
Topics: Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Sustainability, GMO's, Research, Genes /Genetics, Coronavirus/COVID,
BYU researchers sequenced the quinoa genome. Now they’re introducing hybrids of the crop to developing nations
As soils across the world become less fertile and more desert-like due to climate change, it’s getting harder for farmers, especially those in developing nations, to grow basic life-preserving crops such as corn, wheat and rice.
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Topics: Commodities, Crop Consultant, Economics, Sustainability, World Hunger, Ag Africa,
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Topics: Agriculture US, Crop Consultant, Water, Sustainability, Weather,
Opinion: The importance of California’s agricultural water supplies
We cannot accommodate serious discussion on the demand side of water questions without working on the supply side.
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Topics: Commodities, Agriculture US, Crop Consultant, Economics, Sustainability, Trade (Commodities), Coronavirus/COVID,
Wisconsin agriculture fared better in 2021 than 2020
Despite drought conditions crops turned out good and milk prices are climbing. With inflation woes and a persistent pandemic, can an upward trend last?
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Topics: Soil Health, Organic, Forestry, Crop Consultant, Sustainability, Research, Regenerative Agriculture, Education,
Soils in old-growth treetops can store more carbon than soils under our feet
AGU press contact: Rebecca Dzombak, +1 (202) 777-7492, news@agu.org (UTC-4 hours) Contact information for the researchers: Peyton Smith, Texas A&M University, peyton.smith@ag.tamu.edu (UTC-6 hours) Hannah Connuck, Franklin and Marshall College, hconnuck@gmail.com (UTC-4 hours) NEW ORLEANS—New research reveals a previously underappreciated way old-growth forests have been recycling and storing carbon: treetop soils. Branches in forest canopies can hold caches of soil that may store substantially more carbon than soils on the ground beneath them, and scientists are just beginning to understand how much carbon canopy soils — which exist on every continent except Antarctica — could store. The new research on these unique soils, being presented on Wednesday, 15 December at 5:00 p.m. CST at AGU Fall Meeting 2021, marks the first attempt to quantify carbon capture by canopy soils. The work highlights another way old-growth forests are rich, complex ecosystems that cannot be quickly replaced by replanting forests. Tree branches collect fallen tree leaves and other organic material over hundreds of years, like the ground does. On top of the branches, the plant litter decomposes as it accumulates, forming a carbon-rich layer that can be several inches thick. The researchers climbed up into the rainforest canopy in Costa Rica, instruments in hand, to find out just how much carbon canopy soils can contain. Active carbon, a short-term storage pool of organic carbon, was three times higher in canopy soil compared to soils underfoot, the researchers found. “We knew these would be really organic-rich soils, but we didn’t expect the extremely large amount of carbon compared to mineral soils,” said Hannah Connuck, an undergraduate researcher at Franklin and Marshall College who will be presenting the study results. The researchers are still calculating the total concentration of organic carbon at their research site, but other research has found canopy soils to have up to 10 times higher concentrations of or...
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Topics: Wheat, Commodities, Agriculture US, Crop Consultant, Weather,
Moisture seen critical for wheat blasted by U.S. Plains dust storm By Reuters
Moisture seen critical for wheat blasted by U.S. Plains dust storm
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Topics: Commodities, Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Water, Economics, Sustainability, Ag India, Weather,
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Topics: Soil Health, Precision AG , Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Sustainability, Research, World Hunger, Education,
Biologist roots out solutions, creates tools to help others grow better crops - MixPoint
Biologist roots out solutions, creates tools to help others grow better crops
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Topics: Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Water, Sustainability, Potatoes, Research, Weather,
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Topics: Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Economics, Sustainability, World Hunger, Ag South America,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/brace-yourself-brazil-is-about-to-rock-markets/2021/11/28/1e043922-50a8-11ec-83d2-d9dab0e23b7e_story.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=wp_business
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