24/7 Farm  News Coverage
February 22, 2018
FARM NEWS
Global grazing lands increasingly vulnerable to a changing climate



Minneapolis MN (SPX) Feb 21, 2018
Some 800 million people around the world depend on livestock that graze on natural vegetation for their livelihoods and food security. In a good season, grasses and other plants flourish, supporting robust herds. In a bad season, the system suffers - as do the people who rely on it. The difference between a good and bad year? One significant and increasingly volatile factor is precipitation. A new study in Nature Climate Change reveals that over the past century year-to-year precipitation variabil ... read more

FARM NEWS
Farming crops with rocks to reduce CO2 and improve global food security
Sheffield UK (SPX) Feb 21, 2018
Farming crops with crushed rocks could help to improve global food security and reduce the amount of CO2 entering the atmosphere, a new study has found. The pioneering research by scientists a ... more
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Eleven missing, 14 injured in Indonesia landslide
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 22, 2018
Eleven people are missing and 14 have been injured following a landslide Thursday that cascaded down the terraced slopes of a rice field on the Indonesian island of Java, officials said. ... more
WATER WORLD
Cape Town now faces dry taps by July 9
Cape Town (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
Residents of drought-stricken Cape Town received good news Tuesday when city officials said they now face losing piped water to their homes by July 9 - a month later than last forecast. ... more
FARM NEWS
Pesticide traces in three-quarters of French fruit: report
Paris (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
Almost three- quarters of fruit and more than two-fifths of non-organic vegetables contain traces of pesticide in France, with grapes and celery the most affected, a report said Tuesday. ... more
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FLORA AND FAUNA
Indonesians arrested for shooting an orangutan some 130 times
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 19, 2018
Four Indonesian men have been arrested over the killing of an orangutan shot some 130 times with an air rifle, police said Monday, in the latest fatal attack on a critically endangered species. ... more
FLORA AND FAUNA
France to let wolf packs grow despite angry farmers
Paris (AFP) Feb 19, 2018
The French government announced Monday it will allow the wolf population to grow 40 percent despite pressure from farmers in mountain regions who are worried about their sheep flocks. ... more
FARM NEWS
Giant London glasshouse to reopen with world's rarest plants
London (AFP) Feb 14, 2018
A gleaming monument to the ambition and creativity of its age, the world's largest Victorian glasshouse will once again welcome visitors to see some of the world's rarest plants following a lengthy facelift. ... more
FARM NEWS
Growing crops with crushed rocks could reduce CO2 emissions
Washington (UPI) Feb 19, 2018
Just add rocks. In a recent study, scientists at the University of Sheffield showed the addition of reactive silicate rocks to agricultural soil can boost crop production while limiting the amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere. ... more
WATER WORLD
India's top court steps in to help thirsty tech hub
New Delhi (AFP) Feb 16, 2018
India's water-starved tech hub Bangalore received a much-needed boost on Friday when the country's top court altered a river-sharing arrangement in its favour, ruling on a bitter dispute that dates back more than a century. ... more
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FARM NEWS
Myanmar farmers going against the grain with apps
Aye Ywar , Myanmar (AFP) Feb 18, 2018
A free app on farmer San San Hla's smartphone is her new weapon in the war against the dreaded stem borer moth that blighted her rice paddy in southern Myanmar for the last two years. ... more
FARM NEWS
Cover crops in nitrogen's circle of life
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 15, 2018
A circle of life-and nitrogen-is playing out in farms across the United States. And researchers are trying to get the timing right. Some cover crops, such as hairy vetch or cereal rye, are not ... more
FARM NEWS
Intensive agriculture influences US regional summer climate, study finds
Boston MA (SPX) Feb 15, 2018
Scientists agree that changes in land use such as deforestation, and not just greenhouse gas emissions, can play a significant role altering the world's climate systems. Now, a new study by research ... more
WATER WORLD
Rapid decompression key to making low-density liquid water
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 15, 2018
Water makes up more than 70 percent of our planet and up to 60 percent of our bodies. Water is so common that we take it for granted. Yet water also has very strange properties compared to most othe ... more
WATER WORLD
Tiny membrane key to safe drinking water
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Feb 15, 2018
Sydney's iconic harbour has played a starring role in the development of new CSIRO technology that could save lives around the world. Using their own specially designed form of graphene, 'Grap ... more


Drought forces Mozambique capital to ration water

FARM NEWS
New model for evaluating rangeland systems launches
Fort Collins CO (SPX) Feb 15, 2018
Rangelands are the dominant land type across the planet and millions of people rely on the natural goods and services and food security the lands provide. A recently released model, G-Range, allows ... more
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FARM NEWS
App delivery boom shakes up China food sector
Shanghai (AFP) Feb 14, 2018
Guo Bonan has opened several new branches of his "8Peppers" spicy Sichuan-style restaurants across Shanghai since last year, and not one has a dining room. ... more
WATER WORLD
A lightning-based approach to immediate short-duration rainfall predictions
Beijing, China (SPX) Feb 13, 2018
Previous studies have indicated a worldwide increasing trend of intense precipitation events under the influence of global warming. Heavy precipitation events increase the risk of flooding, exerting ... more
WATER WORLD
For global water crisis, climate may be the last straw
Paris (AFP) Feb 13, 2018
Before man-made climate change kicked in - and well before "Day Zero" in Cape Town, where taps may run dry in early May - the global water crisis was upon us. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Worsening Ethiopian drought threatens to end nomadic lifestyle
Dabafayed, Ethiopia (AFP) Feb 13, 2018
Down a sandy track past a desiccated animal carcass lies a cluster of half-built huts that Ethiopia's government and aid agencies hope will blunt the worsening toll of repeated droughts. ... more
CLIMATE SCIENCE
S.Africa declares drought a 'national disaster'
Cape Town (AFP) Feb 13, 2018
South Africa on Tuesday declared a "national disaster" over a drought that has ravaged parts of the country and threatened to leave homes in Cape Town without running water. ... more
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Tracking a typhoon's seismic footprint
Princeton NJ (SPX) Feb 16, 2018
Climatologists are often asked, "Is climate change making hurricanes stronger?" but they can't give a definitive answer because the global hurricane record only goes back to the dawn of the satellite era. But now, an intersection of disciplines - seismology, atmospheric sciences, and oceanography - offers an untapped data source: the continuous seismic record, which dates back to the early 20th ... more
+ Ball Aerospace Delivers Flight Cryocooler Early for NASA's Landsat Mission
+ Farewell to a Pioneering Pollution Sensor
+ ESA Cluster mission unveils the magnetosphere
+ Landsat 8 marks five years in orbit
+ Micro to macro mapping - Observing past landscapes via remote-sensing
+ Chinese company hitches space ride on UK satellite
+ Ozone at lower latitudes not recovering, despite ozone hole healing
Why Russia is one step ahead of US Army's plans for future GPS
Moscow (Sputnik) Feb 12, 2018
The Pentagon and Israel's Defense Ministry have launched 'Urban Navigation Challenge', a startup competition to create advanced 'counter-terror' navigation systems which don't use GPS. The project makes no mention of officially designated US "rivals" like Russia or China, but according to Russian experts, it would make no difference even if it did. The project, officially dubbed the Combat ... more
+ Europe claims 100 million users for Galileo satnav system
+ Airbus selected by ESA for EGNOS V3 program
+ Pentagon probes fitness-app use after map shows sensitive sites
+ China sends twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites into space
+ 18 satellites in exactEarth's real-time constellation now in service
+ 'Quantum radio' may aid communications and mapping indoors, underground and underwater
+ Raytheon to provide GPS-guided artillery shells


Poland illegally logged in ancient forest: EU court advisor
Luxembourg (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
Poland's rightwing government broke the law by logging in one of Europe's last primeval forests, the legal advisor to the EU's top court said Tuesday, setting up a new clash between Brussels and Warsaw. Logging in the Bialowieza Forest began in May 2016 but the European Commission took Poland to court last year arguing that it was destroying a forest that boasts unique plant and animal life. ... more
+ Tropical trees use unique method to resist drought
+ Polish logging in ancient forest breaches EU law: court advisor
+ Hunting wolves in Serbia's southern forests
+ A theory of physics explains the fragmentation of tropical forests
+ FSU researchers: Savanna fires pump Central African forests full of nitrogen
+ Climate: Two Congos set joint approach for peatland help
+ Increased UV from ozone depletion sterilizes trees
Fungal enzymes could hold secret to making renewable energy from wood
York UK (SPX) Feb 20, 2018
An international team of researchers, including scientists from the University of York, has discovered a set of enzymes found in fungi that are capable of breaking down one of the main components of wood. The enzymes could now potentially be used to sustainably convert wood biomass into valuable chemical commodities such as biofuels. As an alternative to coal and oil, wood is increasingly ... more
+ The new bioenergy research center: building on ten years of success
+ Indonesia eyes lax palm oil rules in EU trade deal: leak
+ Argonne and Energy Vision demonstrate Renewable Natural Gas as transport fuel
+ Biochar could replace unsustainable peat moss in greenhouse industry
+ Lithuanian researchers: Wastewater treatment plants could generate electricity
+ Calculating the CO2 emissions of biofuels is not enough
+ Bio-renewable process could help 'green' plastic


EU nations should seize chance to boost renewable energy: study
Brussels (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
EU member states should take advantage of falling costs for renewable energy to invest more in the sector and make it account for a third of total energy output by 2030, an new report said Tuesday. The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) study said the European Union could make renewables account for 34 percent of total production by 2030, up from the current target of 27 percent a ... more
+ United Sun Systems and DoE launch new super cheap solar battery system
+ Leclanche selects NEXTracker's NX Drive Energy storage system for various applications
+ Governor Cuomo Announces More Than 1,000 Percent Growth Of Solar Power In New York
+ Greensmith Energy storage technology selected to deliver reliable solar power in Massachusetts
+ GE partners with Scatec Solar for the 162-Megawatt solar project in Brazil
+ U.S. solar segment depended on Asia in 2016
+ China's Solar-Powered Drone Test-Fires Missiles in Near Space
World's first floating wind farm put to the test
Washington (UPI) Feb 15, 2018
Put to the test with high winds and strong seas, Norway's Statoil said a floating wind farm in Scottish waters shows promise for deepwater installations. During its first three months in service, the company's Hywind Scotland floating wind farm, the first of its kind, was put to the test and performed better than expected. Hurricane Ophelia in October pummeled the wind farm with 80 mile ... more
+ New wind farm construction starts in Italy
+ Ireland pushing for greener economy
+ China wind turbine-maker guilty of stealing US trade secrets
+ Scotland sets up $83 million low-carbon fund
+ German offshore wind farm closer to powering mainland
+ The wave power farm off Mutriku could improve its efficiency
+ Turkey gets European loan for renewable energy


Michigan utility company to go zero coal
Washington (UPI) Feb 20, 2018
Coal will no longer be used as an energy source for Michigan residents as more renewables come on stream in the decades ahead, a utility company said. Public utility company Consumers Energy, which provides gas and electricity to about 60 percent of the state population, said it would no longer be using coal as a power source by 2040. By then, the company said it expects more than 40 pe ... more
+ Australia won't fund mega Adani mine rail link
+ New York unveils plans for fossil fuel divestment
+ French energy company EDF to replace coal in China
+ Poland opens Europe's largest coal-fired power unit
+ BHP to exit global coal body over climate change policy
+ Coal demand falling, IEA says
+ Adani drops contractor for contentious Australia mega mine
China rules out arson in Tibetan temple fire
Beijing (AFP) Feb 22, 2018
Chinese authorities have ruled out arson as the cause of a recent fire at Tibetan Buddhism's holiest temple, state media reported Thursday, adding an important Buddha statue had emerged "intact" from the blaze. The report is the first official account of Saturday's fire at the more than 1,300-year-old Jokhang Temple, after authorities suppressed social media accounts of the incident, leadin ... more
+ Hong Kong activist on trial over riots
+ China angered by theft of Terracotta Warrior's thumb
+ MGM China to open mega resort in Macau as high rollers return
+ China's former internet czar expelled from Communist Party
+ Mercedes apologises to China after quoting Dalai Lama
+ Publisher detained in China 'confesses', blames Sweden
+ 'Gotta find a way': Chinese rap in crisis after crackdown


Artificial intelligence poses questions for nature of war: Mattis
Washington (AFP) Feb 18, 2018
Artificial intelligence and its impact on weapons of the future has made US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis doubt his own theories on warfare. A question on the subject prompted the retired Marine general to give an impromptu seminar on his theory of war Saturday to reporters returning with him from a week-long tour of Europe. Recalling his own writings, he differentiated between the essent ... more
+ New stretchable electronic skin sensitive enough to feel ladybug footsteps
+ Researchers help robots think and plan in the abstract
+ Can a cockroach teach a robot how to scurry across rugged terrain?
+ All-terrain microbot moves by tumbling over complex topography
+ The robots will see you now
+ Quantum algorithm could help AI think faster
+ Integration of AI and robotics with materials sciences will lead to new clean energy technology
The plastics industry is leaking huge amounts of microplastics
Gothenburg, Sweden (SPX) Feb 21, 2018
The problem of plastic pellets in marine environments has been reported since the 1970s and the first recommendations for legislation were introduced in the USA back in the 1990s. However, in Sweden, these spills have only received attention in recent years. Small plastic pellets are used as raw materials. The pellets are shipped from the manufacturing site to different plants where they a ... more
+ Judges to rule on diesel bans in choking German cities
+ Gaza to pump sewage straight into sea as crisis worsens
+ Enhanced education could help turn the tide on marine litter
+ 3M settle Minnesota water pollution lawsuit for $850 mln
+ Environmental chemicals may boost body weight: study
+ Coal-loving Poland struggles with killer smog
+ Philippines resorts given two months to clean up 'cesspool' island


Rash of forest fires breaks out in Indonesia
Pekanbaru, Indonesia (AFP) Feb 21, 2018
Indonesia was battling a rash of forest fires Wednesday as it raised an alert over the blazes which occur every year and emit choking smog that can envelop neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia. Fires have broken out in four provinces - South Sumatra, Riau, West Kalimantan and Central Kalimantan - prompting them to declare "alert emergency" status, one notch below the most severe warning. ... more
+ NASA Covers Wildfires from Many Sources
+ Fort McMurray researchers find simple key to risk of severe peat fires
+ Charcoal remains could accelerate CO2 emissions after forest fires
+ Wet winters may not dampen small wildfires
+ Returning winds churn up heightened alert in fire-hit California
+ Thomas fire mostly contained in charred
+ After the fire, charcoal goes against the grain, with the flow
Coming decades vital for future sea level rise: study
Paris (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
How quickly humanity draws down the greenhouse gases driving global warming will determine whether sea levels rise half-a-metre or six times that, even if Paris climate pact goals are fully met, researchers reported Tuesday in a study. "The trajectory of emissions in the next few decades will shape our coastlines in the centuries to come," lead author Matthias Mengel, a scientist at the Pots ... more
+ Rare find from the deep sea
+ Cape Town now faces dry taps by July 9
+ India's top court steps in to help thirsty tech hub
+ Shellfish reefs: Australia's untold environmental disaster
+ The neuroscience of cuttlefish camouflage
+ Illegal South African abalone flowing into Hong Kong: report
+ Drought forces Mozambique capital to ration water


Record high temperatures for February in New York
New York (AFP) Feb 21, 2018
New York residents on Wednesday enjoyed record heat for the month of February, with the thermometer reaching 24 degrees Celsius (76 Farenheit) in the early afternoon, the National Weather Service reported. The previous record for February 21 was 20 Celsius (68 degrees Farenheit) set in 1930, said Faye Morrone, meteorologist at the NWS's New York office. Wednesday's temperature, taken in ... more
+ Lightning storms less likely in a warming planet, study suggests
+ Reflective surfaces alleviate heatwaves
+ Storm damage to cost Germany 500 mln euros as death toll rises
+ Nine dead as huge storms batter Europe
+ Death toll from California mudslides rises to 20
+ Dozens still unaccounted for in California mudslides
+ Rescuers search for victims as California mudslide toll hits 17
HSBC profits surge as CEO departs
London (AFP) Feb 20, 2018
Profits at HSBC surged during 2017, in part thanks to a strong Asian performance, the global banking giant said Tuesday as it looks to the future without long-serving chief executive Stuart Gulliver. Net profit ballooned to $9.7 billion (7.9 billion euros) last year, from $1.3 billion in 2016 when the Asia-focused bank was hit by huge restructuring charges and writedowns. London-headquar ... more
+ WTO chief urges US to avoid paralysing trade system
+ US eyes heavy tariffs on China, Russia to counter steel, aluminum glut
+ After stunning growth streak, Amazon ambitions seem boundless
+ Trump threatens China sanctions, vows to rework S.Korea trade deal
+ Beijing ups trade tensions with new measures on key US chemical
+ Chinese bank lending surges to record high in January
+ Trade on agenda as China's top envoy visits US
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Pulsating aurora mysteries uncovered with help from THEMIS and ERG missions
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 21, 2018
Sometimes on a dark night near the poles, the sky pulses a diffuse glow of green, purple and red. Unlike the long, shimmering veils of typical auroral displays, these pulsating auroras are much dimmer and less common. While scientists have long known auroras to be associated with solar activity, the precise mechanism of pulsating auroras was unknown. Now, new research, using data from NASA ... more
+ Towards a better prediction of solar eruptions
+ Where no mission has gone before
+ HINODE captures record breaking solar magnetic field
+ What's behind the most brilliant lights in the sky
+ NASA's newly rediscovered IMAGE mission provided key aurora research
+ GOLD will revolutionize our understanding of space weather
+ Rare 'super blood blue moon' visible on Jan 31
New phagocytosis model predicts which cells can eat other cells
Washington (UPI) Feb 20, 2018
Scientists have designed a new model to identify which organisms are capable of consuming other cells through a process called phagocytosis. The research, detailed this week in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, could help scientists more accurately simulate the evolution of early complex lifeforms. The earliest life forms on Earth were made up of prokaryotes, simple, sing ... more
+ Scientists create 'Evolutionwatch' for plants
+ Kin of 'world's ugliest animal' among fish hauled off Australia abyss
+ The conflict between males and females could replace the evolution of new species
+ In Kenya, anti-poaching dogs are wildlife's best friends
+ Footage shows 'dumbo' octopod hatchling looks like a miniature adult
+ France to let wolf packs grow despite angry farmers
+ Indonesians arrested for shooting an orangutan some 130 times


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