• Home
  • About
  • BlogRoll
  • Seeds
  • Articles
  • Map
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Subscribe by RSS
  • Follow agrobiodiverse on Twitter

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog

Crops, animals, wild relatives ...

May 2011

Organic practitioners meet, and meet again

by Luigi on May 25, 2011

Feria del Elote

by Luigi on May 25, 2011

Maize hits the heights

by Luigi on May 25, 2011

German lentils go back home

by Luigi on May 24, 2011

More on that llama dung story

by Luigi on May 24, 2011

Vegetable seed kits for Thailand; more details

by Jeremy on May 23, 2011

Brainfood: Introgression, Sorghum and drought, Rice and drought, Carrot evaluation, Wheat breeding, Legume conservation, Wild Tibet soybean, Gezira, Biochar, CA, Grass ecotypes and climate, Organic ag and nutrients

by Jeremy on May 23, 2011

Organic breeding conferences

by Jeremy on May 22, 2011

Investment in agriculture; thousands of words worth.

by Jeremy on May 22, 2011

← Previous Entries

Next Entries →

Fresh Nibbles: January 27, 2012 : <- click to comment

  • My favorite agriculture blogs. Can you say “parochial”?
  • Want to track Geographical Indicators? Look no further.
  • India’s agriculture magazine tackles Agro-Biodiversity For Food Security.
  • And GFAR promotes a new initiative to realise the benefits of agrobiodiversity. Love is all around.
  • National Plant Genetics Resources Laboratory (NPGRL) at the University of the Philippines at Los Baños checks in to rehab.
  • Bioversity scientist plays with fire, for better and more diverse forest regeneration.
  • Mutation breeding; Matt explains the lack of breakthroughs in a bit more detail.
  • Fabulous, complex story of spiders, flies and microbes. Add ‘em together for green flypaper.

Nibbles Archive: All that condensed goodness.

And easy access to the Brainfood Archive.

Featured Comment: January 23, 2012

We don’t get many comments on Nibbles, but the book Diane Ragone points to is definitely worth noting.

Check out Angela Kepler & Frank Rust’s new book “The World of Bananas in Hawaii: Then and Now”.

  • So he said ...
  • Lately ...
  • Popular ...
  • January 27, 2012: J.Giles Waines commented on Any crops, or crop wild relatives, in the eastern Andes?
  • January 27, 2012: sanaa commented on Looking for low saturated fat sunflowers
  • January 25, 2012: Lee commented on Pocket pigs
  • January 25, 2012: Matt commented on How long does it really take to do mutation breeding?
  • January 25, 2012: Mike Jackson commented on How long does it really take to do mutation breeding?
  • January 25, 2012: Jacob commented on Genebanks forgotten, again
  • January 25, 2012: Jeremy commented on Contract farming is good for you — official
  • January 25, 2012: Marc F. Bellemare commented on Contract farming is good for you — official
  • January 25, 2012: Ruben Palacio commented on Brainfood: Ag vs biodiversity, Bioinformatics, Genomic association, Diversity and productivity in forests, Increasing diversity
  • January 24, 2012: Fatma commented on New journal on Food Security
  • Mutation breeding: still a long shot
  • How long does it really take to do mutation breeding?
  • Genebanks forgotten, again
  • Contract farming is good for you — official
  • Looking for low saturated fat sunflowers
  • EU seed law in turmoil?
  • Brainfood: Ag vs biodiversity, Bioinformatics, Genomic association, Diversity and productivity in forests, Increasing diversity
  • Telling it like it is for rice in Nepal
  • European Botanic Gardens Congress calling for papers one last time
  • Celebrating the donkey
  • Egyptian genebank looted
  • Mixing it up for organic tomatoes
  • Germplasm documentation is a two way street
  • Latest on the Egyptian Deserts Gene Bank
  • How grafting a plum tree led to an obsession
  • Using data to inform nutrition security policy
  • The quinoa story: it’s complicated
  • Forests at your service: lessons from Kibale
  • Breadfruit roundup
  • Not all Andean tubers are potatoes

WordPress Admin