Adding crushed rock to farmland pulls carbon out of the air

News

Adding crushed volcanic rock to cropland could play a key role in removing carbon from the air. In a field study, scientists at the University of California, Davis, and Cornell University found the technology stored carbon in the soil even during an extreme drought in California. The study was published in the journal Environmental Research Communications.
  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Global Development Section
  • Agriculture
  • Digital Agriculture
  • Climate Change
a tractor sprinkles rock dust over a tilled farm field

COMM Updates - 10/24/2023

News

Conference Papers Associate Professor Dawn Schrader is delivering 3 papers at the Association for Moral Education annual conference. “Four Case Studies of Ethics in Political Revolutions: Moral Education and the Ethical and Epistemological...
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Now’s the time to look for Spotted lanternfly egg masses

News

SLF will lay eggs on any solid surface, including trees, tires—even lawn furniture. Scrape the eggs by putting them in doubled sealable bags, alcohol or hand sanitizer or by smashing or burning them. Fewer eggs this winter mean fewer SLF next...
  • Cornell Integrated Pest Management
an old car tire with light gray spotted lanternfly egg masses on it

Native ‘superfruits’ present opportunities for NY growers, consumers

News

Four such delectable berries – honeyberry, juneberry, aronia and elderberry – are being studied at Willsboro Research Farm, which is marking the 10-year anniversary of its specialty fruit trials. These native berries were essential food sources...
  • Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station
  • Willsboro Research Farm
  • Agriculture
  • Food
  • Fruits
A cluster of dark purple and red juneberries on a branch.

Ultraviolet light kills fire blight in apple blossoms without antibiotics

News

Ultraviolet light, which has been used successfully to suppress fungal powdery mildew in grapes, strawberries and cucumbers, can also destroy the bacteria that causes devastating fire blight in apples, according to new research from Cornell...
  • Cornell AgriTech
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Agriculture
  • Plants

Mysid shrimp populations across the Great Lakes

News

CBFS graduate student Toby Holda, working with Watkins, Rudstam, Boynton from CBFS, and collaborators from EPA (Scofield), Univ Michigan (Jude), NOAA (Pothoven), USGS (Warner, O’Brien) and DFO Canada (Currie, Bowen), analyzed the abundance...
  • Biological Field Station
  • Natural Resources and the Environment Section
  • Ecosystems
Person removing cod end of limnology net

40,000 daffodils planted along Cayuga Inlet

News

On October 4, students in the course Plant Science and Systems (PLSCI 1101) assisted in the planting of 40,000 daffodil bulbs into the sod along both sides of Taughannock Boulevard (Route 89) just south of Ithaca Children’s Garden. “It only took...
  • Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Horticulture Section
  • Nature
  • Plants
  • Horticulture
students with Dutch bulb planter

SnapDragon apple wins outstanding cultivar award

News

Susan Brown and Kevin Maloney thought they had a winner on their hands when they took their very first bite of an apple seedling that would eventually be named SnapDragon. Proof came earlier this year, when the apple won the outstanding cultivar...
  • Cornell AgriTech
  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Horticulture Section
Susan Brown's hand holding a Snapdragon apple

COMM Updates - 10/10/2023

News

Alumni News Professor Hepeng Jia Ph.D. ’19 was ranked as a provincial key talent in China. This marks the first time a faculty member of the School of Communication, Soochow University (Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), received this honor. This...
team of people standing in open grass field in front of large building