Farms with crops from coffee to mangoes don’t get the best yields if they rely solely on honeybees.
Published:
2013-03-01 14:23:00
Found in: Botany, Ecology, Environment, Life and Zoology
There has been a lot of research, recently, showing how global change — especially warming — can alter the habitat and preferred range of marine and terrestrial species. But rising levels of greenhouse gases can also, directly, do a number on agricultural ecosystems, a new study shows. At least for U.S.-grown rice, rising carbon dioxide levels give a preferential reproductive advantage to the weedy natural form — known colloquially as red rice (for the color of its seed coat).
Published:
2012-05-25 10:46:12
Found in: Agriculture, Biology, Botany, Climate Change, Environment, Food Science, Nutrition and Science & Society
The more things change, the more they stay the same, as a Dec. 29 Associated Press report on genetically engineered corn notes. Like déjà vu, this news story on emerging resistance to Bt toxin — a fabulously effective and popular insecticide to protect corn — brings to mind articles I encountered over the weekend while flipping through historic issues of Science News. More than a half-century ago, our magazine chronicled, real time, the emergence of resistance to DDT, the golden child of pest controllers worldwide. Now much the same thing is happening again with Bt, its contemporary agricultural counterpart. Will we never learn?
Published:
2011-12-29 14:53:23
Found in: Agriculture, Biology, Botany, Environment and Science & Society
The term “bar fight” does not actually appear in Saila Varis’ recent paper in the journal Trees or in her Ph.D. dissertation on the Scots pine. But she’s a good sport about discussing whether her research suggests that tree pollen grains have their own versions of nose-punching brawls over female favor.
After all, pollen grains from genetically different trees of the same species appear to be able to sabotage each other’s race to a mate, says Varis, of the Finnish Forest Research Institute near Helsinki. Though it is not exactly like a bar fight, she says, there are hints of male-ve... (p. 16)
Found in: Botany
Most people have heard about omega-3 fatty acids, the primary constituents of fish oil. Stearidonic acid, one of those omega-3s, is hardly a household term. But it should become one, researchers argued this week at the 2011 Experimental Biology meeting.
Published:
2011-04-09 23:27:38
Found in: Agriculture, Biology, Body & Brain, Botany, Chemistry, Environment, Food Science, Genes & Cells, Nutrition, Science & Society and Technology
Engineers gain insight into the extreme growth of gargantuan gourds.
Published:
2010-10-29 13:00:21
Found in: Botany and Life
Compost feels so good, sifting through a gardener’s fingers. Unfortunately, data are showing, this soil amendment can host a germ responsible for Legionnaire’s disease, a potentially serious form of pneumonia.
Published:
2010-09-02 18:33:46
Found in: Agriculture, Biology, Biomedicine, Botany and Environment
Pine and spruce needles brim with flu-drug precursor.
Published:
2010-08-30 10:51:47
Found in: Botany, Chemistry, Molecules and Science & Society
Many caffeinated tonics lack natural antioxidants and other beneficial compounds found in coffee, yerba maté and other plant-based drinks.
Published:
2010-08-27 13:02:18
Found in: Botany, Chemistry, Molecules and Science & Society
New variety of photosynthetic pigment is the first to be discovered in 60 years (p. 13)
Found in: Botany, Chemistry, Life and Molecules