Friday, 12-06-2026 | 08:38
Conducting large-scale multi-environment trials (METs) is practically challenging to breeding programs in Sub-Saharan Africa due to limitations of land, seed, and associated costs of phenotyping. As a result, early-generation hybrid maize trials are usually planted in single-row plots. In trials with single-row plots, genotypes compete with their neighbors for resources, and this biases the prediction of the genotype value.
Updated News
- IFAD partners with Government of Ghana and World Bank to transform agri-food systems through AgriConnect Compact
- FAO Partnership Award honors logistics, youth innovation and integrated development
- ISAAA and MABIC Announce 2026 Asian Short Course in Malaysia
- Research Shows Drought-Stressed Canola, Tomatoes, and Rice Block Iron Uptake
- Study Finds Strong Public Support for GM Mosquitoes in Mali
- Rothamsted Research Drills First Precision-Bred Crop in Historic Field Trial
- Researchers Find Key Gene for Cadmium Tolerance and Accumulation in Rice
- FAO Report Calls for Urgent Coordinated Financing to Address Agrifood Challenges in Africa
- Ukraine to Harmonize GMO Regulations with EU by August 2026
- Nutrition-Sensitive Trade: What Zanzibar’s Dagaa Fishery Reveals About Food and Nutrition Security
- Closing the gender gap in agrifood systems can help reduce food insecurity and boost global GDP: FAO gender experts
- CRISPR Reduces Allergy Risk in Cultivated Beef Cells
- Pakistan Introduces Major Biosafety Reforms to GMO Regulation
- FAO Director-General calls for AI’s transformative power to be at the service of rural communities and a bridge towards shared prosperit
- Kenyan President calls for ambitious investment in IFAD14 at Africa Forward Summit
Scientific news
- Comprehensive Evaluation of Bacterial Blight Resistance and Gene Distribution in Common Wild Rice (Oryza rufipogon) from Hainan Province, China
- Jacalin-Related Lectin OsJacLK1 Positively Regulates Resistance to Magnaporthe oryzae in Rice
- Inter-plot competition in hybrid maize multi-environment yield trials in Ethiopia can reduce rate of genetic gain
- Cashew Nut Oil Improves Lipid Metabolism and Fat Liver Deposition in High-Fat Diet-Fed C57BL/6J Mice
- A large-scale framework for estimating soil carbon, nitrogen, pH, and salinity dynamics for 1985–2023
- Skeleton-guided 3D digitization standardizes complex trait phenotyping and supports reproducible locus discovery in cucumber
- Os79, a UDP‐Glycosyltransferase, negatively regulates cadmium tolerance and accumulation in rice
- CRISPR/Cas9 mediated knockout of MeSSI enhances resistant starch content without compromising yield in cassava
- Genetic identification of Pid3-1 and its regulatory role in promoting blast resistance in rice
- CRISPR-Mediated Gene Editing for Inducing Thermosensitive Genic Male Sterility and Sheath Blight Resistance in Rice
- (E)-2-Hexenal Combats Rice Sheath Blight Through Direct Pathogen Inhibition and Host Defense Reprogramming
- Genetic mapping and diagnostic marker development for a co-localization interval conferring resistance to both Aspergillus flavus infection and aflatoxin production in peanut
- AI-designed OpenCRISPR-1 performs robust knockout, base editing, and prime editing in rice
- The effector NlOBP1b from the brown planthopper suppresses rice immunity by manipulating the OsCK2 complex
- OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
Friday, 12-06-2026 | 01:37
Agricultural biotechnology holds immense potential to foster sustainable agriculture, but transforming lab breakthroughs into real-world solutions requires a seamless blend of robust R&D, science-based regulations, and effective communication. To ensure society reaps these benefits while minimizing risks, scientists, regulators, and policymakers must collaborate closely so that scientific advancements and regulatory practices evolve hand in hand.
Friday, 12-06-2026 | 01:38
Conducting large-scale multi-environment trials (METs) is practically challenging to breeding programs in Sub-Saharan Africa due to limitations of land, seed, and associated costs of phenotyping. As a result, early-generation hybrid maize trials are usually planted in single-row plots. In trials with single-row plots, genotypes compete with their neighbors for resources, and this biases the prediction of the genotype value.
Friday, 12-06-2026 | 01:37
Japanese biotechnology firm Sanatech Life Science Co., Ltd. has secured regulatory clearance in Canada for its gene-edited Sicilian Rouge High GABA tomato. Following a thorough review by Health Canada's Novel Foods Section, the federal agency determined that the product meets all requirements under its plant breeding guidelines and does not meet the definition of a novel food.




















