19. Organic farming bearing fruit Organic farming bearing fruit The scientific evidence is growing that organic food is better for you, but some politicians still refuse to admit it The newspaper headline this week that stated "Proof at last that organic apples can be better for you" was perhaps slightly more tentative ('can be' not 'are') than first appeared. Organic farming bearing fruit. Organic farming bearing fruit. Organic farming bearing fruit The scientific evidence is growing that organic food is better for you,...
Source • Nation Multimedia,Thailand •
20. Pest threatens crops They first detected the light brown apple moth in Berkeley three weeks ago and have since trapped 26 others in a 30-square-mile area from Alameda to Richmond. A fruit-eating Australian moth has arrived in the continental United States for the first time, landing in the East Bay and threatening major economic damage to crops if the infestation spreads, state agriculture officials announced Wednesday. Some of the possibilities include spraying pesticides or checking for moths in crops that...
Source • Contra Costa Times •
21. NEW: Pest threatens East Bay crops They first detected the light brown apple moth in Berkeley three weeks ago and have since trapped 26 others in a 30-square-mile area from Alameda to Richmond. Some of the possibilities include spraying pesticides or checking for moths in crops that leave parts of the East Bay. Lyle said a federal group of agriculture experts is deciding how to best eradicate the moth. Gregory Gee, Alameda County's acting assistant agriculture commissioner, declined to say how his department is addressing...
Source • Oroville MercuryRegister •
22. EU may miss "invisible revolution" because of biotech policy The European Union operates an effective ban on new gene-engineered seeds and risks missing out on the "invisible revolution" that's developing crops for cleaner fuels or washing detergents, the industry says. Innovation by companies such as BASF AG and Bayer CropScience AG in developing nutritional changes to corn, plants for use in biofuels as well as food and feed crops that resist drought or disease is changing the market for genetically modified technologies. Innovation by companies...
Source • Truth about Trade & Technology,IA •
23. We need bees' help; they need ours If you have to use pesticides, use horticultural oil; insecticidal soap; or Bt, a bacterium that controls such pests as gypsy moths. Every year, hundreds of thousands of bees are trucked from their home apiaries to farms, sometimes in distant states, where they are set out to pollinate crops. There are other insect pollinators bumblebees, some wasps and a fly that looks like a wasp but fuzzy little honeybees are the biggies. Use integrated pest management to balance beneficial insects and...
Source • The Ithaca Journal •
24. By Mary Jane Grenzow With apologies to Alfred Lord Tennyson, the arrival of spring, season of love and renewal, has once again been marred by the return of the ubiquitous box elder bug. General all-purpose insecticides will work, but according to howtogetridofthings.com, the most effective usually include the following chemicals: When the weather turns cool, they seek shelter inside houses, crawling in through cracks and crevices in walls, around windows and doors and around the foundation, where they will...
Source • Monroe Times •
25. South African farmers warned over pesticides South Africa's largest farming association, Agri SA, has pledged to publicly act against any farmers who are misusing pesticides or otherwise endangering neighbours through toxic pollution. The warning follows reports that widespread pesticide poisoning around Groblersdal, Limpopo, may be responsible for teenage boys growing breasts, as well as increased incidents of cancer, miscarriages, ear infections, and partial facial paralysis. Johan Minnaar, and is being investigated by a high level...
Source • FreshPlaza,Netherlands •
26. Board: No pesticides found at school Johns County school officials said Friday that testing at an elementary school in Hastings found "no pesticides within detectable limits,'' but they stopped short of saying a science fair project which prompted the testing was flawed. After their project became public, the school district hired MACTEC, a Jacksonville consulting and engineering firm, to do professional testing. MACTEC reported it had collected six samples on three different days and determined the detection levels for...
Source • Gainesville Sun,FL •
27. What 07 corn rush means to you However, increased corn acreage will help moderate grain prices, and that keeps livestock farms and ethanol distilleries financially healthy, Hart said. Corn generally requires more pesticides and fertilizer to grow than most major crops. Excess nitrates from fertilizer can run off fields into streams and rivers, a concern to Des Moines and other cities that must treat the water for drinking. Nelson and his two brothers will plant about 70 percent of their acreage to corn this year, up...
Source • The Des Moines Register •
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