24/7 Farm  News Coverage
September 13, 2016
FARM NEWS
Rutgers researchers debunk 'five-second rule'
New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Sep 13, 2016
Turns out bacteria may transfer to candy that has fallen on the floor no matter how fast you pick it up. Rutgers researchers have disproven the widely accepted notion that it's OK to scoop up food and eat it within a "safe" five-second window. Donald Schaffner, professor and extension specialist in food science, found that moisture, type of surface and contact time all contribute to cross-contamination. In some instances, the transfer begins in less than one second. Their findings appear online in ... read more

Previous Issues Sep 12 Sep 09 Sep 08 Sep 07 Sep 06
WATER WORLD

Protests over water supplies hit India's tech hub
Violent protests have broken out in the southern technology hub of Bangalore over a Supreme Court order to divert water from reservoirs to a neighbouring state. ... more
FARM NEWS

Study suggests cover crop mixtures increase agroecosystem services
Planting a multi-species mixture of cover crops - rather than a cover crop monoculture - between cash crops, provides increased agroecosystem services, or multifunctionality, according to researcher ... more
WATER WORLD

Waste-besieged Easter Island slowly learns to recycle
Every Friday, a cargo plane loaded with three tonnes of waste cardboard takes off from wind-swept Easter Island, bound for the Chilean mainland thousands of miles away across the Pacific. ... more
SEED DAILY


FARM NEWS

Fruit flies help explain why humans yearn for protein
Serotonin may be responsible for our love of protein. ... more


FARM NEWS

Farming adaptations needed to combat climate change to impact crop yields in 2050
As the globe continues to spin toward a future with higher temperatures, crop yields will likely decrease if farmers do not adapt to new management or technology practices. Establishing new strategi ... more

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


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FARM NEWS

Future drought will offset benefits of higher CO2 on soybean yields
An eight-year study of soybeans grown outdoors in a carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere like that expected by 2050 has yielded a new and worrisome finding: Higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations will boos ... more
TECH SPACE

Experts warn booming seaweed industry
A rising number of valuable uses being found for seaweed - from food and fertilizer to pharmaceuticals and industrial gels - is driving the rapid growth of an industry that could easily and needless ... 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
FARM NEWS

Predictive tool vital to sustainable environmental futures
A new predictive tool, which for the first time combines human perception of the environment with land-use planning and socioeconomic data, could help governments mitigate the impact of climate chan ... more
FARM NEWS

Helpers for energy acquisition from plants
Research into plant cells is far from complete. Scientists under the biochemist Professor Peter Dormann at Universitat Bonn have now succeeded in describing the function of chloroplasts in more deta ... more
FARM NEWS

During drought, dry air can stress plants more than dry soil
Newly published research by Indiana University scientists finds that low relative humidity in the atmosphere is a significant, growing and often under-appreciated cause of plant stress in hot, dry w ... 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. Transition from Operations to Decommissioning by Preparing a Safe, Cost-Effective Shut Down and Waste Management Strategy Cryogenic Buyer's Guide
FARM NEWS

Sorghum: A Super Plant to Save the World
Long hailed as a 'miracle crop,' the versatile sorghum plant is being hailed as a singular solution to many problems in an increasingly populated, hungry, and energy-starved planet. Will sorghum sav ... more
WATER WORLD

Russia probes river turning bright red
Russia's environment ministry on Wednesday ordered a probe into a possible industrial accident after a river in the far north of the country turned bright red. ... 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

Can humans learn from the farming prowess of ambrosia beetles?
To learn the art of sustainable, pathogen-free farming, one group of researchers has turned its attention to the ambrosia beetles, a species of tree-dwelling beetle that has been cultivating fungi for 40 million years. ... more
FARM NEWS

Early-onset spring models may indicate 'nightmare' for ag
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 ... more
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
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

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
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
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

ChemChina rolls over $43 bn Syngenta offer

FARM NEWS

More tomatoes, faster: Accelerating tomato engineering

WATER WORLD

Millions at risk from rising water pollution: UN

WATER WORLD

University of Akron researchers find thin layers of water can become ice-like at room temperature

FARM NEWS

Plants found to regulate leaf temperature to boost carbon uptake

FARM NEWS

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WATER WORLD

Torrential monsoon rains bring Indian capital to halt

FARM NEWS

Making pesticide droplets less bouncy could cut agricultural runoff

FARM NEWS

Plants' future water use affects long-term drought estimates

CLIMATE SCIENCE

Climate change has less impact on drought than previously expected

Defend or grow? These plants do both

Vegetation matters

Managing invasive weeds in Botswana

60% of key S.Asian water basin not usable: study

Stormy outlook hits French wine output

Bonfires light up Baltic coast, with tech-savvy twist

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

Blending wastewater may help California cope with drought

Study offers insights into rainstorm formation

Researchers image roots in the ground

Water shortage: The demise of the Maya civilization

Molecular signature shows plants are adapting to increasing CO2

Cameroon must halt rubber plantation project: Greenpeace

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



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