10. A divide over stricter fertilizer laws Sarasota County's proposed fertilizer rules could: Prevent the use of fertilizers that contain nitrogen and phosphorus in the rainy summer season. The ordinances, which would put restrictions on the kinds of fertilizer residents could use and when they could use it, are up for approval next month and seem likely to pass. The commissioners considered approving the ordinance on Wednesday but decided they needed more information to set fair standards for the chemical composition of...
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11. Nebraska research safeguards sustainable world crop yields Roundup kills all weed types, and that's a big reason why glyphosate-tolerant crops are now being planted on more then 220 million acres per year, worldwide. Now, the industry has two effective all-weed herbicides that can be bred into crops and rotated or even stacked in the same seeds to prevent any major resistance. It claimed agriculture had become as dependent on glyphosate for weed control as human medicine had become on antibiotics. In the very same issue, however, the University of...
Source • 7/2/2007 •
12. Organic palay farming thrives in coastal town Wednesday, July 18, 2007 Organic palay farming thrives in coastal town PALIMBANG, Sultan Kudarat -- Organic farming method has swept hundreds of farmers off their feet in this coastal town notoriously known in the past decades for its erratic peace and order condition. Wednesday, July 18, 2007 Organic palay farming thrives in coastal town PALIMBANG, Sultan Kudarat -- Organic farming method has swept hundreds of farmers off their feet in this coastal town notoriously known in the past...
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13. Researcher predicts larger Gulf dead zone this year Nitrogen is a popular crop fertilizer that causes problems when it washes off fields into rivers on its way to the ocean. That's consistent with any change in acreage, intensification of corn agriculture up in the basin. A "dead zone," shown in gray, occurs in the Gulf of Mexico each summer as nutrient buildup leads to drastic reductions in oxygen in bottom waters. The number of acres planted to corn this spring were up nearly 20 percent over last year, mainly to meet ethanol demand. Each...
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14. Field 'schools' help farmers become sustainable The schools helped farmers control pests like mosquitoes Sahar Majid 16 July 2007 Source: SciDev.net Empowering farmers to reduce mosquito populations and to use less pesticide will reduce malaria and other vector-borne diseases, according to a research paper published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization (WHO) this month (July) The schools helped farmers control pests like mosquitoes Sahar Majid 16 July 2007 Source: SciDev.net Empowering farmers to reduce mosquito populations...
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15. Joran Viers: Snatch the microbe from my hand, grasshoppers These chemicals are often found in fertilizers that are combined with herbicides. My advice is to not use those products, as the best time to fertilize isn't the best time to apply herbicides, which should only be applied to solve a specific problem that hasn't responded to other methods, like hand-pulling. Regular insecticides can kill grasshoppers, but their sheer numbers and great mobility, combined with strong chemical constitutions, require very frequent re-applications of strongly...
Source • 7/3/2007 •
16. Calvin R. Finch: Mowing is one big task facing gardeners now; dealing with too-wet soil is another In conditions like we have faced in the last four weeks it is advisable to use every period when the grass is relatively free of water on the blades, to rev up the mower, and cut a portion of the lawn. Set the mower at its highest setting and mow the lawn at that level before lowering the blades to the recommended height for the grass variety and mowing a second time to bring the lawn to its normal cutting height. If you have been on vacation and return to find your lawn 8 inches tall and...
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17. Healty lawns, healthy people This season, Scott's K-Lawn sprays park turf with an herbicide to kill broadleaf weeds; Animas Valley Arborist injects insecticides into root zones of park trees to ward off pests; Tres Mesas Spraying maintains non-manicured rights-of-way and strips of open land. This season, Scott's K-Lawn sprays park turf with an herbicide to kill broadleaf weeds; Animas Valley Arborist injects insecticides into root zones of park trees to ward off pests; Tres Mesas Spraying maintains non-manicured...
Source • Durango Herald,CO •
18. Pick of the herbicides: Neighbors' spray irks cotton farmers The Oklahoma cotton industry says the herbicide 2,4-D used by many ranchers and wheat farmers often drifts onto cotton fields and damages the crop. By ROD WALTON World Staff Writer 6/26/2007 Some of Oklahoma's cotton farmers are picking political fights with wheat and cattle producers who use a certain herbicide that is good for controlling weeds in pastures but proves detrimental to the state's lucrative cotton crop. By ROD WALTON World Staff Writer 6/26/2007 Some of Oklahoma's cotton...
Source • Tulsa World,OK •
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