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New Long Bean Varieties are More Pest Resistant

Long beans, also known as yard-long beans for their impressive, up to three-foot length, are popular in Asia, Africa and among Asian communities in the United States. The beans are valued for their nutrition and resistance to heat and humidity, but until now, have been very vulnerable to specific pests.

Seed to Sip: Dasylirion

Sotol is poised to shake up the spirits industry, and seeds have a crucial role to play in the shift. Sotol plants, or Dasylirion, grow wild throughout Mexico and in […]

Seeds Canada’s New Vice-President Has Your Back

Last month in Edmonton, Alta., industry leaders and stakeholders gathered to discuss the evolving landscape of the seed industry at Seeds Canada’s annual conference. Among them was Sarah Foster, president […]

How Bread Dough Gave Rise to Civilisation

A major international study has explained how bread wheat helped to transform the ancient world on its path to becoming the iconic crop that today sustains a global population of […]

Innovative Irrigation System Helps Growers Beat Unpredictable Weather and Boost Profits

Michigan State University researchers are revolutionizing farm irrigation with a low-cost monitoring system that saves water, improves crop health, and maximizes yields—without breaking the bank.

Unpredictable precipitation is one of the toughest challenges farmers face today. Not enough moisture stunts plant growth, while too much can oversaturate the soil and create the perfect environment for diseases to spread.

USDA Announces Growing Climate Solutions Act Advisory Council

The USDA announced the creation of the Greenhouse Gas Technical Assistance Provider and Third-Party Verifier Program Advisory Council, commonly referred to as the Growing Climate Solutions Act (GCSA) Advisory Council. The USDA is now accepting nominations for council membership, as stated in a Federal Register notice Aug. 13.

Thailand Approves Gene-Editing Regulations

Thailand’s minister of Agriculture and Cooperatives, has signed progressive legislation for gene-edited organisms, according to a release. This new regulation is titled “Certification of Organisms Developed from Genome Editing Technology for Agricultural Use, B.E. 2567 (2024),” and positions Thailand as a leader in agricultural innovation alongside nations like the United States, Japan, and Australia.

Top 15 Management Mavericks of North America – Canada

We asked our readers to nominate leaders in North America with these characteristics. Now, we’re unveiling those who go beyond the ordinary, those who champion employee well-being and inclusion, those who nurture a culture of mentorship and those who excel in talent retention and career development. In alphabetical order, these are the Top Management Mavericks of North America. Next up, the Canadian honorees.

FOUND: The ‘Missing Link” of Corn’s Jump into North America

Until recently, corn’s fast and effective evolution from maize was a mystery. New research released by the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) reveals a glimpse of how corn was able to adapt quickly to the variable temperatures and climate of the Midwest region of the United States.

Top 15 Management Mavericks of North America – United States, Part 2

We asked our readers to nominate leaders in North America with these characteristics. Now, we’re unveiling those who go beyond the ordinary, those who champion employee well-being and inclusion, those who nurture a culture of mentorship and those who excel in talent retention and career development. In alphabetical order, these are the Top Management Mavericks of North America. Next up, the rest of the eight U.S. honorees.

Modern Wheat Has a Diminished Beneficial Root Microbiome

Modern wheat varieties grown with inorganic fertilizers exhibit significantly fewer beneficial root bacteria than those grown without fertilization. However, ancestral wheat varieties do not show this reduction, regardless of fertilization, […]

Top 15 Management Mavericks of North America

A Management Maverick tends to break away from conventional expectations, showing creativity and originality. This trait can be especially valuable in a seed industry that requires innovation and fresh perspectives. Mavericks are usually unafraid to forge new paths or to challenge the status quo, making them pivotal in driving change and progress in their environments.

A New Weapon Against Italian Ryegrass

Donnie Miller, a weed scientist at the LSU AgCenter Northeast Research Station in St. Joseph, has been experimenting with this approach, detailed in a LSU news release. He’s found that a combination of fall-applied residual herbicides and cereal rye—a common cover crop—can significantly suppress the troublesome Italian ryegrass, a weed that has become increasingly problematic for Louisiana farmers.

Raising the Bar for Seed Production

Whenever someone asks me what Genesis Seed Solutions stands for, I always say the same thing: quality, quality, quality. My biggest goal each year is to produce high quality, consistent products […]

New Technology Dramatically Improves Long-Range Weather Prediction

Despite advanced technology and the best efforts of leading global organizations like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), long range weather prediction — anything that aims to predict beyond days or, at best, weeks — is often viewed as unreliable… and for good reason.

Diversity Key to Global Success

Limagrain has come a long way from its modest beginnings as a farmers’ co-operative in France more than 50 years ago. In those early years, most of its revenue came […]

Diversity Key to Global Success

Limagrain has come a long way from its modest beginnings as a farmers’ co-operative in France more than 50 years ago. In those early years, most of its revenue came […]

Diversity Key to Global Success

Limagrain has come a long way from its modest beginnings as a farmers’ co-operative in France more than 50 years ago. In those early years, most of its revenue came […]

New Genetic Discoveries in Snap Beans Offer Hope for Herbicide Tolerance

A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) identifies snap bean germplasm that can withstand flumioxazin, a soil-applied herbicide effective against waterhemp. Furthermore, the genomic region responsible for that tolerance seems to act as a master switch controlling multiple stress tolerance genes.

Legumes and Bacteria Working Together

Researchers from the University of Kentucky’s Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment, as part of an international team, have discovered a genetic mechanism that explains how legumes choose specific bacteria to form nitrogen-fixing root nodules. A recent news release details the findings.

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