Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $21,223
26%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 26%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: crops

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • GM industry puts human gene into rice

    04/25/2005 5:19:11 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 32 replies · 666+ views
    Telegraph ^ | 4/25/05 | Duncan Gardham
    Scientists have begun mixing human genes with rice in an attempt to take genetically modified crops to the next level. Researchers have inserted into rice a gene from the human liver that produces an enzyme which is good at breaking down harmful chemicals in the human body. They hope the enzyme, CYP2B6, will do the same to herbicides and pollutants when combined with rice. But anti-GM campaigners say using human genes will scare off consumers worried about cannibalism and the idea of scientists playing God. Sue Mayer of GeneWatch UK said: 'I don't think anyone will want to buy this...
  • Unique Weather A Factor In Record 2004 Midwest Crop Yields

    04/11/2005 8:33:34 AM PDT · by jexus · 5 replies · 462+ views
    Cool summer, bright days led to the highest crop yields ever in the US. Not a good omen for the chicken little crowd. See the article at Science Daily.
  • Facts versus fears on biotechnology:

    03/09/2005 9:52:21 AM PST · by MikeEdwards · 18 replies · 698+ views
    CFP ^ | March 9, 2005 | Paul Driessen and Cyril Boynes Jr
    The Congress of Racial Equality’s recent conference, video and commentary on agricultural biotechnology* presented personal testimonials from African farmers whose lives have been improved by GM crops, impressive data on progress, and a message of hope for poor, malnourished people in developing countries. The response has been overwhelmingly positive. But not from all quarters. Predictably, anti-GM zealots continue to offer a steady stream of unsupported and unsupportable invective. To hear them tell it, biotechnology is a "scourge" that will do nothing to save lives or reduce poverty and malnutrition. "Evil multinationals" like Monsanto are determined to impose "a new form...
  • What thoughtless activists want to do with biotechnology

    02/14/2005 11:56:51 AM PST · by MikeEdwards · 13 replies · 632+ views
    CFP ^ | February 14, 2005 | Paul Driessen and Cyril Boynes, Jr.,
    Like Dr. Martin Luther King, Dr. Ruth Oniango has a dream. A member of Kenya’s parliament, she dreams of the day when the people of her poor country "can feed themselves." Congress of Racial Equality national chairman Roy Innis shares that vision. But he also knows the obstacles. "Over 70 percent of Africans are employed in farming full time," he points out. "Yet, half of those countries rely on emergency food aid. Within 10 years, Africa will be home to three-fourths of the world’s hungry people." Many of the continent’s farmers are women who labor sunup to sundown on 3...
  • PLEASE! STOP POSTING SAME MESSAGE ON ALL BOARDS!

    08/16/2002 7:39:49 AM PDT · by Merchant Seaman · 754 replies · 30,137+ views
    Annoyed Reader
    The purpose of FreeRepublic.com's multiple message boards is to limit the topics for each board to particular topics. Posting the same message on all the boards defeats the purpose of multiple-boards for special topics. It is very annoying to see the same message on every bulletin board. PLEASE! DO THE READERS A FAVOR. STOP CROSS-POSTING YOUR MESSAGES!
  • Weather whacks U.S. cotton crop

    11/23/2004 4:37:57 PM PST · by M. Espinola · 13 replies · 395+ views
    Futures and Commodity Market News ^ | November 23rd, 2004 | United Press International via COMTEX
    WASHINGTON, Nov 23, 2004 (United Press International via COMTEX) -- The harvesting was wrapping up across much of the United States this week although rain across Texas and the South kept the cotton harvest behind schedule. The Agriculture Department's weekly crop report said Tuesday the cotton harvest was 72 percent complete compared to the 5-year average of 80 percent. Heavy rain did not halt field work but caused some degrading of the quality. Nevertheless, New York cotton futures were trading about 44 points lower Tuesday. Live cattle futures were up sharply on concerns about mad cow disease and stress on...
  • Climate crowd has dark view of future; scientists describe phenomena linked to global warming

    11/08/2004 8:11:13 AM PST · by cogitator · 35 replies · 813+ views
    Rocky Mountain News ^ | 11/08/2004 | Jim Erickson
    Boulder climate researcher Michael Glantz predicts that future historians will look back on the 21st century as the Climate Century. "Climate will dominate the news, now and then, throughout this century," Glantz said Sunday at a meeting of the Geological Society of America. Food production, water resources, energy needs, infectious-disease outbreaks, wildfires and the frequency and severity of extreme weather events will be altered in unknown and surprising ways by climate changes, said Glantz, a social scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. And humans will help shape future climate by their actions - or by failing to act....
  • Tomato prices double due to delayed plantings in Florida

    10/30/2004 11:27:46 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 9 replies · 271+ views
    The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review ^ | Saturday, October 30, 2004 | Rick Wills
    Juan Alba had been feeling the squeeze from soaring tomato prices for nearly three months. Something had to give. "We had new menus printed and just started using them today," Alba, the owner of El Campesino restaurants in Ross and Monroeville, said Friday. New prices will help cover Alba's weekly produce bills, which have swelled by $200. Blame that on tomatoes. With planting delayed in Florida because of hurricanes and heavy rains drenching hundreds of acres of crops in California, the juicy red fruit that is the staple of salsa and sauce suddenly is in short supply. The result: A...
  • Hurricanes have Big Impact on Economy (short-term down, long-term up)

    10/06/2004 12:17:59 PM PDT · by cogitator · 7 replies · 439+ views
    Washington Post ^ | 10/06/2004 | Justin Blum, Nell Henderson
    The four hurricanes that recently struck the southeastern United States left a lingering imprint on the national economy by pushing up oil prices, wiping out jobs and disrupting shipments of fruits and vegetables to grocery stores. . . . Insurance payments from the four storms combined will total as much as $23 billion, . . . Through Sept. 10, nearly 13,000 workers in Florida alone had filed new claims for unemployment benefits because of job losses related to Hurricanes Charley, Frances and Ivan, . . . After combining the employment losses and gains, the hurricanes probably eliminated 15,000 jobs nationally,...
  • 1st Annual Free Republic County Fair; Post Your Entries Here

    09/19/2004 8:11:43 PM PDT · by hispanarepublicana · 43 replies · 5,240+ views
    9/19/04 | Hispanarepublicana
    Since most FReepers are personally responsible, hard-working, well-prepared, self-sufficient individuals, I thought it would be nice for us to get to brag about the fruits of our labor--whether it be traditional county-fair fare (canning, crochet, quilting, crops, cheeses) or FReeper-oriented fare (political slogans, FReep posters, FReep ideas, breaking news, opus posts, FR handles, FR profiles, posts-of-the-day, etc.) I'm not sure who the judges will be, but you all are welcome to post your entries here.
  • Biotechnology : Norman Borlaug's Legacy

    09/02/2004 1:49:13 PM PDT · by BattleFlag · 2 replies · 233+ views
    The Center for Consumer Freedom ^ | Sep 2, 2004 | The Center for Consumer Freedom
    The clamor over genetically enhanced crops has reached a fevered pitch in France. In the last few months, a group of neo-luddite radicals have crisscrossed the countryside razing fields and sowing baseless paranoia. In one evening alone, more than 1,500 people -- led by anti-globalization militant Jose Bove -- tore the crops out by their roots as police stood by and watched. "For us," Bove has exclaimed, "this combat will not stop."
  • Sewage Waters A Tenth Of World's Irrigated Crops

    08/19/2004 6:48:52 AM PDT · by blam · 11 replies · 604+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 8-18-2004 | Frank Pearce
    Sewage waters a tenth of world's irrigated crops 12:01 18 August 04 NewScientist.com news service A tenth of the world’s irrigated crops - everything from lettuce and tomatoes to mangoes and coconuts - are watered by sewage. And much of that sewage is raw and untreated, gushing direct from sewer pipes into fields at the fringes of the developing world’s great megacities, reveals the first global survey of the hidden practice of waste-water irrigation. And, however much consumers may squirm, farmers like it that way. Because the stinking, lumpy and pathogen-rich sewage is rich in nitrates and phosphates that fertilise...
  • Marijuana is county's No. 2 'crop' [Tulare County, CA]

    11/02/2003 6:32:07 PM PST · by yonif · 142 replies · 492+ views
    Visalia Times-Delta ^ | Thursday, October 30, 2003 | Percy Ednalino
    <p>If marijuana were legal, it would replace oranges as the second most valuable crop in Tulare County.</p> <p>And if marijuana were legal, Tulare County also would lead the state in the plant's cultivation.</p> <p>Figures released Wednesday from the state Attorney General's Office revealed more than a quarter of all marijuana plants seized in California this year have been found in Tulare County.</p>
  • Higher flows ease fears over repeat of Klamath salmon kill

    09/03/2003 3:08:34 PM PDT · by bicycle thug · 5 replies · 320+ views
    oregonlive.com ^ | Sept. 03, 2003 | By JEFF BARNARD
    GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) -- More water flowing down the Klamath and Trinity Rivers in Northern California is giving the Yurok Tribe and California state biologists hope they will not see a repeat of last year's massive salmon kill. The tribe, however, is moving ahead with a lawsuit against the federal government claiming authorities violated treaty obligations by allowing the deaths of 33,000 adult salmon in the lower Klamath last September. And the tribe is pressing for higher flows at other times of the year. "While we are not as concerned about the flows (in August and September), we do...
  • Mormon Crickets Devour Crops, Turn Roads 'Blood Red'

    06/15/2003 3:15:17 AM PDT · by yonif · 29 replies · 328+ views
    Yahoo! News ^ | Sat Jun 14,11:21 PM ET | James Nelson - Reuters
    SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - Mormon crickets, the plague of the western United States, are on the march again, ravaging farms and turning roads "blood red." Farmer Duane Anderson said the bugs are at times so thick that he could kill 10 crickets with a single step on his 3,200-acre spread in Dog Valley about 100 miles south of Salt Lake City. Officials in Utah, Idaho and Nevada say this year's infestation may be the worst in recent history. The grasshopper-like insects have become a traffic hazard, rendering some hilly roads impassable as they become caked with crushed bug carcasses....
  • Wildlife killed by conventional farming 'flourishes in GM fields'

    01/17/2003 7:26:37 AM PST · by ZGuy · 9 replies · 416+ views
    The Independent ^ | 15 January 2003 | Steve Connor
    One of the first experiments to test the impact of genetically modified crops on the environment has found that insects and farmland birds can flourish in GM fields that under conventional farming would be wildlife deserts. Scientists monitoring plots of GM sugar beet have recorded a significant increase in spiders, beetles and other insects that provide important food for the nestlings of skylarks, lapwings and partridges. They claim in a study published today in the Royal Society journal Proceedings B that GM crops engineered to be resistant to broad-spectrum herbicides could be better for wildlife than conventional crops doused with...
  • Dry High Plains Are Blowing Away, Again

    05/03/2002 3:08:39 PM PDT · by Willie Green · 19 replies · 369+ views
    The New York Times ^ | May 3, 2002 | TIMOTHY EGAN
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use. AMAR, Colo. — A hypnotist was the featured guest at the soil conservation district's annual meeting here a few weeks ago, a fitting diversion for a place where it has not rained for nearly a year and the land seems to be in a hard trance. Across the state line from this southeastern Colorado town, in Syracuse, Kan., a crowd packed into the school gym to hear Dusty Dowd, a crop- duster, lead a prayer for rain. "Lord, we ask that you might again bless us with the general, beneficial rains...
  • DIVERSITY KILLS!

    05/01/2002 11:25:12 AM PDT · by scouse · 5 replies · 144+ views
    How agricultural biodiversity is disappearing It is not only biodiversity in nature that is declining; there are also increasingly fewer varieties of plants and animals being used in agriculture. Of the hundreds of varieties of crops such as onions and lettuce, only a few now remain. In an attempt to turn the tide, gene banks and new users such as organic and regional farmers' cooperatives are seeking cooperation.^^^^^^^^The diversity in agricultural crops has decreased alarmingly in the last century. There is no comprehensive overview of the decrease, but there are indications. Figures from the collections of the American National Seed...