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Teste dein Wissen im Quiz!: Kannst du diese Schulaufgaben noch lösen?

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 19:00
In allen Kantonen kehrt der Alltag in die Klassenzimmer zurück. Dazu haben wir ein Quiz mit Schulaufgaben aus der 5. bis 8. Klasse vorbereitet. Kannst du noch mithalten?
Categories: Swiss News

Gyengült a forint

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:55
Az euró árfolyama a reggel hét órakor jegyzett 393,78 forintról 394,61 forintra erősödött 18.15 órakor, napközben 393,13 forint és 395,56 forint között mozgott. Az euró jegyzése a reggeli 1,1183 dollárról 1,1161 dollárra változott. (mti)

Három részeg sofőrt csíptek el szombaton a Nagyszombati kerületben

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:48
Szombaton három részeg sofőrt csíptek el a rendőrök a Nagyszombati kerületben, közülük ketten kisebb baleseteket is okoztak.

Paar im Zürcher Limmattal leidet unter dem Lärm der Auto-Poser: «Es macht uns krank!»

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:47
Alois und Carmen Greber sind lärmgeplagt: Bis um 23.00 Uhr haben sie den Flughafenlärm und seit einiger Zeit machen ihnen Autoposer das Leben schwer. Der Lärm sei unaushaltbar und mache sie und andere Nachbarn krank.
Categories: Swiss News

Autoposer am Fressbalken – Ehepaar Greber hält es nicht mehr aus: «Niemand kann uns richtig helfen»

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:47
Autobahnraststätten, wie etwa der Fressbalken in Würenlos, locken Autoposer an. Anwohnerinnen und Anwohner leiden unter dem Motorenlärm. Jetzt sollen in der Schweiz endlich Lärmblitzer her, fordert die Lärmliga.
Categories: Swiss News

Tanzanian president names 'troublesome' lion after rival

BBC Africa - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:39
President Samia says the lion is "always unsettled" so named him after opposition leader Tundu Lissu.
Categories: Africa

Tanzanian president names 'troublesome' lion after rival

BBC Africa - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:39
President Samia says the lion is "always unsettled" so named him after opposition leader Tundu Lissu.
Categories: Africa

Bulgarian parties urged to submit Commissioner picks as deadline looms

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:38
Bulgarian parties must submit their nominations for the country's new European Commissioner by the end of the week, caretaker Prime Minister Dimitar Glavchev urged on Monday, as continuing political instability and preparations for snap elections in October have delayed the process. Caretaker Prime Minister Dimitar Glavchev asked on Monday the parliamentary political formations to nominate candidates for a new Bulgarian commissioner before the government makes the final choice.
Categories: European Union

Verkehrsampeln fallen aus: Grosser Stromausfall im Baselbiet

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:31
Montagnachmittag erlebte das untere Baselbiet massive Stromausfälle. Ein Kurzschluss legte mehrere grosse Gemeinden lahm, auch Ampeln waren betroffen.
Categories: Swiss News

Scandale vinicole: «Je n’ai jamais vendu de vin étranger en AOC Valais»

24heures.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:27
Face aux juges, l’encaveur valaisan Cédric Flaction rejette en bloc les accusations de fraude à l’AOC et n’admet qu’avoir rendu service à des viticulteurs.
Categories: Swiss News

Unfall beim Bahnhof Tiefenbrunnen in Zürich: Heftige Kollision zwischen Porsche und Ambulanz

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:26
Ein Ambulanzfahrzeug ist am Montagnachmittag beim Bahnhof Tiefenbrunnen mit einem Auto kollidiert. Gemäss Stadtpolizei Zürich war die Ambulanz mit eingeschaltetem Blaulicht unterwegs.
Categories: Swiss News

Macron says Telegram CEO’s arrest has nothing to do with free speech

Euractiv.com - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:25
The arrest of Telegram CEO Pavel Durov in Paris has nothing to do with restricting free speech, French President Emmanuel Macron said.
Categories: European Union

In Basel werden Jugendliche gezielt durchsucht: Blick begleitet Patrouille bei Messer-Kontrolle

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:23
Nach der Messerattacke in Solingen (D) diskutiert Deutschland über ein Messerverbot. In Basel macht die Polizei seit zwei Jahren im Sommer explizit Stichwaffenkontrollen bei Jugendlichen. Blick hat sie eine Nacht auf Patrouille begleitet.
Categories: Swiss News

Research: Disease and Climate Stress Resistant Wheat Varieties for Global South

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:22

Scientists screen the Indian wheat genetic resources collection in Jaipur, India.

By Maina Waruru
NAIROBI, Aug 26 2024 (IPS)

Groundbreaking research indicates that the wild relatives of wheat could be turned into an all-time food security crop capable of cushioning vulnerable populations from starvation and hunger, thanks to its ability to withstand both climatic stress and diseases. Wheat is a staple for over 1.5 billion people in the Global South.

The review looked at two different studies and found that using the ancient genetic diversity of wild relatives of wheat, which provides 20 percent of the world’s calories and protein, could lead to weather- and disease-resistant varieties of the crop. This could ensure food security around the world.

The study led by the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre reveals that “long overlooked” wild wheat relatives have the potential to revolutionise wheat breeding, with new varieties capable of withstanding climate change and associated threats, including heat waves, droughts, flooding, and emerging and current pests and diseases.

Wild wheat relatives, which have endured environmental stresses for millions of years, possess genetic traits that modern varieties lack—traits that, when integrated into conventional varieties, could make wheat farming more possible in ever more hostile climates, the study published today (August 26, 2024) explains.

By farming the more resilient wheat, productivity could increase by an estimated USD 11 billion worth of extra grain every year, says the authors in the review paper titled ‘Wheat genetic resources have avoided disease pandemics, improved food security, and reduced environmental footprints: A review of historical impacts and future opportunities’ published by the journal Wiley Global Change Biology.

The review suggests that the use of plant genetic resources (PGR) helps against various diseases like wheat rust and defends against diseases that jump species barriers, like wheat blast. It gives nutrient-dense varieties and polygenic traits that create climate resilience.

The study points to a vast, largely untapped reservoir of nearly 800,000 wheat seed samples stored in 155 gene banks worldwide that include wild varieties and ancient farmer-developed ones that have withstood diverse environmental stresses over millennia. This is despite the fact that only a fraction of this genetic diversity has been utilised in modern crop breeding.

The findings, according to co-author Mathew Reynolds, will have major implications for food security, particularly in the Sub-Saharan Africa region, where the world’s most food-insecure populations live.

“The discoveries are very promising, as Africa has a lot of new environments in terms of potential wheat cultivation,” he told IPS.

Based on the research findings, significant environmental benefits have been realised thanks to various scientific efforts that have successfully integrated wild genes into modern species.

The study acknowledges that the use of PGR in wheat breeding has improved the nutrition and livelihoods of resource-constrained farmers and consumers in the Global South, where wheat is often the cereal of choice in parts of Asia and Africa

“We’re at a critical juncture,” says Reynolds. “Our current breeding strategies have served us well, but they must now address more complex challenges posed by climate change.”

He observes that breeding that helps in maintaining genetic resistance to a range of diseases improves “yield stability” and avoids epidemics of devastating crop diseases that ultimately threaten food security for millions.

“Furthermore, post-Green Revolution genetic yield gains are generally achieved with less (in the Global North) and often no fungicide in the Global South, and without necessarily increasing inputs of fertilizer or irrigation water, with the exception in some high-production environments,” the study contends.

As a result, there has been an increase in grain yield and millions of hectares of “natural ecosystems” have been saved from cultivation for grain production. These include millions of hectares of forests and other natural ecosystems, Reynolds and colleagues found.

Equally promising is the discovery in some experimental wheat lines incorporating wild traits that show up to 20 percent more growth under heat and drought conditions when compared to current varieties, and the development of the first crop ever bred to interact with soil microbes that has shown potential in reducing production of nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas. This enables the plants to use nitrogen more efficiently.

“The use of PGR wild relatives, landraces, and isolated breeding gene pools has had substantial impacts on wheat breeding for resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses while increasing nutritional value, end-use quality, and grain yield,” the review further finds.

Without the use of PGR-derived disease resistance, fungicide use to fight fungal diseases, the main threat to the crop, would have easily doubled, massively increasing selection pressure that would come with the need to avoid fungicide resistance, the review finds.

Remarkably, it is estimated that in wheat, a billion litres of fungicide application have been avoided, saving farmers billions that would go into the purchase and application of the chemicals, it adds.

The authors note that as weather becomes more extreme, crop breeding gene pools will need to be further enriched with new adaptive traits coming from PGR to survive the vagaries of climate change.

These ‘definitely’ include stubborn diseases that have plagued wheat farming in the tropics, such as the Ug99, a devastating stem rust fungal disease that, at its worst, wipes out entire crops in Africa and parts of the Middle East, Reynolds said.

Modern crop breeding, it says, has largely focused on a relatively narrow pool of star athletes—elite crop varieties that are already high performers and that have known, predictable genetics.

The genetic diversity of wild wheat relatives, on the other hand, offers complex climate-resilient traits that have been harder to use because they take longer, cost more, and are riskier than the traditional breeding methods used for elite varieties.

“We have the tools to quickly explore genetic diversity that was previously inaccessible to breeders,” explains Benjamin Kilian, co-author of the review and coordinator of the Crop Trust’s Biodiversity for Opportunities, Livelihoods and Development (BOLD) project, that supports conservation and use of crop diversity globally.

Among the tools are next-generation gene sequencing, big-data analytics, and remote sensing technologies, including satellite imagery. The latter allows researchers to routinely monitor traits like plant growth rate or disease resistance at unlimited numbers of sites globally.

While the collection and storage of PGR since early in the 20th century have played a key role, especially in breeding of disease-resistant plant varieties, the study concludes that a massive potential remains unexploited.

With wild relative varieties having survived millions of years of climate variance compared with our relatively recent crop species, more systematic screening is recommended to identify new and better sources of needed traits not just for wheat but for other crops as well, the study advises.

It calls for more investments in studying resilient wild varieties of common crops, taking advantage of widely available, proven and non-controversial technologies that present multiple impacts and a substantial return on investment.

“With new technologies emerging all the time to facilitate their use in plant breeding, PGR should be considered the best bet for achieving climate resilience, including its biotic and abiotic components,” the authors said.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Burgermeister keine 24 Stunden nach Horror-Unfall: «Ich würde am liebsten sofort wieder fahren»

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:20
Der Schock am Sonntagnachmittag war gross. Rennfahrer Joel Burgermeister (33) aus Egnach TG verunfallte beim Bergrennen Oberhallau. Sein Auto wurde zerfetzt, er überlebte. Am Tag danach spricht er mit Blick über den Moment und seine Zukunft.
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Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:20
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Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:19
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Categories: Swiss News

Le Décaméron : les contes médiévaux « à couper le souffle » qui ont repoussé les limites de la sexualité

BBC Afrique - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:09
Écrit par Giovanni Boccaccio dans les années 1350, ce recueil de nouvelles traite de la sexualité d'une manière qui peut encore faire rougir les lecteurs – et il a maintenant inspiré une comédie Netflix.
Categories: Afrique

Liebesglück für Dr. Bob: Das ist die Frau, die das Herz vom Dschungelarzt eroberte

Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:05
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Categories: Swiss News

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Blick.ch - Mon, 08/26/2024 - 18:04
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