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  Ag Headlines  

Monsanto Takes Major Step Toward Launch of World's First Drought-Tolerant Corn Product
Wed, 7 Jan 2009 08:30:00 -0500
Higher-Yielding Soybeans, SmartStax Corn, and Dicamba- and Glufosinate- Tolerant Cotton Also Move Forward in Company's Research & Development Pipeline
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Monsanto Announces Yield Gains With Deltapine Class Of 09
Tue, 6 Jan 2009 16:49:00 -0500
Combination of Elite Genetics and Second Generation Traits Outyield Market Standards
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Source: DTN Soybean Rust Information Center-2009 Latest News
First Soybean Rust of 2009
Thu, 08 Jan 2009 16:27:49 GMT
Since the beginning of the year, three counties in Florida and one county in Georgia have reported instances of Asian soybean rust.
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Source: EurekAlert! - Agriculture
Low level herbicide use can damage potato reproduction
Wed, 07 Jan 2009 00:00:00 EST
(American Society of Agronomy) A recent study examining the development and reproduction of plants and the effects that herbicides can have upon those processes has shown that treating potato plants with low levels of herbicide application can have a detrimental effect on crop yields.
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Preventing soil erosion in continuous corn
Mon, 12 Jan 2009 00:00:00 EST
(American Society of Agronomy) The removal of corn residue for the purpose of creating cellulosic ethanol requires changes in tillage for increased efficiency and protection against soil erosion, and a recent study focused on understanding how residue removal and tillage system affect the response of continuous corn to nitrogen fertilization.
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Source: India Together - News feed for the Agriculture section.
Fungus threat to Indian wheat advancing
Stem rust, the worst of the three rusts that afflict wheat plants, has made a comeback. Wheat crops in Africa have been at its mercy and the fungus has already broken into the middle-east. India is directly on its parth, scientists predict. Sudhirendar Sharma has more.
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Source: PRWeb Industry Agriculture
Zemea® Propanediol Meets U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Design for the Environment Criteria

DuPont today announced that the breakthrough bio-based ingredient, Zemea® propanediol, has been independently evaluated by NSF International and now is listed in the CleanGredients® database as passing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Design for the Environment (DfE) screen. Zemea® is produced and marketed by the DuPont Tate & Lyle Bio Products joint venture. (PRWEB Dec 30, 2008)

Read the full story at http://www.emediawire.com/releases/DuPont/Zemea_propanediol/prweb1807494.htm


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DuPont Acquires Ag Data Management Business to Enhance Information Solutions for Growers

Acquisition will Enhance Precision Farming Technology Available to Industry and Pioneer Customers (PRWEB Dec 29, 2008)

Read the full story at http://www.emediawire.com/releases/Pioneer_Hi-Bred/corn_seed/prweb1803944.htm


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Source: USDA Agricultural Research Service
Careful Land Management Protects Mississippi Watersheds
Tue, 06 Jan 2009 09:54:00 EST

Read the magazine story to find out more.

Photo: ARS soil scientist Martin Locke. (left) and biologist Wade Steinriede examine a soil sample from a crop field next to a lake. Link to photo information
ARS researchers have been tracking changes in the Beasley Lake watershed caused by farming practices for more than a decade. Click the image for more information about it.


For further reading

Careful Land Management Protects Mississippi Watersheds

By Ann Perry
January 6, 2009

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists at the National Sedimentation Laboratory (NSL) in Oxford, Miss., are studying how farming practices and conservation strategies can improve water quality in the Yazoo River Delta and beyond.

As part of this effort, research leader Martin Locke and his colleagues have been tracking changes in the Beasley Lake watershed for more than a decade. During this time, local farmers have shifted from primarily growing cotton to producing corn, soybeans and sorghum. Other farmland has been taken out of production altogether.

Throughout this shift, the researchers monitored a range of biological, chemical and physical factors in Beasley Lake, which flows into the Yazoo River. They also evaluated runoff from edge-of-field sites and developed vegetated buffer zones and slotted inlet pipes to slow water flow and trap agricultural chemicals and sediments in field runoff.

The researchers found that Beasley Lake has improved in clarity, plankton growth levels and fish stocks over the past 11 years. Lake phosphorus levels decreased when farmers began to adopt conservation management practices, and pesticide levels also dropped significantly.

NSL ecologist Matt Moore and other scientists also carried out studies using constructed wetlands near Beasley Lake that consisted of a sediment retention pond and two vegetated wetland “cells.” Moore’s team set up 10 stations at various points within the constructed wetland system to collect water samples from a simulated runoff event.

The team drew water from Beasley Lake and mixed it with sediment and the pyrethroid insecticides lambda-cyhalothrin and cyfluthrin, which are typically used in the production of corn, cotton, soybeans, rice and wheat. Next, they conducted a carefully orchestrated “storm” and pumped the contaminated water into the constructed wetlands. Then water samples from the wetland were collected for the next 55 days.

The scientists found that the wetland vegetation trapped a significant amount of both pesticides, which suggests that constructed wetlands can help reduce the amount of chemicals that are washed out of production fields.

Read more about this research in the January 2009 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

ARS is a scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


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Source: USDA Economic Research Service - What's New
Season-Average Price Forecasts
Mon, 12 Jan 2009 15:00:00 GMT
A futures-price forecasting model is used to provide season-average price forecasts for corn, soybeans, and wheat. In addition to the monthly forecasts for prices received, the model computes a forecast for the counter-cyclical payment rate for each commodity. The 2002 Farm Act provides for counter-cyclical payments when prices are below specified levels.
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