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Scientists say ag is good for honeybees

Feedstuffs | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

In a recent study, researchers with the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture found the overall health of honey bees improved in the presence of agricultural production, despite the increased exposure to agricultural pesticides.


Harding County, South Dakota Farm, ships whole herd due to bovine tuberculosis

TSLN | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

"I think the tears are gone," Susan said. "It had gotten to the point that we had accepted it. I think it somehow became easier to do what we had to do," she said, of losing her family's entire herd of cattle due to bovine tuberculosis."We battled it day by day finding positive things to think about. We went to the Lord," she says.


U.S. Farm Groups Pile on Canada as Trump Eyes Trade Fairness

Drovers | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Federal News

U.S. President Donald Trump's criticism of the protected Canadian dairy system has emboldened American farm groups to tackle other longstanding agriculture irritants, as the countries move toward rewriting trade rules.U.S.


Mara Abbott: GMO debate about everything except GMOs

Daily Camera | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Food News

Last December, Adrian Card ruined grocery shopping for me. Card is the CSU extension agent to Boulder County, and was the lead author of "Economic, Environmental and Social Implications of Cropping Systems in Boulder County," a 2015 briefing paper for the county commissioners.


Agriculture is a social cause millennials could get excited about

Meatingplace (free registration required) | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

You've likely noticed that the competing interests of the day are all vying for millennials attention, and the practice of beating up on agriculture (the meat industry in particular) is a very popular ‘larger social issue’ that resonates with millennials.Just a few examples:A Colorado State University student has petitioned through change.org to stop the construction of a very small slaughter facility on campus that facilitates the instruction of meat science and best practices of animal handling.The documentary “What the Health” (aka Cowspiracy 2) is currently showing across the country in


Dam on Yellowstone River moves ahead

High Country News | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Rural News

Pallid sturgeon, declared endangered in 1990, can live for decades and reach 5 feet in length. Fewer than 125 are left in the Upper Missouri River Basin; they’re believed to be genetically distinct and key to the species’ survival. Their reproduction is hampered by dams, though, and in 2015, environmental groups sued to demolish one on the Yellowstone River that blocks 165 miles of crucial spawning habitat (“Can pallid sturgeon hang on in the overworked Missouri River?” HCN, 9/17/12).


Study of meat from home delivery services shows disturbing results

Meatingplace (free registration required) | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Food News

Researchers at Rutgers University and Tennessee State University who ordered and tested hundreds of meat, poultry, game and seafood items from home delivery systems such as meal kits found disturbing results relative to cold-chain integrity, packaging, labeling and pathogen loads on some of these food items. Of consumers interviewed, 95 percent believed these products to be safe. However, many of these food items arrived as unexpected gifts, increasing the likelihood the products might sit outside for eight hours or more before being opened and refrigerated.


First shipments of US beef arrive in Brazil

Meat + Poultry | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in News

Secretary Sonny Perdue announces the first shipments of fresh US beef in 13 years have arrived in Brazil, creating promising long-term opportunities for American producers in the Brazilian market. “With Brazil’s large market reopened to the United States, US beef exports are poised for new growth. I look forward to Brazilians getting the opportunity to eat delicious American beef, because once they taste it, they’ll want more of it,” Secretary Perdue said in a statement.São Paulo, Brazil-based JBS SA received its first lot containing 12 tons of US beef.


When Oregon farm and ranch land changes hands

Capital Press | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Rural News

The impact is unclear at this point, but the primary worry is about ag land being taken out of production.


Second-largest crop pushes many apple prices lower

Capital Press | Posted onMay 16, 2017 in Food News

It’s been a tough sales season for the Washington apple industry. Not as tough as 2014, when a record crop tanked prices, but still bad enough that it’s “not sustainable,” a leading marketer says.Red Delicious apples, selling below break-even, are still 29 percent of the 2016 crop and need to be more like 15 to 18 percent, says Tim Evans, general sales manager of Chelan Fresh Marketing.Reds and Gala make up more than 50 percent of the crop.


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