24/7 Farm  News Coverage
September 06, 2016
FARM NEWS
Early-onset spring models may indicate 'nightmare' for ag
Ithaca NY (SPX) Sep 06, 2016
Warm springs in the Great Lakes and Northeast regions - which create havoc for agriculture - may start earlier by mid-century if greenhouse gas emissions are not reduced, according to a new Cornell University study published in Climate Dynamics. Very warm springs have been anomalies, but this new analysis of climate model data shows an increased frequency to nearly one in every three years by the end of this century. "The spring of 2012, with its summerlike warmth, brought plants out of dorm ... read more

Previous Issues Sep 05 Sep 02 Sep 01 Aug 31 Aug 30
FARM NEWS

Crop domestication is a balancing act
Skinny lines of ants snake through the rainforest carrying leaves and flowers above their heads - fertilizer for industrial-scale, underground fungus farms. Soon after the dinosaur extinctions 60 mi ... more
WATER WORLD

Flood threat as plastic bags clog Bangkok's bowels
A line of prisoners emerges from Bangkok's sewers covered in a thick film of slime and hauling buckets of sludge - frontline troops in the battle against a rising tide of plastic waste. ... more
FARM NEWS

Iran's pistachio farms are dying of thirst
The pistachio trees at the village in southern Iran are long dead, bleached white by the sun - the underground water reserves sucked dry by decades of over-farming and waste. ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

ChemChina rolls over $43 bn Syngenta offer
State-owned China National Chemical Corp. said Tuesday it was extending its $43 billion agreed takeover for Swiss pesticide and seed giant Syngenta until November. ... more


FARM NEWS

Ivory Coast cocoa farmers seek gold in face of drought
Once a cocoa planter, Ferdinand Konan Yao has joined the ranks of fellow farmers who have abandoned Ivory Coast's top cash crop to work in clandestine gold mines buried deep in the plantations. ... more

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


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FARM NEWS

More tomatoes, faster: Accelerating tomato engineering
Tomatoes are already an ideal model species for plant research, but scientists at the Boyce Thompson Institute (BTI) just made them even more useful by cutting the time required to modify their gene ... more
FARM NEWS

'Electric' sheep models help scientists study sheltering sheep
Keeping livestock comfortable in the face of ever-changing and often adverse weather is a constant struggle. The more comfortable the animals, the more productive they'll be. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
One billion Africans being harmed by cooking pollution
US reaches civil nuclear cooperation accord with Bahrain
American firms flag hit from US export controls targeting China
BIO FUEL

Croatian Pig Farm Uses Synergies to Generate Energy
In summer 2016, a biogas plant of the German plant manufacturer WELTEC BIOPOWER went live in Varazdin, northern Croatia. The 250-kW plant of the pig farmer Dalibor Vrcek perfectly suits the farm's c ... more
WATER WORLD

Millions at risk from rising water pollution: UN
Increasingly polluted rivers in Africa, Asia and Latin America pose a disease risk to more than 300 million people and threaten fisheries and farming in many countries, a UN report warned Tuesday. ... more
WATER WORLD

University of Akron researchers find thin layers of water can become ice-like at room temperature
New research by scientists at The University of Akron (UA) shows that a nanometer-thin layer of water between two charged surfaces exhibits ice-like tendencies that allow it to withstand pressures o ... 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
FARM NEWS

Plants found to regulate leaf temperature to boost carbon uptake
A new study has found that plants regulate their leaf temperature with some independence from the surrounding air temperature, a trait that increases carbon uptake through photosynthesis. The resear ... more
WATER WORLD

Torrential monsoon rains bring Indian capital to halt
Heavy monsoon downpours and thunderstorms brought life in the Indian capital to a grinding halt Wednesday as hundreds of thousands of commuters - and the US secretary of state - were left stranded on waterlogged roads. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
China, India should work towards 'win-win' cooperation: Chinese FM
US delays Patriot arms deliveries to Switzerland in switch to Ukraine
US 'moving at haste' to get Ukraine weapons: envoy
FARM NEWS

Making pesticide droplets less bouncy could cut agricultural runoff
When farmers spray their fields with pesticides or other treatments, only 2 percent of the spray sticks to the plants. A significant portion of it typically bounces right off the plants, lands on th ... more
FARM NEWS

Plants' future water use affects long-term drought estimates
As humans pump carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and global temperatures rise, many questions loom. One major issue is how much fresh water will be available for people, forests and agriculture. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE

Climate change has less impact on drought than previously expected
As a multiyear drought grinds on in the Southwestern United States, many wonder about the impact of global climate change on more frequent and longer dry spells. As humans emit more carbon dioxide i ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA

Defend or grow? These plants do both
From natural ecosystems to farmers' fields, plants face a dilemma of energy use: outgrow and outcompete their neighbors for light, or defend themselves against insects and disease. But what if you c ... more
WATER WORLD

Vegetation matters
In California's Sierra Nevada mountains, as more precipitation falls in the form of rain rather than snow, and the snowpack melts earlier in spring, it's important for water managers to know when an ... more

FARM NEWS

Managing invasive weeds in Botswana
Teams of scientists and labourers from the Department of Water Affairs in Botswana undertook a decades old challenge since the 1970s to combat invasive weeds in wetlands of Botswana, namely the Okav ... more
WATER WORLD

60% of key S.Asian water basin not usable: study
Sixty percent of the groundwater in a river basin supporting more than 750 million people in Pakistan, India, Nepal and Bangladesh is not drinkable or usable for irrigation, researchers said Monday. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Chinese researchers craft high fidelity Mars soil simulant to support future missions
Ancient river systems reveal Mars was wetter than we thought
NASA's Parker Solar Probe Snaps Closest-Ever Images to Sun




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FARM NEWS

Stormy outlook hits French wine output

FARM NEWS

Bonfires light up Baltic coast, with tech-savvy twist

WATER WORLD

Study: Thin layers of water behave like ice at room temperature

WATER WORLD

Blending wastewater may help California cope with drought

WATER WORLD

Study offers insights into rainstorm formation

FARM NEWS

Researchers image roots in the ground

WATER WORLD

Water shortage: The demise of the Maya civilization

FARM NEWS

Molecular signature shows plants are adapting to increasing CO2

FARM NEWS

Cameroon must halt rubber plantation project: Greenpeace

FARM NEWS

Study reveals genetic history of the cultivated strawberry

China's COFCO buys rest of Dutch commodity trader

Trade liberalization could buffer economic losses in agriculture

Story of how meat was raised can alter tasting experience

The fuel for Hong Kong's engine: milk tea

Researchers discover a special power in wheat

Flowering meadows benefit humankind

New method for quantifying methane emissions from manure management

Reduced ecosystem functions in oil palm plantations

Plant response to carbon dioxide emissions depends on their neighbors

'Neonic' insecticides bad news for bees: study

Pesticide-resistant whitefly could 'devastate' many US crops

Pesticide-resistant whitefly could 'devastate' many US crops

Adding milk, meat to diet dramatically improves nutrition for poor in Zambia

Drought ravages Lesotho as water is exported to S.Africa

Sudan floods kill 100, destroy villages: officials

Not all is green in Mexico City's Aztec garden district

Sequencing of fungal disease genomes may help prevent banana arma

Archaeologists find Britain's last hunter-gatherers on small island

Saving bees: France's thriving city hives offer token help

Drought-hit Swaziland imposes four day water cuts



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