Foodfarmnewstv

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING

FADAMA 111 PROJECT ADDITIONAL FINANCING
supporting farming as a business with focus on Rice, Cassava, Sorghum and Tomato value chains.

Search This Blog

Total Pageviews

SPONSORED

SPONSORED
Nigerian Institute of Soil Science- NISS

Translate Food Farm News to Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba and over 100 Languages

Latest News




The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)

Thursday, 6 September 2018

Chief Audu Ogbeh flags- off Ceremony of erosion prone, farm connected market roads and rehabilitation of degraded rangeland, cutting across 7 states in the Savannah Belt of the country.

The Honorable Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh



The Honorable Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh during a visit to Madobi village in Katsina State performed the flags- off Ceremony of erosion prone, farm connected market roads and rehabilitation of degraded rangeland, cutting across 7 states in the Savannah Belt of the country.

News Release- WFP distributes 7,000 fuel-efficient stoves to improve the lives of displaced women in Banki


WFP staff member Mustapha Tanko handing over a stove to Mrs Ali during the distribution of over 7000 cook stoves in Banki 
The World Food Programme (WFP), together with its partner INTERSOS, has distributed fuel-efficient stoves to 7,340 displaced families receiving WFP food assistance in the town of Banki, in Nigeria’s Borno state. The stoves distribution is an effort to improve people’s quality of life and reduce the protection risks faced by women and girls in particular, when they have to gather firewood from unsafe areas.

Wednesday, 5 September 2018

We can feed the world if we change our ways

Related image
Farmers
Current crop yields could provide nutritious food for the projected 2050 global population, but only if we make radical changes to our dietary choices, a new study shows.

Tuesday, 4 September 2018

Fertilizer destroys plant microbiome's ability to protect against disease

A growth chamber packed with tomato plants sprayed with bacteria to simulate different leaf microbiomes and then challenged with a plant pathogen to measure how well the microbiomes protect the plant from disease.
A new study of the role microbial communities play on the leaves of plants suggests that fertilizing crops may make them more susceptible to disease.

Monday, 3 September 2018

Rice with fewer stomata requires less water and is better suited for climate change

Image result for rice
Rice
Rice plants engineered to have fewer stomata -- tiny openings used for gas exchange -- are more tolerant to drought and resilient to future climate change, a new study has revealed.

Sunday, 2 September 2018

New geometric shape used by nature to pack cells efficiently

embryo 
As an embryo develops, tissues bend into complex three-dimensional shapes that lead to organs.

Saturday, 1 September 2018

Aphids manipulate their food

Aphids manipulate their food
who hasn't been bothered by these little insects at one time or another? Why do they reproduce on plants so successfully? These are among the questions that Professor Dr Caroline Müller and her research team are addressing at Bielefeld University's Faculty of Biology.

Friday, 31 August 2018

Soil bugs munch on plastics

Soil bugs
Our world is drowning in a flood of plastic. Eight million tons of plastic end up in the oceans every year. Agricultural soils are also threatened by plastic pollution.

Thursday, 30 August 2018

Ancient farmers transformed Amazon and left an enduring legacy on the rainforest

Ancient farmers
Ancient communities transformed the Amazon thousands of years ago, farming in a way which has had a lasting impact on the rainforest, a major new study shows.

Wednesday, 29 August 2018

Archeological plant remains point to southwest Amazonia as crop domestication center

Archeological plant
Genetic analysis of plant species has long pointed to the lowlands of southwest Amazonia as a key region in the early history of plant domestication in the Americas, but systematic archaeological evidence to support this has been rare.