Friday, 17-04-2026 | 08:27
Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is a globally important oilseed and food legume, yet its productivity is persistently constrained by devastating diseases and insect pests that thrive under changing climates. This review aims to provide a comprehensive synthesis of advances in precision breeding and molecular approaches for enhancing disease and pest resistance in peanut. Traditional control measures ranging from crop rotation and cultural practices to chemical protection have delivered only partial and often unsustainable relief.
Updated News
- New research provides updated estimates on global forest-sector employment
- FAO Director-General calls for accelerated action on One Health agenda
- FAO rolls out new initiatives to include and promote entrepreneurial youth
- Can Better Fish Processing Improve Diets Without Undermining Local Nutrition?
- ICRISAT Celebrates its Foundation Day, Marking 55 Years of Science-Driven Impact
- FAO Director-General calls for accelerated action on One Health agenda
- FAO rolls out new initiatives to include and promote entrepreneurial youth
- Food security is crucial to global security (Globe and Mail)
- Will the Iran crisis lead to another round of food price spikes?
- Peru Releases Gene Editing Guidelines
- Launch of new SIDS and new GIAHS initiatives mark milestone in FAO’s partnership with China
- Experts Recommend Climate-adaptive Breeding Pipeline for Rice
- A Leadership & Culture Workshop Shapes the Future of Rice in Africa
- Green Climate Fund approves $50 million for FAO-supported adaptation project in Jamaica
- ISAAA Report Presents Top Producers of Biotech/GM Crops in 2024
Scientific news
- Next-Generation Precision Breeding in Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) for Disease and Pest Resistance: From Multi-Omics to AI-Driven Innovations
- Deciphering cassava brown streak virus infection in cassava through VPg mediated host protein interactions
- Population genetics and phylogenomic insights into the origin of economically important black pepper (Piper nigrum)
- Cloning and functional analysis of qCmr2.1, a novel gene for Cucumber mosaic virus resistance in Capsicum frutescens
- A haplotype-layered GWAS identifies a multi-trait grain mold resistance hub on sorghum chromosome 5
- CasY7: An optimized Cas12i system for enhanced genome editing in monocot crops
- Integrated physiological, biochemical and hormonal traits determine drought tolerance and yield stability in cashew (Anacardium occidentale L.)
- Endophytic Streptomyces griseorubens MEPSL1 from sweetpotato promotes plant growth and enhances γ-tocopherol accumulation
- Identification of photosynthetic pigment content-related genes in peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) by GWAS and RNA-seq
- MeNADP-ME3 Confers Salt and Drought Tolerance in Arabidopsis and Drives Functional Diversification of the NADP-ME Family in Cassava
- Structural insight of a photosystem I-CpcL-phycobilisome supercomplex from a cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120
- Integrating image-based phenotyping and QTL mapping to enhance genetic resistance and accelerate breeding for bacterial grain rot resistance in rice
- Leveraging AI and integrated genomic-environmic prediction for intelligent sugarcane breeding
- Going wild in banana breeding enables Fusarium-resistant hybrids with improved fruit quality
- Metabolomics and transcriptomics analyses reveal quality differences in forage-grain ratoon rice under varying mowing stages
Friday, 17-04-2026 | 01:24
Forests employ approximately 42 million people worldwide, with women accounting for one quarter of the workforce, according to new research from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the Thünen Institute of Forestry. Published on Tuesday, Updated methodology to quantify forest-sector employment: Global and regional estimates presents fresh estimates that help close critical data gaps in global and regional forest-sector employment between 2011 and 2022.
Friday, 17-04-2026 | 01:27
Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is a globally important oilseed and food legume, yet its productivity is persistently constrained by devastating diseases and insect pests that thrive under changing climates. This review aims to provide a comprehensive synthesis of advances in precision breeding and molecular approaches for enhancing disease and pest resistance in peanut. Traditional control measures ranging from crop rotation and cultural practices to chemical protection have delivered only partial and often unsustainable relief.
Friday, 17-04-2026 | 01:25
You may not see them with the naked eye, but bacteria are among the most influential organisms on Earth. Often feared as agents of disease, bacteria are now being used as essential tools in biotechnology to transform the way we produce food, protect crops, treat illnesses, and conserve the environment. From fermenting everyday staples like yogurt and cheese, bacterial applications are quietly evolving in many ways to address global challenges such as food security, climate change, and public health.




















