Agriculture
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 28-Oct-2025 16:11 ET (28-Oct-2025 20:11 GMT/UTC)
Combining laboratory techniques yields wealth of information about deadly brain tumors
Johns Hopkins MedicinePeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Nature Communications
New global model shows how to bring environmental pressures back to 2015 levels by 2050
Utrecht UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
A first-of-its-kind study in Nature finds that with bold and coordinated policy choices—across emissions, diets, food waste, and water and nitrogen efficiency—humanity could, by 2050, bring global environmental pressures back to levels seen in 2015. This shift would move us much closer to a future in which people around the world can live well within the Earth’s limits. “Our results show that it is possible to steer back toward safer limits, but only with decisive, systemic change,” says lead author Prof Detlef Van Vuuren, a researcher at Utrecht University and the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL).
- Journal
- Nature
FFAR taps Danforth Center plant scientists for crop research to preserve soil and water health
Donald Danforth Plant Science CenterBusiness Announcement
The Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research (FFAR) and matching funders today awarded two Seeding Solutions grants totaling over $5 million to the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center (Danforth Center) for crop development research.
What NASA is learning from the biggest geomagnetic storm in 20 years
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center- Journal
- Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics
Machine learning powers new approach to detecting soil contaminants
Rice UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Funder
- NIH/National Institutes of Health, Welch Foundation, Carl and Lillian Illig Fellowship
Central Asia's alpine forests: growing against the tide
Tsinghua University PressPeer-Reviewed Publication
A study published in Forest Ecosystems shows that low-latitude warming has increased tree growth in Central Asia's alpine forests since the 20th century. Researchers analyzed 128 tree-ring records and found a significant upward trend in tree radial growth, driven by enhanced regional temperatures and precipitation. However, they warn that continued warming may eventually reverse these gains. Future research needs to refine models to better understand these dynamics.
- Journal
- Forest Ecosystems