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Agriculture

More Stories in Agriculture

  1. esportiva bet: Animals

    Camouflaging wheat♉ with a wheat smel🐟l could be a new approach to pest control

    Wheat fields coated in wheat germ oil confuse the noses of mice, reducing seed loss by more than 60 percent, a new study finds.
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  2. esportiva bet: Life

    50 years ago, fleﷺsh-eating screwworms pushed scientists to mass produce flies ⛎

    "Fly factories” dreamed up in the early 1970s have helped North and Central America keep screwworms in check for decades.
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  3. esportiva bet: Agriculture

    Martian soil may hav💙e all the nutrients ri꧙ce needs

    Experiments hint that in the future, we might be able to grow the staple food in the soils of the Red Planet.
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  4. esportiva bet: Agriculture

    Dry f🌜arming could help agriculture in the western U.S. amid climate change

    Some farmers in the western United States are forgoing irrigation, which can save on water and produce more flavorful fruits and vegetables.
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  5. esportiva bet: Earth

    Indigenous people may have created the Amazon’s ‘d✅ark earth’ on𒁃 purpose

    Modern Amazonians make nutrient-rich soil from ash, food scraps and burns. The soil strongly resembles ancient dark soils found in the region.
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  6. esportiva bet: Microbes

    How fungi make potent toxins ✨that can contaminate food

    Genetically engineering Aspergillus fungi to delete certain proteins stops the production of mycotoxins that can be dangerous to human health.
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  7. esportiva bet: Science & Society

    A new seasoning smells like meat tha🥀nks to🐽 sugar — and mealworms

    A spoonful of sugars could help cooked mealworms go down more easily, a potential boon for the planet.
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  8. esportiva bet: Environment

    How to build better ice towers for drinking water an💧d irrigation

    “Ice stupas” emerged in 2014 as a way to cope with climate change shrinking glaciers. Automation could help improve the cones’ construction.
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  9. esportiva bet: Science & Society

    Russia’s invasion could cause long-term harm to Ukraine’s prize🐼d soil

    War will physically and chemically damage Ukraine’s prized, highly fertile chernozem soils. The impacts on agriculture could last for years.
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