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  • Insects can teach us how to create better technologies

    If you put all humans living on the planet into an imaginary tin like sardines, the tin would be 2km long, wide and high. Amazingly, all the ants in the world would fill a similar-sized tin. Yet, despite their huge numbers, insects such as ants manage to thrive without overwhelming the natural world.Insects are true inventors of technology.

  • Insect pests will increase due to climate change- World.

    A new report has been released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – the UN’s authority on climate change – which revealed the latest research on how the Earth is changing and what those changes will mean for the future.

  • Plummeting insect numbers 'threaten collapse of nature'

    The world’s insects are hurtling down the path to extinction, threatening a “catastrophic collapse of nature’s ecosystems”, according to the first global scientific review.

  • Insect mass extinction shock headlines do not tell whole story and risk undermining threat of declining numbers

    Something's bugging me about today's reporting of the imminent extinction of insects.

  • Africa’s most notorious insects – the bugs that hit agriculture the hardest

    The dreaded crop-eating fall armyworm continues to spread across Africa like wildfire. This invasive insect pest, first reported in Africa in early 2016, is in more than 20 African countries including South Sudanand South Africa. Again in 2017 and in 2019. 

  • Why Aren’t We Eating More Insects?

    JAPANESE GIANT HORNETS, known in their native land as suzumebachi, are behemoths of their kind, some nearly two inches long and reportedly capable of stinging through leather. They often build their nests underground, in forests of cypress and cedar, and there, in autumn, hunters rouse the grown hornets, swatting them into jars of shochu, where they flail and drown.

  • Insects in the tropics are already near their heat limits – climate change could push many beyond survival

    Insects make up to 90% of all animal species on the planet, and most of them can be found in the tropics, the regions around the equator. Yet we still know surprisingly little about how these species will cope with rising temperatures driven by climate change.

  • World Food Day: Insects could play a vital role in fighting hunger globally

    Insects could be a game changer in the race to combat food insecurity and achieve zero hunger – the theme of this year’s World Food Day.

  • INSECTS: SPAWNING FARMING INNOVATION

    Increasingly, scientists are arguing that insects will have an essential role to play in the long-term prosperity and security of the world’s food supply.

  • How conventional soy farming starves honey bees

    significant, multi-year study published Monday provides new evidence that commodity crop production can be detrimental to honey bees, putting colonies at risk by depleting their access to food.

  • Turning feed waste into poultry protein

    Feed businesses are scrambling to make the most of an as-yet untapped protein source for livestock: insects.

  • Lessons on how to effectively tackle insect invasions

    Kenyan food production and grazing land is under threat from a huge desert locust invasion.

  • Fates of humans and insects intertwined, warn scientists

    The “fates of humans and insects are intertwined”, scientists have said, with the huge declines reported in some places only the “tip of the iceberg”.

  • How did insects get their colours? Crystal-covered beetle discovery sheds light

    The natural world is full of colour, and few groups of animals are as colourful as insects. From the dramatic black and yellow stripes of wasps and striking spots of ladybirds to the dazzling metallic sheen of jewel beetles, insects show a kaleidoscopic array of hues, patterns and optical effects.

  • New precision ag platform predict insects pressure one week in advance

    The new Arc farm intelligence platform uses predictive modeling based on real-time data.

  • What a warmer, wetter world means for insects, and for what they eat

    A new report has been released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – the UN’s authority on climate change – which revealed the latest research on how the Earth is changing and what those changes will mean for the future.

  • Insect and Hydroponic Farming Could Boost Food Security, Business, and the Circular Economy

     Insect and hydroponic crop farming, for both human food and animal feed, have the potential to increase access to nutritious food, while creating millions of jobs, improving the climate and the environment, and strengthening national economies, according to a new World Bank report ‘Insect and Hydroponic Farming in Africa:

  • Here are 7 incredible things we learned this year that animals can do

    This year, animals of all shapes and sizes surprised us with amazing abilities we didn’t know they had. From powerlifting to walking on the underside of water, these are the creature capabilities that most impressed us in 2021.

  • Climate change and intense farming may be devastating some insect populations

    As the sheer number and types of insects living on Earth's land decreases, scientists are beginning to determine the impacts of habitat loss, climate change and other threats on insect populations worldwide.

  • What, where and how do soil animals eat? And why do we need to know?

    We all know the early bird catches the worm, but what does the worm catch?

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  • The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could help ease pressure on South African farmers ahead of the next summer crop season starting mid-October 2026. Fertiliser prices have jumped about 50% year on year due to the Middle East conflict, and with fertiliser making up 20 to 35% of input costs for grains, oilseeds and sugarcane, any price relief would be a major boost.
  • We would like to offer potential buyers the opportunity to acquire one of the following Exclusive farms. Due to the Brands and Clientele involved the confidentiality of all information will be handled with the utmost discretion. A recent partnership with industry experts allows us to offer these farms to international buyers, the farms concerned will never be available on the open market.
  • Zambia is on track for a remarkable 70% increase in soybean production for the 2025/2026 agricultural season, with output forecasted to reach approximately 453,000 metric tonnes, up from 266,000 tonnes the previous season.
  • The controversy surrounding the foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) outbreak has become a significant test of whether the Democratic Alliance (DA) truly lives up to its claims of being different from other political parties.

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AGRI NEWS NET AUDIO CAST Feeding-

  • AFRICA CAN FEED THE WORLD – BUT ONLY IF TECH, POLICY, AND CASH LINE UP
  • Your Feet: The Foundation of Human Health
  • Alternative Proteins, Lab-Grown Meat, and Grass-Fed Meat: A Health Perspective
  • The Quality of South African Soil and Water: Impacts on Crop Production .

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