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Costa Rica coffee farmers innovate as rainfall plummets

Costa Rican coffee farmers were once blessed with abundant rains but as precipitation grows fickle they are being forced to innovate to keep producing one of the world's favorite brews......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgFeb 28th, 2024

New research investigates how climate change amplifies severity of combined wind-rain extremes over the UK and Ireland

Climate change will cause an increase in extreme winter storms combining strong winds and heavy rainfall over the UK and Ireland, new research has shown......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsMay 3rd, 2024

No One Knows How Far Bird Flu Has Spread

With little incentive for US farmers to test their cattle, and many undocumented laborers on dairy farms, the full scale of the outbreak is unclear......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredRelated NewsMay 3rd, 2024

Improved AI process could better predict water supplies

A new computer model uses a better artificial intelligence process to measure snow and water availability more accurately across vast distances in the West, information that could someday be used to better predict water availability for farmers and o.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMay 1st, 2024

Study says El Nino, not climate change, was key driver of low rainfall that snarled Panama Canal

The climate phenomenon known as El Niño—and not climate change—was a key driver in low rainfall that disrupted shipping at the Panama Canal last year, scientists said Wednesday......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMay 1st, 2024

Hong Kong team plants seeds to safeguard legacy grains

Far from the soaring skyscrapers synonymous with Hong Kong, scientists and farmers labor in a paddy field on the city's outskirts to revive dormant rice varieties that once sprung from local soil......»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsApr 30th, 2024

This gaming PC will also make you a cup of coffee

You may think you've seen it all, but have you seen a gaming PC that can make coffee?.....»»

Category: topSource:  digitaltrendsRelated NewsApr 30th, 2024

African farmers look to the past and the future to address climate change

From ancient fertilizer methods in Zimbabwe to new greenhouse technology in Somalia, farmers across the heavily agriculture-reliant African continent are looking to the past and future to respond to climate change......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 29th, 2024

Best espresso machine deals: Nespresso, De’Longhi, Breville

Add some savings to a quality cup of coffee with the best espresso machine deals you can shop right now......»»

Category: topSource:  digitaltrendsRelated NewsApr 26th, 2024

Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, Noble Numbat, overhauls its installation and app experience

Plus Raspberry Pi 5 support, better laptop power, and lots of other changes. Enlarge / Ubuntu has come a long way over nearly 20 years, to the point where you can now render 3D Ubuntu coffee mugs and family pictures in a video an.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsApr 25th, 2024

Amazon deals: TVs, laptops, headphones and more

Today's best Amazon deals include discounts on laptops, TVs, tablets, coffee makers, and even a handful of Apple products......»»

Category: topSource:  digitaltrendsRelated NewsApr 25th, 2024

Amazon deals: TVs, laptops, headphones and more

Today's best Amazon deals include discounts on laptops, TVs, tablets, coffee makers, and even a handful of Apple products......»»

Category: topSource:  digitaltrendsRelated NewsApr 25th, 2024

In south China, silkworm farmers reel from deadly floods

Hose in hand, 40-year-old Zhu Huangyi cleans a small concrete room once home to his silkworms, two thirds of which were lost in deadly floods hitting southern China this week......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 25th, 2024

The story of the first Alor people adapting to climate change 43,000 years ago

As humans, our greatest evolutionary advantage has always been our ability to adapt and innovate. When people first reached the expanded coastline of Southeast Asia around 65,000 years ago, and faced the sea crossings necessary to continue east into.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 24th, 2024

A leader in US seaweed farming preaches, teaches and builds a wider network

Bren Smith and his GreenWave organization are helping lay the foundations for a generation of seaweed-growing farmers in the United States, while working to build a network of producers and buyers......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 22nd, 2024

Scientists find common genes defending coffee plants against devastating disease

Arabica coffee is the most economically important coffee globally and accounts for 60% of coffee products worldwide. But the plants it hails from are vulnerable to a disease that, in the 1800s, devastated Sri Lanka's coffee empire......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 21st, 2024

Your morning coffee may be more than a half million years old

That coffee you slurped this morning? It's 600,000 years old......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 20th, 2024

"Harvesting data": Latin American AI startups transform farming

For centuries, farmers used almanacs to try to understand and predict weather patterns......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 20th, 2024

Research suggests ways to ensure more sustainability in global agricultural trade

The EU wants to ensure greater sustainability in agricultural trade with the Global South—with the aim of minimizing the environmental and climate-damaging effects of importing crops such as soya, palm oil, coffee, and cocoa. However, this aspirati.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsApr 18th, 2024

The Rise of the Carbon Farmer

Farmers around the world are reigniting the less intensive agricultural practices of yesteryear—to improve soil health, raise yields, and trap carbon in the atmosphere back down in the soil......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  wiredRelated NewsApr 18th, 2024

Vibrations of granular materials: Theoretical physicists shed light on an everyday scientific mystery

Coffee beans in a jar and piles of rice or sand are examples of granular matter: materials composed of large numbers of macroscopic—rather than atomic scale—particles. Although granular matter is extremely familiar in everyday life, it represents.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsApr 17th, 2024