Frontiers in Science Lead Article
Published on 15 Oct 2024
Enabling sustainable crop protection with induced resistance in plants
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Frontiers in Science Lead Article
Published on 15 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Editorial
Published on 15 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Viewpoint
Published on 15 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Viewpoint
Published on 15 Oct 2024
Dr Osama El-Lissy, formerly of the Food and Agriculture Organization, Italy, asserts that integrating science, technology, and a skilled workforce can close plant health policy gaps—enhancing food security, human and environmental health, and economic growth.
An version of the lead article written for—and peer reviewed by—kids aged 8-15 years.
Induced resistance, where plants’ immune systems are activated in a controlled way that prepares them to fight pests and disease, could help build a sustainable and resilient agricultural system.
Biologists who have worked for several years at the University of Neuchâtel take stock of induced plant resistance in a multimedia special report published today by the prestigious journal Frontiers in Science.
Frontiers in Science Lead Article
Published on 01 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Editorial
Published on 01 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Viewpoint
Published on 01 Oct 2024
Frontiers in Science Viewpoint
Published on 01 Oct 2024
A version of the lead article written for—and peer reviewed by—kids aged 8-15 years.
A new synthesis of regional climate data highlights emerging climate change signals. Researchers emphasize the increasing intensity of monsoons, altered storm tracks, and polar precipitation shifts, underscoring the critical need for region-specific data to inform effective climate policies and protect communities from escalating risks.
A greater understanding of how climate change impacts at a regional level is vital to developing effective climate policies that protect communities from escalating risks.
A team, including researchers from British Antarctic Survey (BAS), describe in the journal Frontiers in Science how they used the results from multiple new studies to make a synthesis of regional climate data that highlights emerging climate change signals.
A visionary concept for maximizing productivity and profitability through dynamic control of environmental conditions
A roadmap and novel online tool for optimizing national methane mitigation strategies
A map of priority sites to protect rare species at imminent risk of extinction
A vision for personalized medicine driven by innovative science and new interdisciplinary collaborations
In 2019 alone, more than half a million people died due to a stroke linked to high and low temperatures, a new study found. With the world getting warmer due to human-made climate change, that number is expected to rise.
In a rapidly growing and changing world, the need to produce enough food for everyone has become more urgent than ever.
Researchers explore how dynamic environmental control in indoor farms could help us feed a growing population with nutritious, high-quality, locally grown fruit and vegetables.
Over the poles, an increasing amount of precipitation will fall as rain, weather researchers predict.
Study identifies 16,825 sites around the world where prioritizing conservation would prevent extinction of thousands of unique species.
A “feasible and financially affordable” plan to avoid the most likely extinctions of species in the short term: this is what an international coalition of ecologists and conservation stakeholders proposes in a study.
Large numbers of fungi have been found living in the twilight zone of the ocean, and could unlock the door to new drugs that may match the power of penicillin.
A trove of more than 300 million gene groups from ocean bacteria, fungi and viruses has been made freely available online.
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