1,432 results match your criteria: "Centre for agricultural Research[Affiliation]"

Adopting agricultural technologies is crucial to improve productivity and livelihoods in developing countries. While much research has focused on adoption decisions, understanding dis-adoption, when farmers stop using technology, is equally important. Studies on agricultural technology adoption often treat dis-adopters (those who initially adopted but later discontinued to use) and never-adopters (those who never adopted) as the same, using binary models to analyze farmers' decisions.

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Analysis of Mycorrhization Trends and Undesired Fungi Species in Three- and Six-Year-Old Plantations in Hungary.

J Fungi (Basel)

October 2024

Department of Plant Physiology and Molecular Plant Biology, Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE), 1/C Pázmány Péter Sétány, 1117 Budapest, Hungary.

is a key truffle species with significant ecological and economic value. Despite its importance, plantation success can be influenced by soil pH, host plants, and undesired fungi. This study examines how soil pH and host plants influence mycorrhization trends in plantations across six plant species in eight Hungarian settlements, using root sampling and DNA analysis to assess plantations at three and six years of age.

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Historically, for more than one and a half centuries, only one so-called "long-legged bat tick" species, i.e., Koch was known to science.

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Water-soluble organic selenometabolites of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) green biomass-derived fractions.

J Trace Elem Med Biol

December 2024

Department of Plant Physiology and Metabolomics, Agricultural Institute, HUN-REN Centre for Agricultural Research, Brunszvik str. 2, Martonvásár 2462, Hungary. Electronic address:

Background: Tolerance of plants towards selenium, a non-essential microelement for higher plants, is a key issue when designing either the indirect (selenium-depletion from highly seleniferous soils) or directed (selenized feed production) enrichment of selenium in forages. Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), the well-known forage crop of the Fabaceae family, has been gaining considerable interest due to its application as a green manure, as a cover crop, or in soil remediation by nitrogen fixation.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Analysis of data from over 1 million forest plots and thousands of tree species shows that wood density varies significantly by latitude, being up to 30% denser in tropical forests compared to boreal forests, and is influenced mainly by temperature and soil moisture.
  • * The research also finds that disturbances like human activity and fire alter wood density at local levels, affecting forest carbon stock estimates by up to 21%, emphasizing the importance of understanding environmental impacts on forest ecosystems.
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Juvenile agile frogs spatially avoid ranavirus-infected conspecifics.

Sci Rep

October 2024

HUN-REN-ELTE-MTM Integrative Ecology Research Group, Budapest, Hungary.

Article Synopsis
  • Exposure to pathogens can trigger behavioral changes that influence the spread of diseases, with healthy individuals practicing social distancing and infected individuals potentially isolating themselves.
  • In a study of agile frog juveniles, both healthy and infected frogs avoided mingling with infected peers, which may help reduce disease transmission.
  • However, infected frogs did not show self-isolation, which could allow the disease to spread further; more research is needed to understand these dynamics in amphibians.
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The key to wide geographical distribution of wheat is its high adaptability. One of the most commonly used methods for studying adaptation is the investigation of transition between the vegetative-generative phase and the subsequent intensive stem elongation process. These processes are largely determined by changes in ambient temperature, the diurnal and annual periodicity of day length, and the composition of light spectrum.

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Tree growth and longevity trade-offs fundamentally shape the terrestrial carbon balance. Yet, we lack a unified understanding of how such trade-offs vary across the world's forests. By mapping life history traits for a wide range of species across the Americas, we reveal considerable variation in life expectancies from 10 centimeters in diameter (ranging from 1.

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  • Whales, dolphins, and porpoises are prone to infections by various parasites, including protozoans and metazoans.
  • Tissue samples and parasites were collected from various dolphin and whale species to analyze their molecular composition.
  • The study revealed the presence of a significant DNA in the cerebellum of a dolphin, suggesting possible health implications, and identified new genetic markers for several parasite species affecting marine mammals.
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Cultivated and wild species of the genus rye () are important but underexploited gene sources for increasing the genetic diversity of bread wheat. Gene transfer is possible via bridge genetic materials derived from intergeneric hybrids. During this process, it is essential to precisely identify the rye chromatin in the wheat genetic background.

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  • The study explores how plants, specifically Arabidopsis, absorb inorganic carbon (like bicarbonate) through their roots and the mechanisms involved in this process.
  • It was found that the absorbed carbon is incorporated mainly into sucrose and transported to the leaves, enhancing plant growth and photosynthesis.
  • The research also highlighted the role of specific transporters and signaling pathways, suggesting that these processes support the plant's nutrient assimilation and growth when inorganic carbon is available.
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The study was carried out to estimate genetic and phenotypic parameters for growth traits in Dorper crossbred sheep. The data set consisted of 5717 growth records from 1347 individuals of Dorper 50% crossbred sheep descended from 43 sires and 344 dams born between the years 2012 and 2022 at Debre Birhan Agricultural Research Center sheep research station, Ethiopia. Studied traits were birth weight (WT0), weaning weight (WT3), six months weight (WT6), yearling weight (WT12), average daily gain from birth to weaning (ADG1), average daily gain from weaning to six months (ADG2), average daily gain from six months to yearling (ADG3).

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We test the hypothesis whether levels of key traits of sheep heterogeneously affect market prices of sheep in a rural setting. Feasible generalized least squares and (un)conditional quantile regression estimations were made on a dataset of 1153 sheep transactions in two primary small ruminant markets in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. The empirical results show that animal traits affect the observed prices of sheep differently, but only partly explain the sheep price differences.

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  • The study aimed to investigate how low temperatures experienced by rice leaves influence stress responses in the roots and how light conditions affect these processes.
  • Researchers exposed rice plants to low temperatures (12°C) while keeping roots at normal temperatures (27°C) and analyzed gene expression changes in the roots.
  • Findings revealed that low temperature exposure led to more down-regulated genes, particularly affecting nitrogen metabolism and related signaling, with additional insights from real-time PCR and metabolomics showing that both leaf cold exposure and light conditions impact root stress responses.
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The introduction of the Nearctic predaceous stink bug species, (Perillus bioculatus) was attempted multiple times in various countries throughout Europe to mitigate the damage caused by the invasive and harmful pest species, the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata). Though these attempts were thought to be unsuccessful for decades, more recent data elucidated that the species have established small self-sustaining populations in the Balkans Peninsula, Southern Russia, and Türkiye and recently began to expand. In the past years, the European range of the species reached Eastern Europe.

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Detection of tick-borne pathogens in the pangolin tick, Amblyomma javanense, from Vietnam and Laos, including a novel species of Trypanosoma.

Acta Trop

December 2024

Department of Parasitology and Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Budapest, Hungary; HUN-REN-UVMB Climate Change, New Blood-sucking Parasites and Vector-borne Pathogens Research Group, Hungary. Electronic address:

Two species of Southeast Asian pangolins (the Chinese pangolin, Manis pentadactyla and the Malayan or Sunda pangolin, Manis javanica) are critically endangered species. Therefore, knowledge on their parasitic infections is very important, especially considering ticks that can transmit which pathogens. In this study, 32 pangolin ticks (Amblyomma javanense), that were collected in Vietnam and Laos, were analyzed with molecular methods for the presence of tick-borne pathogens.

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Effect of caffeic acid and cobalt sulfate on potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants in the presence and absence of nanoparticles-coated urea.

Sci Rep

September 2024

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine and King, Khalid University Hospital, King Saud University, Medical City, PO Box-2925, 1146, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Article Synopsis
  • Potatoes are an important global food crop, and the study focuses on how different amendments can enhance their growth under nutrient stress.
  • Caffeic acid (CA) boosts plant health by enhancing antioxidant activity and root development, while cobalt sulfate (CoSO) promotes nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis.
  • The combination of CA and CoSO with nanoparticle-coated urea (NPCU) significantly improved various growth parameters in potatoes, including increased chlorophyll levels and overall plant vigor compared to the control group.
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DEFENSE NO DEATH 1 (DND1) is a cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channel protein. Earlier, it was shown that the silencing of DND1 in the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) leads to resistance to late blight, powdery mildew, and gray mold diseases.

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One of the major factors driving the currently ongoing biodiversity crisis is the anthropogenic spread of infectious diseases. Diseases can have conspicuous consequences, such as mass mortality events, but may also exert covert but similarly severe effects, such as sex ratio distortion via sex-biased mortality. Chytridiomycosis, caused by the fungal pathogen (Bd) is among the most important threats to amphibian biodiversity.

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Plant infections caused by fungi lead to significant crop losses worldwide every year. This study aims to better understand the plant defence mechanisms regulated by red light, in particular, the effects of red light at night when most phytopathogens are highly infectious. Our results showed that superoxide production significantly increased immediately after red light exposure and, together with hydrogen peroxide levels, was highest at dawn after 30 min of nocturnal red-light treatment.

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Birds are long-known as important disseminators of ixodid ticks, in which context mostly their latitudinal, south-to-north migration is considered. However, several bird species that occur in the eastern part of the northern Palaearctic are known to migrate westward. In this study, a female tick collected from the sedge warbler, , in Lithuania was identified morphologically and analyzed with molecular-phylogenetic methods.

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Unlabelled: (MDMV) is one of the most serious viruses of sweet corn. Utilising the process of RNA interference, the exogenous introduction of small RNA molecules mimicking virus-derived small interfering RNA (siRNA) into the plant prior to infection triggers the antiviral RNA silencing effect, thereby promoting more effective antiviral protection. Hence, a treatment with MDMV-derived small RNA was applied to sweet corn plants one day before MDMV virus inoculation.

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The CIMMYT Australia ICARDA Germplasm Evaluation concept: a model for international cooperation and impact.

Front Plant Sci

July 2024

Centre for Biometrics and Data Science for Sustainable Primary Industries, National Institute for Applied Statistics Research Australia, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.

Article Synopsis
  • Australian wheat breeders access wheat germplasm through the CAIGE program, which coordinates the selection, import, quarantine, and evaluation of this germplasm for the Australian wheat industry.
  • The CAIGE model has been validated through trials from 2017 to 2020, showing significant yield improvements from germplasm contributions compared to non-CAIGE varieties.
  • Investing in CAIGE has proven highly profitable, offering a benefit-cost ratio of $20 for every dollar spent, indicating substantial economic returns and ongoing benefits for Australian wheat breeding.
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The common grape (Vitis vinifera L.) has been cultivated for thousands of years. Nowadays, it is cultivated using a variety of tillage practices that affect the structure of the soil microbial communities and thus the health of the vine.

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