Friday, 24-04-2026 | 13:54
Parasitic plants have evolved independently at least a dozen times across angiosperms, yielding some of the most extreme examples of genomic reconfiguration in plants. Comparative analyses of plastid, mitochondrial, and nuclear genomes reveal striking convergence across lineages such as progressive plastid genome reduction with retention of a minimal core gene set, alongside lineage-specific divergences, including unusual mitochondrial genome architectures, rampant horizontal gene transfer
Updated News
- Extreme heat is pushing agrifood systems to the brink worldwide
- Strengthening seed systems in Liberia: EU-project improving access to high-quality coffee seedlings via regional seedling nursery hubs
- Africa's First Gene-Edited Grapevine Promises Climate Resilience
- Tracing impact: A joint mission through Kenya’s BRAINS project
- Success of Fertilize Right pilot in Vietnam’s 1M-Hectare Rice Program show better yields and incomes
- FAO Regional Conference for Africa: Director-General urges “abundance” narrative for youthful continent
- Japan and Brazil Grant Green Light to Non-browning Banana
- Nigeria Approves High-Performing Groundnut Variety SAMNUT 30 Developed by ICRISAT
- FAO: Protracted Strait of Hormuz crisis could turn into global agrifood catastrophe
- 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
Scientific news
- Comparative Metabolomic Profiling of Resistant and Susceptible Coffea arabica Accessions to Bacterial Pathogen Infection
- Progress and Prospects of Parasitic Plant Biodiversity Genomics
- Rubisco kinetic acclimation at the holoenzyme level
- Functional genomics in sugarcane breeding: key challenges and strategies
- Regulatory networks and molecular mechanisms underlying salt stress tolerance in rice
- Semiochemicals and odorant receptors underlying potato cultivar susceptibility and resistance to potato tuber moth
- Identification of nodule number-related loci and the candidate gene GmbHLH135 in soybean under low phosphorus stress
- Microbiological quality of plant-based cheese analogues and pathogen behavior in cashew nut-based varieties in cashew nut-based varieties
- Identification and Analysis of DUF506 Gene Family in Peanut (Arachis hypogaea)
- 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
Friday, 24-04-2026 | 06:51
In the pre-war Liberia era, coffee was a high economic crop, especially Liberica coffee, which is unique to the country. The coffee sector in Liberia produced 5 percent of the world’s coffee. However, the 14-year civil war destroyed coffee production systems. Post-war, Liberian farmers relied on informal seed distribution networks to keep their farms alive, facing a high risk of loss from climate adversities including pests and diseases affecting low-yielding varieties and non-availability of good quality planting materials.
Friday, 24-04-2026 | 06:54
Parasitic plants have evolved independently at least a dozen times across angiosperms, yielding some of the most extreme examples of genomic reconfiguration in plants. Comparative analyses of plastid, mitochondrial, and nuclear genomes reveal striking convergence across lineages such as progressive plastid genome reduction with retention of a minimal core gene set, alongside lineage-specific divergences, including unusual mitochondrial genome architectures, rampant horizontal gene transfer
Friday, 24-04-2026 | 06:52
Researchers from the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia, developed two transgenic lines of genetically modified (GM) poplar trees carrying dehydrin genes TaWCS120 and HvDHN5 to improve tolerance to high salinity. The findings of the study offer potential benefits for both the wood industry and agriculture.




















