Arable farms switch to robotic dogs to guard valuable corn crops      VIEWPOINT- South Africa Cannot Borrow Its Way Out of Broken Systems      Many of the health claims we hear about specific fruits and vegetables in the media are exaggerated, misleading, or not strongly backed by science."      How soils changed life on Earth      South Africa -Weeklikse Landbou Nuusoorsig - Weekly Agriculture News Summary 22nd April 2026      Weekly Health News Quanlim Health- LifeIselect 22nd April 2026       What Europe Risks with New GMO and Seed Regulations      THE FUTURE OF FARMING TECHNOLOGY      Vineyards Benefit from Furry Friends      VIEWPOINT- South Africa- Government Water Rules Add Pressure on Citizens and Farmers     
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  • How fast can Antarctica rise when the ice melts?

    Earth is finally free to rise after hundreds of thousands of years of ice suppression.

  • By 2050 there may be more plastic in oceans than fish – UN

    Plastic pollution in the oceans has reached a stage where microplastics – pieces smaller than 5mm – now outnumber stars in our galaxy, according to UN secretary general António Guterres. 

  • New Technique Can Turn Millions of Tons of Plastic Waste into Clean Fuel

    World’s population is growing, so is the plastic wastes that people produce. According to the United Nations estimates, annually more than 8 million tons of plastics flow into the oceans.

  • 90% of plastic polluting our oceans comes from just 10 rivers

    Over the last decade we have become increasingly alarmed at the amount of plastic in our oceans. More than 8 million tons of it ends up in the ocean every year. If we continue to pollute at this rate, there will be more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050.

  • Sea Pangolin: the first ever species endangered by potential deep sea mining

    Hydrothermal vents host rare species at incredibly high density comparable to tropical rainforests or coral reefs.

  • Sea level rise doesn’t necessarily spell doom for coastal wetlands

    Rising sea levels don’t have to spell doom for the world’s coastal wetlands.

  • You May Find Salt-Tolerant Rice Growing In The Ocean By 2021

    Growing rice in the ocean sounds a little whacky, but ocean agriculture is an emerging form of food production that could have some real potential.

  • South African seas up to 30m higher show a wet planet under siege

    Welcome to the Pliocene – an ancient proxy for a future world in which big carbon can rewrite global temperatures and expanding oceans can swallow liveable land.

  • Overfishing, Conservation, Sustainability, and Farmed Fish

    As with many other aspects of government policy, overfishing and other fishing-related environmental issues are a real problem, but it’s not clear that government intervention is the solution.

  • Marine protected areas must promote and respect rights of small-scale fishers, not dispossess them

    Marine Protected Area Day was observed in Africa for the first time on 1 August 2021.

  • The world’s only source of critical seawater samples could dry up

    If you are a scientist studying how carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are altering the ocean, you likely know who Andrew Dickson is—and can’t get along without him.

  • Sea spray is belching toxic chemicals back on land

    Scientists and policymakers are puzzling over how to get rid of a group of toxic chemicals found in streams and drinking water.

  • Climate change threatens one of world’s biggest fish harvests

    The Peruvian anchovy is a small fish with a big impact. Only about the size of an index finger, they make up the single largest fish catch in the world—sometimes up to 15% of the global haul.

  • When it comes to sucking up carbon emissions, ‘the ocean has been forgiving.’ That might not last

    Our planet would be unrecognizable without the ocean for myriad reasons, not least of which is the key role it plays in keeping our climate in check. A specific ocean layer, known as the twilight zone, can take a lot of the credit for making that happen.

  • Marine life in a South African bay is full of chemical pollutants

    The adage “out of sight, out of mind” has long summed up humans’ attitude to dumping personal and industrial waste. In a 1974 Scientific American article, the oceanographer Willard Bascom wrote that “the ocean is the plausible place for man to dispose of some of his wastes”. If done “thoughtfully”, he continued, “it will do no damage to marine life.”

  • South Africa is surrounded by sea but doesn’t have a plan to protect it: three steps to get one

    South Africa is surrounded by 2,798km of coastline. Yet, oddly, the country doesn’t have a coherent maritime strategy underpinned by a related national strategy to safeguard its maritime interests.

  • Antarctic sea ice has been hitting record lows for most of this year

    Something strange is happening to the Antarctic’s sea ice.

  • World’s beaches are changing because of climate change - green thinking is needed to save them

    Coastlines – the interface between land and sea – lie at the frontline in the battle against climate change impacts.

  • Antarctic sea ice hits lowest winter maximum on record: US data

    The sea ice around Antarctica likely had a record low surface area when it was at its maximum size this winter, a preliminary US analysis of satellite data showed Monday.

  • The five biggest threats to our natural world … and how we can stop them

    The world’s wildlife populations have plummeted by more than two-thirds since 1970 – and there are no signs that this downward trend is slowing.

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  • Tropical agriculture faces unique challenges due to natural mineralization cycles, which significantly influence soil fertility and nutrient availability. Here's an overview of the difficulties and possible corrective actions:
  • CRA Group a leading media and advertising company in South Africa are looking for young junior Agri writers and journalist to start a part time career in a vibrant media - CRA Group is always on the move and always busy implementing new ways of reporting and making use of the latest technologies as we lead by example. - contact us at- cra@cramedia.co.za
  • Under the collaborative project among University of the Witwatersrand, nuclear energy officials and conservationists, five rhinos were injected Thursday in what the university hopes will be the mass injection of the declining rhino population.
  • TLU SA brei sy suksesvolle Jongboer van die Jaar-kompetisie uit deur vir die eerste keer ’n Jeugboer van die Jaar-kompetisie vir skoolleerlinge aan te bied.Die nuwe projek gee leerders van graad 1 tot graad 12 die geleentheid om reeds op skoolvlak hul ondernemingsgees, kreatiwiteit en verantwoordelikheidsin te ontwikkel deur praktiese landbou- en voedselprojekte.

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