Skip to content Skip to navigation

AgClips

Recent AgClips

A look at the future of dairies

Indiana Gazette | Posted onAugust 29, 2018 in Agriculture News

A group of agriculture experts from around the world recently published a Journal of Dairy Science article sharing their vision for what dairy production and consumption will look like in 2067.It is expected that the demand for dairy products will grow, for two main reasons. First, per capita income worldwide will be higher and allow the average person to purchase more animal products. Second, dairy products meet human nutritional requirements while requiring less land per unit of edible protein than many other food products.


Making Economic Development Work In Rural Wisconsin

Wiscontext | Posted onAugust 29, 2018 in Rural News

A major reason that economic development organizations carefully define rural areas is because priorities and potential initiatives in those communities can differ in some ways from their urban counterparts. Many rural areas, face challenges due to their smaller populations and locations that are often distant from services taken for granted in larger communities. "The big deals don't happen often," said Jim Bowman of Driftless Development, referencing major projects by large companies more common in urban and suburban areas. "So it's about what we have already and how to build on that.


New course trains veterinary students to protect pollinators

Cornell | Posted onAugust 29, 2018 in Agriculture News

New federal regulations require veterinarians around the country to examine and treat honeybee colonies, and training for this new job is needed. That’s why Cornell veterinarian Dr. Robin Radcliffe partnered with Cornell faculty members to offer the first honeybee health course at Cornell for veterinary students.Beyond the fact that bees are invertebrates and possess many different physiological systems compared with vertebrates, honeybee care is “more herd health, and has a lot of parallels to population medicine and public health.


Free Press Gets a Boost With Senate Resolution Declaring It Is Not the Enemy

Roll Call | Posted onAugust 29, 2018 in Federal News

The Senate went on record declaring “that the press is not the enemy of the people” — a rebuke to President Donald Trump, who declares the opposite on a regular basis.  Senators adopted by unanimous consent a resolution from Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii and Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer of New York to declare the Senate’s support for a free press and the First Amendment protections afforded to journalists. The resolution text was released the same day 350 newspapers ran editorials designed to push back on Trump’s criticisms of the media.


USDA Forest Service Announces New Strategy for Improving Forest Conditions

USDA | Posted onAugust 29, 2018 in Agriculture, Federal News

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service announced today a new strategy for managing catastrophic wildfires and the impacts of invasive species, drought, and insect and disease epidemics.


Judge rules case against withdrawal of organic animal welfare rule can proceed

Agri-Pulse | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Agriculture, Federal News

A District Court judge in California has ruled that a group of organic stakeholders has the legal standing to challenge USDA’s withdrawal of organic animal welfare language earlier this year.


Pfizer stops sales of injectable opioids to veterinary market

Veterinary News | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Agriculture News

Pfizer, a human biopharmaceutical company whose products are frequently used off-label by veterinarians, halted sales of injectable opioids to the veterinary market in the second quarter of 2018, a company spokesman says. It is instead prioritizing the drugs to human hospital and surgical customers. "Pfizer Injectables has been experiencing a production delay in the manufacturing of opioid products.


Near 2 million acres on fire in the United States

EurekAlert | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Rural News

The West Coast of the United States is shrouded in smoke from the 110 large fires (this does not include smaller fires within each complex of fires) that have erupted across the region during this fire season. Over 1.9 million acres are or have been ablaze.


FBI Agent Points to Need for Protecting Intellectual Property From Theft

DTN | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Agriculture News

In an era of tremendous change in agricultural technology, it's more important than ever that agribusinesses, research universities and farmers protect themselves against the risks of intellectual theft.The theft of trade secrets is getting more traction among federal authorities and in court. But, if a legal battle over a trade secret goes to court, company and university officials are likely going to be asked why a product or research is proprietary.


Feral hogs invaded a NC preserve. These nature lovers started shooting back.

Charlotte News Observer | Posted onAugust 25, 2018 in Rural, SARL Members and Alumni News

When feral hogs invaded a 1,400-acre tract in southern Davie County, the owners, a Salisbury-based conservation group, came up with what it says is a unique solution: Sign up hunters to settle the score. Three Rivers Land Trust, formerly known as LandTrust for Central North Carolina, has battled hogs since acquiring the farmland between the Yadkin and South Yadkin rivers in 2012. Local people say the hogs were released there illegally a couple of years earlier.


Pages