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Latest News
Friday, 31 May 2019
Research on repetitive worm behavior may have implications for understanding human disease
Thursday, 30 May 2019
AMBASSADOR OF DENMARK TO NIGERIA / CAMEROON / EQUATORIAL GUINEA / REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO / CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, Mr. JESPER KAMP
Minister of Agriculture
and Rural Development
Governor ofKatsina
State
Vice Chancellor
NAPRI Director
Your Excellences
-
I do not recall being to a more
beautiful place in Nigeria than today.
Kenyan Food Outlets Reel From Acute Shortage of Irish Potatoes
Irish potatoes in Musanze market |
Wednesday, 29 May 2019
Phil Hogan: Kilkenny hub to emphasise Ireland's global leadership in agri technology
EU Agriculture Commissioner Phil Hogan has said that a new digital innovation hub in Kilkenny City can drive the digital transformation of Europe's agri-food sector boosting innovation and growth in the region.
STATHS building a legacy of agricultural science
Sanson, head of the agricultural department at the St Andrew Technical High School (STATHS), is convinced that his school has the best agricultural science programme in the country.
Agricultural Tires Market 2019- Global Industry Analysis, By Key Players, Segmentation, Trends and Forecast By 2025
, MAHARASHTRA, INDIA, May 20, 2019 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Summary:
A new market study, titled “Discover Global Agricultural Tires Market Upcoming Trends, Growth Drivers and Challenges” has been featured on WiseGuyReports.
A new market study, titled “Discover Global Agricultural Tires Market Upcoming Trends, Growth Drivers and Challenges” has been featured on WiseGuyReports.
Statistical study finds it unlikely South African fossil species is ancestral to humans
Statistical analysis of fossil data shows that it is unlikely that Australopithecus sediba, a nearly two-million-year-old, apelike fossil from South Africa, is the direct ancestor of Homo, the genus to which modern-day humans belong.
Tuesday, 28 May 2019
Irrigation Boost for Buhera Families
Irrigation Boost for Buhera Families |
Monday, 27 May 2019
e-Extension for farmers soon says NAERL boss
* 100 workers already trained for
operations
The Executive Director, National Agricultural Extension Research Liaison Office (NAERLS) Prof. Mohahammed Uthman |
Agricultural extension services via phones and internet is
set for launching, very soon. This was disclosed by the Executive Director,
National Agricultural Extension Research Liaison Office (NAERLS) Prof. Mohahammed Uthman in Zaria, recently.
Pix: FMARD major projects with their coordinators led by Director of project Dr. Maimuna Habib today interface with NIRSAL management on finance collaboration.
FMARD major projects with their coordinators led by Director of project Dr. Maimuna Habib today interface with NIRSAL management on finance collaboration.
An electric tongue can handle more spicy foods than you can
Spicy food is huge business, and Washington State University researchers have found that an electronic tongue, or e-tongue, is more effective and accurate in taste-testing fiery foods than sensitive human taste buds.
Sunday, 26 May 2019
Radical desalination approach may disrupt the water industry
water that contains high concentrations of dissolved salts and whose saline levels are higher than ocean water -- are a growing environmental concern around the world.
Saturday, 25 May 2019
Paper wasps capable of behavior that resembles logical reasoning
A new University of Michigan study provides the first evidence of transitive inference, the ability to use known relationships to infer unknown relationships, in a nonvertebrate animal: the lowly paper wasp.
Friday, 24 May 2019
Radioactive carbon from nuclear bomb tests found in deep ocean trenches
Radioactive carbon released into the atmosphere from 20th-century nuclear bomb tests has reached the deepest parts of the ocean, new research finds.
Thursday, 23 May 2019
Hummingbird robot uses AI to soon go where drones can't
What can fly like a bird and hover like an insect?
Your friendly neighborhood hummingbirds. If drones had this combo, they would be able to maneuver better through collapsed buildings and other cluttered spaces to find trapped victims.
Wednesday, 22 May 2019
Plastic gets a do-over: Breakthrough discovery recycles plastic from the inside out
Light yet sturdy, plastic is great -- until you no longer need it. Because plastics contain various additives, like dyes, fillers, or flame retardants, very few plastics can be recycled without loss in performance or aesthetics.
Tuesday, 21 May 2019
Phage therapy treats patient with drug-resistant bacterial infection
It was the summer of 2017, and her lungs were struggling to reach even a third of their normal function. She had cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease that clogs lungs with mucus and plagues patients with persistent infections. For eight years, she had been taking antibiotics to control two stubborn bacterial strains.
Monday, 20 May 2019
Pictures speak at the open day of National Animal Production Research Institute(NAPRI) where National discussion on livestock and animals productivity is being discussed.
Food Sustainability Media Award Seeks Food Writers for Cash Prize
Through May 31, 2017, The Thomas Reuters Foundation and Barilla Center for Food & Nutrition are calling all journalists, bloggers, freelancers, and individuals covering a variety of food issues to enter for a chance to win €10,000 (US$10,743), an all-expenses paid media training program and access to an audience one billion strong.
Excessive rainfall as damaging to corn yield as extreme heat, drought
Recent flooding in the Midwest has brought attention to the complex agricultural problems associated with too much rain.
Sunday, 19 May 2019
Yam seeds: Agric Council approves proposal, organization sets for commercialization
With the proposal's approval, yams:could turn out another inexhaustible source of foreign exchange for Nigeria |
The International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)and
Association of yam producers, processors and marketers’ proposal on yam improved
seeds for commercial production presented to the National Council on
Agriculture and Rural Development (NCARD) meeting held in Umuahia, Abia State got
a positive nod with an instruction to have it harmonised with the ministry’s
yam value chain for its integration into national policy for the economic
benefit of all stakeholders including marketers and consumers.
Climate extremes: Impact on global crop yield variations
Researchers from Australia, Germany and the US have quantified the effect of climate extremes, such as droughts or heatwaves, on the yield variability of staple crops around the world.
Saturday, 18 May 2019
Nature's dangerous decline 'unprecedented,' species extinction rates 'accelerating'
Nature is declining globally at rates unprecedented in human history -- and the rate of species extinctions is accelerating, with grave impacts on people around the world now likely, warns a landmark new report from the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), the summary of which was approved at the 7th session of the IPBES Plenary, meeting last week (29 April -- 4 May) in Paris.
Friday, 17 May 2019
Experts, farmers canvas for speedy passage of bills
Farmers and experts in the agricultural sector have called
on the Federal Government (FG) on the need to pass into law, bills such issues as
seed, fertilizer and warehouse receipt system in Nigeria to help boost and
reposition the agricultural industry. This position was taken during the Public-Private
Dialogue with Agriculture sector stakeholders which took place in Abuja.
Industry ministry wants transparency of commodity associations
The Federal
Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment (FMITI) has advised the major
commodity associations registered under it to be more proactive and transparent
in their dealings so as to enhance more government support with detailed record
of accountability in all ramifications. The Director, Commodity Products
Inspectorate in the ministry, Mrs. Opelolu Opewe gave the advice during an
interface session with major agricultural commodity associations in Abuja.
FG, World Bank work out grants to agric cooperatives
· Ginger, maize, dairy for Kaduna
The Federal Government and World Bank are working on how
10,000 registered agriculture cooperative groups will be given 200 million
dollar grants in the six states of the federation under a programme tagged Agro Processing Productivity Enhancement
(APPEAL)so as to achieve empowerment and economic diversification to
agriculture.
Five pillars of FAO’s five-year framework, by country rep
Minister warns on desert
encroachment..
The Country Representative of the Food and Agriculture Organisation of
the United Nations (FAO)in Nigeria, Mr. Suffyan
Koroma has highlighted the five pillars of its five-year framework in Nigeria.
He stated them at the launch a five-year strategic Country Programme Framework
(CPF) toward enhanced food security in Abuja.
Industry minister asks for cotton galvanization
The Minister
of State, Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment (FMITI)
Hajiya Aisa Abubakar has admonished stakeholders
at the value chains of cotton productivity to itemise steps on how to boost the
economic viability of the crop for more financial freedom and job creation for
stakeholders.
Biosafety DG says agency not promoter of GMOs
Director-General/Chief Executive Officer, National Biosafety Management Agency. Dr. Rufus E. Ebegba |
Director-General/Chief Executive Officer, National Biosafety Management Agency. Dr. Rufus E. Ebegba
has said that his agency was never a promoter of Genetically Modified Organisms
(GMOS) as generally believed by many Nigerians. He disclosed this during an
interactive session with editors of media houses on controversies surrounding
the new improved technology in Abuja.
AFAN women fault presidential fertilizer distribution
women leader of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), Imo State Chapter, Mrs. Ijeoma Nwankuku |
A women
leader of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), Imo State Chapter,
Mrs. Ijeoma Nwankuku has decried the presidential fertilizer distribution
strategy to farmers as not effective as many could not get the item with all
other agricultural inputs. She said this at the 43rd National
Council of Agriculture and Rural Development held in Umuahia, Abia State.
Global crop diversity in decline as just four crops dominate, study
Crop diversity around the world is declining, presenting a challenge for both the environment and food security. This is the result of new study from the University of Toronto Scarborough, published in the journal PLOS ONE on February 6.
Thursday, 16 May 2019
Director of Animal Husbandry finally breaks silence, says ‘my experience qualifies me’
Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development, Dr. Mohammed Bello Umar |
The new
director, Department of Animal Husbandry, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development (FMARD), Mr. Bright Boyowa Watergire whose appointment generated
rowdy session during the National Agricultural Council Meeting has finally opened
up to say he was qualified for the position, going by the federal civil service
law.
Targeting how fungi 'taste' ould be key to developing control
Exploring how a hazardous fungal pathogen 'tastes' its surroundings within a wheat plant to coordinate virulence could be the key to developing new control strategies, scientists believe.
With flower preferences, bees have a big gap between the sexes
For scores of wild bee species, females and males visit very different flowers for food -- a discovery that could be important for conservation efforts, according to Rutgers-led research.
Why you love coffee and beer
Why do you swig bitter, dark roast coffee or hoppy beer while your coworker guzzles sweet cola?
UN: Future of food ‘under severe threat’ from biodiversity loss
The plants, animals, and micro-organisms that are the foundation of food production are in decline, putting the future of our food, livelihoods, health and environment under severe threat.
Wednesday, 15 May 2019
NGO trains 86 youths on ‘Climate Resilient Agriculture’
A non-governmental organisation, Fresh & Young Brains
Development Initiative (FBIN), has disclosed that it has trained 86 young
farmers on climate resilient agriculture in seven states and the FCT. The
founder of the organisation, Ms Nikiruka Nnaemego-Okonkwo, stated this at a
“Mock Parliament on Climate Resilience Agriculture” held in Abuja.
From nitrogen pollution to gene drives: UN highlights five key emerging issues
Urgent action from nations around the world is required to tackle emerging environmental challenges that will have profound effects on our society, economy and ecosystems, the United Nations Environment Programme has warned.
Environmental threats put human health in peril, UN warns
Unsustainable human activities have degraded the Earth’s ecosystems, endangering the ecological foundations of society. Environmental damage to our planet is so dire that human health will be increasingly threatened unless urgent action is taken.
FG embarks on ranching, sign MOU with a market outlet, farm
·
Says will support every other stakeholders
The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
(FMARD) yesterday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to expedite action
with a private market outlet and an incorporated farm towards better animal
productivity as President Mohammed Buhari has approved the RUGA model of
facilities provision for herdsmen to mitigate incessant clashes with farmers
through ranching.
Tuesday, 14 May 2019
Images speak @ NESG public-private dialogue with Agriculture sector stakeholders held in Abuja
Images speak @ NESG public-private dialogue with Agriculture sector stakeholders held in Abuja, on "strengthen enabling policy environment for fertiliser system, seed system and warehouse receipt system in Nigeria’’ see more images below..
UN report calls for better access to water for small-scale farmers
Access to water and sanitation is a human right. However, billions of people are still living without safe water and sanitation facilities, with wide disparities between the rich and the poor. This is the message of the UN World Water Development Report, launched on 19 March three days ahead of World Water Day. Some 2.1 billion people do not have access to safe drinking water and 4.5 billion people lack safely managed sanitation facilities.
Aquaculture: Expert advocates for more fishes documentation
The Deputy Provost, Fresh Water Fisheries Technology, Bagu, Bornu state, Dr. Olarenwaju Nurudeen |
The Deputy
Provost, Fresh Water Fisheries Technology, Bagu, Bornu state, Dr. Olarenwaju
Nurudeen has advocated for biological documentation of more economic fishes
from the wild to upscale commercial aquaculture production to meet local
consumption and checkmate huge import bill.
Experts canvas for speedy passage of bill...
* Farmers' group fault implementation
process
Experts in the agricultural sector have called on the
federal government on the need to pass in to law, bills such as seed,
fertilizer and warehouse receipt system in Nigeria to help boast and reposition
the agricultural industry, so as to return to its pride of place.
Monday, 13 May 2019
PATIENCE IS PAINFUL, BUT STILL BEST BET FOR #CORNPLANT19
With each passing day, the wait to plant corn is a little more painful. As of May 6, corn planting is only 23% complete in the nation’s 18 largest corn-producing states, according to USDA’s National Ag Statistics Service. That’s half the progress of corn planting in any other year, NASS reports.
Illegal seeds: Scientists advise farmers on hybrids
·
NASC may
soon begin e- certification
Seeds |
Farmers have
been admonished by agricultural scientists to ensure the use of only certified
hybrid seeds as there are many fake of such in circulation that were imported
without National Agricultural Seed Council (NASC)‘s approval just as the body
reiterated its readiness to ensure certification through electronic means using
digital tracking to reduce adulteration.
The advice
to the end users by scientists was given chiefly by the Executive Director,
Institute for Agricultural Research (IAR), Prof. Ibrahim U. Abubakar during the
annual cropping scheme for year 2019, held at Samaru, Zaria.
Rainforests the size of England lost in 2018 due to deforestation
The world lost 12 million hectares of tropical forest in 2018, an area the size of England, new data from the University of Maryland reveals. According to the figures, released on April 25 by Global Forest Watch, this is the fourth-highest annual loss since records began in 2001.
Sunday, 12 May 2019
Report: 113 million people worldwide face severe food insecurity
Around 113 million people in 53 countries worldwide faced severe food insecurity in 2018, finds a new report released by the Food Security Information Network (FSIN), an initiative of food security and development institutions, UN agencies and the EU.
Saturday, 11 May 2019
Organic farming can drive transition to sustainable food systems
Organic farming can play an important role in triggering a shift towards more sustainable food systems, according to an article published in the scientific journal “Nature Sustainability”. A team of international experts argues that there is broad consensus that we urgently need to change the way we produce and consume food. Only then will we be able to address global challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss and water scarcity and make progress on achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
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