Agriculture
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 8-May-2025 09:09 ET (8-May-2025 13:09 GMT/UTC)
4-Dec-2024
After decades of plantation agriculture, coconut palms dominate over half of Pacific atoll forests
University of California - Santa BarbaraPeer-Reviewed Publication
Coconut palms are king throughout the tropics, serving as the foundation for human lives and cultures across the Pacific Ocean for centuries. However, 200 years of planting by colonial interests transformed the palm from the revered “Tree of Life” to a cash crop monoculture grown on Pacific atolls for a singular purpose — production of coconut oil (copra) for export around the world.
- Journal
- Environmental Research Letters
4-Dec-2024
Physics-based modeling identifies cross-pollination vulnerabilities for hemp farms
Virginia Tech
The relatively new industry has been challenged by wind-blown cross-pollination between neighboring hemp fields.
- Journal
- Scientific Reports
4-Dec-2024
Low meat intake fuels concerns over child nutrition
University of EdinburghPeer-Reviewed Publication
Malnutrition and poor dietary diversity remain significant challenges for children in Ethiopia, despite the country’s large livestock population, a study highlights. The study, led by a team of researchers from the Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Systems at the University of Edinburgh, reveals that only a small percentage of children under five regularly consume animal-sourced foods such as milk, eggs, or meat.
- Journal
- Maternal and Child Nutrition
4-Dec-2024
Recent research news from the Ecological Society of America
Ecological Society of AmericaPeer-Reviewed Publication
The influence of changing rainfall on invasive grasses, the substitution of one group of predators for another in salt marshes and more from ESA's journals.
4-Dec-2024
Climate-ready crop
Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignPeer-Reviewed Publication
A team from the University of Illinois has engineered potato to be more resilient to global warming showing 30% increases in tuber mass under heatwave conditions. This adaptation may provide greater food security for families dependent on potatoes, as these are often the same areas where the changing climate has already affected multiple crop seasons. Their work was recently published in Global Change Biology
- Journal
- Global Change Biology
- Funder
- Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research, Foreign Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), Bill & Melinda Gates Agricultural Innovations (Gates Ag One)
4-Dec-2024
Swelling streams – climate change causes more sediment in high-mountain rivers
University of PotsdamPeer-Reviewed Publication
Many high-mountain rivers in Asia transport more sediment downstream compared to a few years ago. Changes in sediment levels have a particularly strong impact on agriculture, water quality, flood management, and hydropower generation. A study with participation of the University of Potsdam demonstrates the interacting roles of glaciers, vegetation, precipitation, and slope in mobilizing sediment and controlling the current sediment transport in rivers. In order to counteract climate change, the authors call for a systematic approach for the entire catchment area of rivers in the high mountains.
- Journal
- Science Advances