition with Peru's intrepid top chef

EU limits glyphosate use during 18-month extension

ChemChina extends $43 bn offer for agri-giant Syngenta

'The Blob' overshadows El Nino

Agroforestry helps farmers branch out

Zimbabwe farmers benefit from China agricultural technology transfer

Feeding the world by rewiring plant mouths

California droughts caused mainly by changes in wind, not moisture

Characteristics improving bean resistance to drought identified

A new tool to study plant cell biomechanics

Decoding the genome of the olive tree

New study compares transportation energy efficiency of local and conventional food

Climate change is affecting North American fish

Study finds that plant growth responses to high carbon dioxide depend on symbiotic fungi

Conservation key to curbing emissions from palm oil agriculture in Africa

New farming strategies can help prevent soil runoff while maintaining high crop yields

El Nino brings sharks, other marine life to California coast

Herbicides used widely on federal, tribal wildlands, study says

Could ancient wheat be the future of food?



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