- Royal Horticultural Society asks Welsh gardeners to “bring out their dead” (TM Cherfas).
- Rubber photos.
- More on breadfruit from our friend Diane Ragone.
Worried in Tajikistan
The Guardian has a photo essay on how farmers are trying to cope with climate change in Tajikistan. 1
Turaqulov Saidmuzator, a farmer in Temumalik district, is experiencing the effects of climate change. ‘I think the weather has become warmer in the last four or five years and that is affecting our crops,’ he says. ‘The sickness of our crops is increasing but the pesticides are expensive and we are losing almost 30% of our crops to diseases.’
Featured: Vegetable patenting
Andre has “great, great trouble with the data” from that vegetables and PVP paper:
For instance, the table says that no turnip has ever been PVP protected; according to the Office’s data base, two have been. The authors highlighted in a previous paper, with a ‘hurrah’, that Fowler and Mooney made a math error in their 1983 “Shattering…”. They also succumb to a simple subtraction at the bottom of the first column.
There’s more. Over to the authors… BTW, our original source was the CAS-IP blog.
Nibbles: Potato, Research, Tobacco, Bees squared, Seed diversity, Declaration
- “The Jersey Royal is the only potato that enjoys protected designation of origin…”
- Agricultural research not enough?
- Wild crop relative switches pollinator to escape nasty caterpillars.
- Bushmeat hunters become beekeepers.
- And here’s why beekeeping is such a good thing.
- Diversity deemed a good thing, even for crazed monoculturists.
- ‘Keep biodiversity or face hunger’. Yet another Chennai Declaration.
Irradiating cherry trees in order to save them
“Cherry trees require a minimum of 8,000 hours of low temperatures over the winter to produce the optimum blossoms, but as Japan gets warmer we are falling short of that figure,” said [Dr Abe].
“And that is a problem because we Japanese love cherry blossom season.”
Dr. Abe’s team has responded to this national crisis by creating a cherry tree that blooms in all four seasons, keeping its flowers for longer, producing more blossoms and under a wider range of temperatures than any existing breeds.
How? A combination of radiation and grafting. Which means that one will now be able to wear the Human Polllination Suit all year round.