highly branched plants of teosinte, a wild relative of corn. Right: tiny pods on the vine of Glycine soja, wild relative of soybean. New research sheds light on how domestication affects the genomes of corn and soybeans. |
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Sunday, 30 June 2019
Genomic features that make plants good candidates for domestication
Saturday, 29 June 2019
Do additives help the soil?
A UBC researcher is using her latest study to question whether soil additives are worth their salt.
Friday, 28 June 2019
'Exotic' genes may improve cotton yield and quality
Cotton breeders face a "Catch-22." Yield from cotton crops is inversely related to fiber quality. In general, as yield improves, fiber quality decreases, and vice-versa. "This is one of the most significant challenges for cotton breeders," says Peng Chee, a researcher at the University of Georgia.
Thursday, 27 June 2019
The hunger gaps: How flowering times affect farmland bees
For the very first time, researchers from the University of Bristol have measured farmland nectar supplies throughout the whole year and revealed hungry gaps when food supply is not meeting pollinator demand. This novel finding reveals new ways of making farmland better for pollinators, benefitting the many crop plants and wildflowers that depend on them.
Wednesday, 26 June 2019
Pesticide exposure causes bumblebee flight to fall short
Bees exposed to a neonicotinoid pesticide fly only a third of the distance that unexposed bees are able to achieve.
Tuesday, 25 June 2019
'Right' cover-crop mix good for both Chesapeake and bottom lines
'Right' cover-crop mix good for both Chesapeake and bottom lines |
Monday, 24 June 2019
Changing climate may affect animal-to-human disease transfer
Climate change could affect occurrences of diseases like bird-flu and Ebola, with environmental factors playing a larger role than previously understood in animal-to-human disease transfer.
Sunday, 23 June 2019
Gene-editing technology may produce resistant virus in cassava plant
The use of gene-editing technology to create virus-resistant cassava plants could have serious negative ramifications, according to new research by plant biologists at the University of Alberta, the University of Liege in Belgium, and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.
Saturday, 22 June 2019
Microscopic life in the saline soil of the Marismas del Odiel Natural Park
A University of Seville research group, led by the professor Antonio Ventosa, has, for the first time, studied and described the microbiome of saline soil in the Marismas del Odiel Natural Park. This research opens new perspectives in microbiome study of this type of environment, which can produce data on, among other aspects, possible climate alterations and other environmental factors in microbial populations.
Friday, 21 June 2019
What the wheat genome tells us about wars
Wheat is a globally cultivated plant. It originated about 10000 years ago in the so-called fertile crescent, today's Anatolia and north Iraq, and has since then started its successful march around the world. The illustration shows the distribution routes of wheat based on its genetic similarity patterns. Little surprising is the proximity to human migration routes during this period. |
FG appoints Balarabe as new Fadama 111 AF NPC
Thursday, 20 June 2019
The winter weather window that is costing rapeseed growers millions
UK rapeseed growers are losing up to a quarter of their crop yield each year because of temperature rises during an early-winter weather window.
Wednesday, 19 June 2019
Editorial -Population control as a means of ensuring food security
There is a
need to control the Nigerian population (which is growing in geometrical
proportion) most especially for the purpose of ensuring food security now and
in the future.
How absentee farmers killed Agric Bank--Findings
* FG begins recapitalization
Investigations
have revealed that the government had to recapitalize the Bank of Agriculture
(BOA) because non-farmers posing as farmers in connivance with the officials of
the bank defrauded the organisation by presenting fake identity cards, unregistered
Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) cards and other documents which enabled them
to escape repayment of loans collected from the bank.
IAR cropping/REFIL: stakeholders want integration of research, extension into agribusiness
Stakeholders
have advocated integration of research innovations, with efficient transfer of
improved technologies, to farmers as a way to attaining acceptable global
acceptability through best agricultural practices that would guaranty standard
and markets with no rejection.
The secrets of secretion: Isolating eucalyptus genes for oils, biofuel
What is the genetic basis for eucalyptus trees to produce that fragrant oil many of us associate with trips to the spa? Carsten Külheim, associate professor in Michigan Technological University's School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, has spent the past 10 years of his career studying eucalyptus. They are diverse, fast-growing species that includes scrubby bushes and 300-foot-tall flowering trees -- mostly indigenous to Australia, but also New Guinea and Indonesia.
Tuesday, 18 June 2019
Agric policy: Farmers/ herdsmen clashes, cassava, extension top priority
*Technical
department memo step down
· *AFAN
vows to monitor implementation
· *Stakeholders
demand Fadama AF, IFAD continuity
The National
Council on Agriculture and Rural Development (NCARD), the apex policy maker in
the sector has approved a proposal seeking implementation and provision of
facilities for herdsmen towards encouraging ranching to forestall incessant
clashes occasioned by cattle being moved about in the country, even as national
productivity of cassava was also approved along with a memo on national policy
on extension for its strategic role in technologies transfer to farmers
nationwide.
Field experiment finds a simple change that could boost agricultural productivity by 60 percent
Raising tenants' share in crop-sharing contracts between landlords and tenants in developing countries can boost agricultural output, by providing tenants with the right incentive to raise agriculture productivity. Bocconi University's Selim Gulesci and colleagues came to this conclusion making use of a field experiment in Uganda.
Monday, 17 June 2019
New strain of canine distemper in wild animals in NH, VT (Virus highly contagious to domesticated dogs)
The new strain of canine distemper virus was found in two gray foxes similar to these foxes. |
Sunday, 16 June 2019
Discovery of RNA transfer through royal jelly could aid development of honey bee vaccines
Researchers have discovered that honey bees are able to share immunity with other bees and to their offspring in a hive by transmitting RNA 'vaccines' through royal jelly and worker jelly. The jelly is the bee equivalent of mother's milk: a secretion used to provide nutrition to worker and queen bee larvae.
Saturday, 15 June 2019
Close relatives can coexist: two flower species show us how
Scientists have discovered how two closely-related species of Asiatic dayflower can coexist in the wild despite their competitive relationship.
Friday, 14 June 2019
Cryptic mutation is cautionary tale for crop gene editing
Without the nubby joints that are normally present on the stems of tomato plants, the fruit is much easier to harvest. However, researchers have discovered how a cryptic mutation can get in the way of this otherwise desirable trait. |
600 households rescued from poverty, says project coordinator
Over 600
households negatively affected by the Boko haram have been uplifted from
poverty, after rehabilitations, through the 50-million dollar Federal Government (FG)-World Bank
intervention Fadama 111 Additional Financing (AF) project.
Thursday, 13 June 2019
New avenues for improving modern wheat
Since the Agricultural Revolution about 12,000 years ago, humans have been selectively breeding plants with desirable traits such as high grain yield and disease resistance.
Wednesday, 12 June 2019
Opening remarks at Dissemination workshop on Impact of Fadama III–AF II on Food Security and Livelihood Restoration in Northeastern Nigeria. Presented by Kwaw Andam on behalf of IFPRI Nigeria office
Kwaw Andam |
Good
morning, distinguished ladies and gentlemen. I am delighted to offer a few
welcome remarks on behalf of the Nigeria office of the International Food
Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
Detection of unusual hybrid schistosomes in Malawi
LSTM's Professor Russell Stothard is senior author on a new paper in which researchers from the UK and Malawi have described the unusual occurrence of novel schistosome hybrids infecting children along the Shire River Valley.
Tuesday, 11 June 2019
Images speak @ the Dissemination Workshop for Fadama III Additional Financing II Impact Assessment Report , held in Abuja.
Images speak @ the Dissemination Workshop for Fadama III
Additional Financing II Impact Assessment Report , held in Abuja. See more images below...
Wild red deer contribute to the preservation of open landscapes
Red deer (Cervus elaphus) mother and calf. |
Monday, 10 June 2019
FG concessions 19 silos, to earn N6b annually from deal
There Federal Government (FG) has handed over 19 silos located
in 18 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) to six concessionaires for
storage of food at a sum of six billion naira annually. The handover of the
silos was done by the former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief
Audu Ogbeh, in Abuja, recently.
Ministry sets up committee to review project performance
* Director commends Fadama programme
The Director, Project Coordinating Unit (PCU), Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) Dr. Maimuna Habib |
· A 40-man
committee has been set up by the government to review the Climate Change
Adaptation and Agric Business Support Project (CASP).
Scientists determine four personality types based on new data
Northwestern University researchers have sifted through data from more than 1.5 million questionnaire respondents and found at least four distinct clusters of personality types exist: average, reserved, self-centered and role model. The findings challenge existing paradigms in psychology.
Sunday, 9 June 2019
Great chocolate is a complex mix of science, physicists reveal
Mixing chocolate. |
Saturday, 8 June 2019
Researchers crack the peanut genome
Soroya Bertioli inspects peanut plants at the UGA Institute for Plant Breeding, Genetics and Genomics greenhouse. |
Friday, 7 June 2019
Broccoli sprout compound may restore brain chemistry imbalance linked to schizophrenia
Broccoli sprouts. |
Thursday, 6 June 2019
Mathematician's breakthrough on non-toxic pest control
A University of Sussex mathematician, Dr Konstantin Blyuss, working with biologists at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, has developed a chemical-free way to precisely target a parasitic worm that destroys wheat crops.
Running may have made dinosaurs' wings flap before they evolved to fly
Caudipteryx robot for testing passive flapping flight. |
Wednesday, 5 June 2019
Ayahuasca fixings found in 1,000-year-old bundle in the Andes
Today's hipster creatives and entrepreneurs are hardly the first generation to partake of ayahuasca, according to archaeologists who have discovered traces of the powerfully hallucinogenic potion in a 1,000-year-old leather bundle buried in a cave in the Bolivian Andes.
Tuesday, 4 June 2019
President Buhari reappoints Ojo as Dg NASC.
President Muhammadu Buhari |
New three-foot-tall relative of Tyrannosaurus rex
A new relative of the Tyrannosaurus rex -- much smaller than the huge, ferocious dinosaur made famous in countless books and films, including, yes, "Jurassic Park" -- has been discovered and named by a Virginia Tech paleontologist and an international team of scientists.
Monday, 3 June 2019
IAR Releases 17 Climate Resilient and High Yielding Crops Varieties II
Prof Ibrahim Garba, VC ABU Zaria |
Food security situation analysis
presented in the first part of this article indicates the most worrisome
scenario in the nation effort to achieve sustainable production of sufficient
food to all. Sufficing that all hands must be on deck for Nigeria to produce adequate
food to feed its citizenry and achieve food security.
Arsenic-breathing life discovered in the tropical Pacific Ocean
Arsenic is a deadly poison for most living things, but new research shows that microorganisms are breathing arsenic in a large area of the Pacific Ocean. A University of Washington team has discovered that an ancient survival strategy is still being used in low-oxygen parts of the marine environment.
Sunday, 2 June 2019
Tomato, tomat-oh! -- understanding evolution to reduce pesticide use
Dan Lybrand and Bryan Leong, MSU graduate students and study co-authors, examine glandular trichomes on the Solanaceae plant's leaf surface. |
New brain tumor imaging technique uses protein found in scorpion venom
Scorpion. |
Saturday, 1 June 2019
Oldest known trees in eastern North America documented
A recently documented stand of bald cypress trees in North Carolina, including one tree at least 2,624 years old, are the oldest known living trees in eastern North America and the oldest known wetland tree species in the world.