Science on the Land
-
Join 516 other subscribers
-
Recent Posts
- How genetic modification is done: 1. Agrobacterium
- Biotechnology in Action
- New contact details
- Neonic makers might pay for research about neonics on the land
- A neonic that’s bad news for birds
- Hello Ms Truss
- Goodbye Mr Paterson
- Séralini’s rat-feeding trial (part 5)
- New Séralini study shows Roundup damages sperm
- America’s dwindling diversity
Tags
- academia
- alien species
- America
- arthropod
- Asia
- bacterium
- biotechnology
- breeding
- cattle
- child
- climate
- conservation
- corn
- crop
- crop variety
- data
- development
- disease
- ecosystem
- Europe
- farm
- farmer
- feed
- finance
- finfish
- food
- food safety
- food security
- forest
- garden
- genetic modification
- grain
- grocery
- herbicide
- history
- honeybee
- human
- hunting
- hymenopteran
- insect
- insecticide
- knowledge
- land use
- law
- livestock
- maize
- mammal
- meat
- Monsanto
- native species
- nutrition
- pest
- pesticide
- plant_dicot
- plant_monocot
- politics
- pollination
- population
- poverty
- research
- rice
- ruminant
- sea
- seed
- selective breeding
- staple food
- sustainable
- trade
- tree
- vertebrate
- water
- wild bee
- wild food
- wildlife
- woodland
Tag Archives: sugar cane
Cocoa prices are surging, but cocoa farmers are still making a pittance
argylesock says… Chocolate tastes so good, but it’s not so sweet for the smallholders who grow it. You can scroll down for info about other tropical commodity crops.
Posted in agriculture, money and trade
Tagged cacao, cash crop, coffee, commodity crop, farmer, palm oil, plant_dicot, plant_monocot, rubber, shrub, smallholder, sugar cane, trade, tree
Leave a comment
The homogenisation and globalisation of diets
Originally posted on One Billion Hungry: Can We Feed the World?:
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has estimated that some 75% of the diversity of cultivated crops was lost during the 20th Century and, by 2050, we could lose…
Posted in agriculture, food, horticulture, human health, money and trade
Tagged Africa, America, Asia, cassava, city, climate, conservation, crop, crop diversity, crop variety, development, disease, Europe, Food and Agriculture Organization, food safety, genetic diversity, grain, human, iodine, iron, law, micronutrient, millet, neglected crop, nutrition, pest, plant_dicot, plant_monocot, population, potato, prosperity, research, rice, rye, seedbank, staple food, sugar beet, sugar cane, sweet potato, trade, tuber, Vitamin A, wheat
6 Comments
Exotic trees
Lewis at woodlands.co.uk tells us about the exotic (alien) trees which are familiar in our British landscapes. Lewis tells us how many of these trees arrived during colonial times when great houses and gardens were built. He doesn’t mention how … Continue reading
Posted in ecology
Tagged alien species, arboriculture, disease, disease reservoir, ecosystem, forest, garden, hedge, history, human, invasive species, landscape, native species, naturalised species, plant_dicot, plant_gymnosperm, plant_monocot, sugar cane, tree, wood, woodland
Leave a comment
Poverty impairs mental functioning
Here’s some new evidence about how poverty impairs mental functioning and promotes risky decison-making. You can scroll down that article to see how sugarcane farmers were less able to think clearly when poor. The article also mentions brain damage that … Continue reading
Posted in food, human health, knowledge transfer
Tagged academia, biotechnology, child, crop, education, farmer, genetic modification, human, knowledge, nutrition, plant_monocot, poverty, research, sugar cane, woman
Leave a comment
Agricultural biotech against poverty and hunger
Too many people are hungry. Many of the hungry people are African. Biotechnology might help. The International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA) tells us how biotech can help to feed people. ‘A successful strategy should have MULTIPLE … Continue reading
Posted in agriculture, food, knowledge transfer, money and trade
Tagged Africa, biotechnology, breeding, cassava, corn, crop variety, development, feed, food, fruit, fuel, genetic modification, grain, International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications, knowledge, legume, maize, marker assisted selection, melon, millet, pearl millet, plant_dicot, plant_monocot, potato, research, seed, selective breeding, sorghum, soya, staple food, sugar cane, sweet potato, textile, tissue culture, tomato, trade, transport, tuber, wheat
3 Comments