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1 tares of western European and North American agriculture.
2 potential benefits of adopting conservation agriculture.
3 on and pathogen defense, traits critical for agriculture.
4 ches to engineering targeted improvements in agriculture.
5 n and nutrient sequestration and sustainable agriculture.
6 ge, a consequence of rapid deforestation for agriculture.
7 can advance the sustainability of crop-based agriculture.
8 ariant of traditional SD policies focused on agriculture.
9 nt pathogens and have devastating impacts on agriculture.
10 and environmentally friendly alternatives in agriculture.
11 ency (WUE(plant) ) is needed for sustainable agriculture.
12 odiversity and biocomplexity to medicine and agriculture.
13 n due to the considerable economic losses in agriculture.
14 ct, early yielding plants suitable for urban agriculture.
15 and seed formation, and are fundamental for agriculture.
16 rd improving the sustainability of irrigated agriculture.
17 he energy and carbon footprints of irrigated agriculture.
18 pplications in plant functional genomics and agriculture.
19 marily through conversion to aquaculture and agriculture.
20 can expand the repertoire of crops for urban agriculture.
21 ctorum with the east-west Holocene spread of agriculture.
22 levels were measured in grains from organic agriculture.
23 ity offers a great potential for sustainable agriculture.
24 l have negative consequences for surrounding agriculture.
25 real crop with a great potential for dryland agriculture.
26 ation, and thus the sustainability of modern agriculture.
27 oduction consumes 99% of the direct water in agriculture.
28 ore fully the externalities of AMU in animal agriculture.
29 is a key source of nitrogen for sustainable agriculture.
30 ols for mitigating the effects of drought on agriculture.
31 ic hooves and significant economic losses in agriculture.
32 thods for detecting its levels could benefit agriculture.
33 in or win-no-harm situations in conventional agriculture.
34 eutical product biosynthesis and sustainable agriculture.
35 the chemical industry, energy production and agriculture.
36 , feed and fuel while practising sustainable agriculture.
37 cted by processes like mining, industry, and agriculture.
38 vers underlying apomixis could revolutionize agriculture.
39 ency (NUE) reduce fertilizer for sustainable agriculture.
40 tal costs of conventional intensification of agriculture.
41 plants and its applications in the field of agriculture.
42 sectors, particularly in transportation and agriculture.
43 r plants on acid soils, globally restricting agriculture.
44 nt-efficient crops urgently needed in global agriculture.
45 man settlements and markets; and less nearby agriculture.
46 ble the improvement of plant architecture in agriculture.
47 ul applications in research, healthcare, and agriculture.
48 article-plant interactions, and nano-enabled agriculture.
49 have potential to contribute to sustainable agriculture.
50 can be used to develop and deploy precision agriculture.
51 cluding developmental biology, medicine, and agriculture.
52 halate (PBAT) are being increasingly used in agriculture.
53 of these animals for biomedical research and agriculture.
54 est populations damaging to human health and agriculture.
55 daptable forage crop for temperate livestock agriculture.
56 fficiency in crop plants, benefitting global agriculture.
57 ncrease methane (CH(4) ) emissions from rice agriculture, a major source of anthropogenic CH(4) .
60 estive and Kidney Diseases, US Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service 58-3092-5-001.
62 he expansion of manufacturing and commercial agriculture alongside rapid globalization have resulted
63 hieve substantial CH(4) mitigation from rice agriculture, alternative plant breeding strategies may b
64 tropical peat swamp forest to drainage-based agriculture alters greenhouse gas (GHG) production, but
65 imate change necessitates diversification of agriculture and a more efficient utilization of plant ge
72 address post-Green Revolution challenges in agriculture and explore emerging strategies for enhancin
74 Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity for Agriculture and Food (TEEBAgriFood) to assess key benefi
76 trial Research Organisation; Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CGIAR) Research Program o
78 (CGIAR) Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security; CGIAR Research Program on
79 recognized need to advance more sustainable agriculture and food systems has motivated the emergence
82 allocated to human activities (predominately agriculture and forestry), occasionally at the cost of g
83 s remain a serious threat to the sustainable agriculture and forestry, despite the extensive efforts
86 ne the value generated by water in irrigated agriculture and highlight its global spatiotemporal patt
87 mended List variety trial data run by the UK Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB).
90 y contaminations could derive from intensive agriculture and industrial activities, but also from bee
94 ll as facilitated a range of applications in agriculture and medicine, as ecofriendly crop protection
99 nities in intensive-agriculture, diversified-agriculture and natural-forest habitats in 4 regions of
100 ngs point to adaptation to climate change in agriculture and reveal diverse implications for terrestr
101 reased 10-fold during the rapid expansion of agriculture and river system modification associated wit
102 t, coinciding with the onset of millet-based agriculture and significant environmental changes in the
103 genomes may reflect post-conquest changes in agriculture and the breakdown of traditional management
106 ecies' westward dispersal with the spread of agriculture, and (2) populations across the Mediterranea
110 s of the private sector, such as extraction, agriculture, and construction, can bring large numbers o
111 s revolutionized our approaches to medicine, agriculture, and energy, the design of completely novel
113 cessary inputs (light, water, soil) for crop agriculture, and for better managing biotic and abiotic
114 e BLV infection has serious implications for agriculture, and given its similarities to human retrovi
116 on, their use against pathogenic bacteria in agriculture, and in medicine as an alternative against a
117 cal infrastructure, transportation networks, agriculture, and many other societally important systems
122 e increasing use of CRISPR-Cas9 in medicine, agriculture, and synthetic biology has accelerated the d
123 ed data from the US Census, US Department of Agriculture, and the Economic Innovations Group to asses
127 er systems used for household consumption or agriculture are key transmission routes for Salmonella T
129 uced five Assessment Reports (ARs), in which agriculture as the production of food for humans via cro
131 might useful for small producers and family agriculture businesses unable to afford specialized labo
132 western honey bee Apis mellifera is vital to agriculture but threatened by alarmingly high levels of
133 an alternative to traditional antibiotics in agriculture, but also provide options for food, environm
134 s are critical pollinators in ecosystems and agriculture, but their numbers have significantly declin
135 gions can benefit the most from conservation agriculture by achieving a win-win outcome of enhanced C
136 ssues, crop diversification and conservation agriculture (CA)-based management hold considerable prom
138 These findings demonstrate that diversified agriculture can help to alleviate the long-term loss of
140 sitic nematodes pose a significant threat to agriculture causing annual yield losses worth more than
141 simulations, we also show that land-sparing agriculture conserves greater functional diversity and p
144 ting yet poorly documented priorities on how agriculture could or should support achieving the SDGs.
148 ant pathogens are a significant challenge in agriculture despite our best efforts to combat them.
150 ent changes in bird communities in intensive-agriculture, diversified-agriculture and natural-forest
151 (C)-rich wetland soils are often drained for agriculture due to their capacity to support high net pr
152 and can be used for other detection tasks in agriculture (e.g. plant disease detection) and beyond.
154 nge mitigation due to decreased land use for agriculture; efficient local cycling of carbon and nutri
156 n cycling ecosystem services at the nexus of agriculture, environmental quality and climate change.
158 enarios of both land-use (e.g., development, agriculture, etc.) and climate change in future studies
160 nto the value chain of complex areas such as agriculture, food production, and healthcare requires th
161 Beneficial microorganisms are widely used in agriculture for control of plant pathogens, but a lack o
163 infrequently studied compared to diseases of agriculture, forestry, and even native plant populations
168 For example, the spatial concentration of agriculture has important consequences for the spread of
170 The misuse of antibiotics in health care and agriculture has provided a powerful evolutionary pressur
172 lts that characterized early 20th century US agriculture have collapsed, with spatial concentration i
174 global unification of monocultures in modern agriculture, high volumes of trade in plants and plant p
175 impact ecosystems, food and water security, agriculture, hydropower, and the socioeconomics of a reg
176 from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) breeding program using image analysis
177 from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) diverse lines with high provitamin A
178 sing high-resolution imagery of the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) and a LiDAR canopy he
179 r the indirect pathways by which climate and agriculture impact pintail through their additional cont
180 new insights for preventive control of this agriculture important pest and closely related species.
181 ts in pathogen exposure due to the advent of agriculture imposed radically heightened selective press
182 lution to the two grand challenges of modern agriculture: improving food security while reducing envi
186 ula is one of the most threatening pests for agriculture in North and South America, and its oral sec
187 farm and policy level to develop sustainable agriculture in order to minimize environmental and healt
189 ing rates of deforestation and conversion to agriculture in the Basin are altering the current regime
192 Our results suggest a prominent role for agriculture in the grass's western spread, although glac
193 s the impacts of climate change on irrigated agriculture in the snow-dependent Yakima River Basin (YR
194 ulturing extremely unlikely to offset global agriculture, in part due to production growth and cost c
195 ing technology and intensification of animal agriculture increase the cost-efficiency and production
197 te facets of disease systems at the wildlife-agriculture interface, it is essential that multiscale s
198 also showed distinct temporal patterns, with agriculture, invasions, and urbanization being significa
204 impact of elevated CO(2) (eCO(2) ) in global agriculture is important given climate change projection
206 ons to champion sustainable and eco-friendly agriculture is of great importance, especially in face o
208 e to the use of transgenics or pesticides in agriculture is the use of a 'green' alternative known as
210 s increased substantially since the onset of agriculture, it is rarely included in the current genera
211 (concentrations increase with streamflow) in agriculture lands and dilution patterns (concentrations
212 n drained, exploited for timber and land for agriculture, leading to frequent fires in the region.
213 f modern crops have been heavily selected in agriculture, leaving commercial lines often more suscept
215 0 years ago, and ceramic use and intensified agriculture mark a shift from the Archaic to the Ceramic
216 mic change, but the spatial concentration of agriculture may also offer environmental benefits in are
218 published by the United States Department of Agriculture - National Agriculture Statistics Service da
220 MR in humans,(b) the impact of AMU in animal agriculture on AMR in animals, (c) the fraction of AMR i
222 al to reconcile these roles by concentrating agriculture on existing farmland and sparing land for na
224 y suggests the need to understand impacts of agriculture on food-energy-water-CO(2) nexus in other pa
226 lity and profitability of continuous no-till agriculture on yield, soil water availability, and N(2)
229 ealth Organization (WHO) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of 0.2 mg/kg, whereas, al
231 Pb and Zn were higher in crop than Food and Agriculture Organization guidelines for food additives a
232 river basins (estimate based on the Food and Agriculture Organization Harmonized World Soil Database,
233 approximately since 2013, when the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) pub
234 ry experts (i.e., identified by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations across th
236 The 2007 World Health Organization/Food and Agriculture Organization/United Nations University (WHO/
238 ous no-till as compared to conventional till agriculture over a 29-year period at a site in the upper
241 enefits, introduction of PPCPs in production agriculture poses potential food safety and human health
242 formative innovation in European prehistoric agriculture previously based mainly on (winter) cropping
244 of interest in their potential benefits for agriculture production and environmental sustainability.
245 Such conditions are a serious threat to agriculture production, because photosynthesis is highly
246 tions are held constant in the future, total agriculture profits for the six crops will drop by 31% f
247 hain PUFA synthesis when the introduction of agriculture provided diets rich in linoleic acid but wit
248 llutant of major environmental concern, with agriculture representing 60% of anthropogenic global N(2
249 th basalt, and its potential co-benefits for agriculture, require experimental and field evaluation.
253 sitive sectors, with particular focus on the agriculture sector, health care access, sanitation, and
254 rts in the health, water and sanitation, and agriculture sectors will support continued success.
256 nt dynamics and emergent outcomes of no-till agriculture, shown to be beneficial in the long term.
257 mmer-fallow weed, which is common in no-till agriculture situations where herbicides are involved in
258 tion and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from agriculture soil requires a better understanding and qua
260 States Department of Agriculture - National Agriculture Statistics Service database, (2) develop a n
261 onaviruses.IMPORTANCE According to 2017 U.S. agriculture statistics, the combined value of production
263 or in addressing complex issues that impact agriculture, such as climate change, digital technology,
264 egrating nest detection within the precision agriculture system that heavily relies on drone-borne se
266 To face the need for a more sustainable agriculture system, the circularization of the crop indu
267 broad impacts of invasives on diversity and agriculture, the genetic adaptations and near-term evolu
268 rage HTP data that is routinely generated in agriculture; the methodology can also be used to conduct
269 offset sanitation costs while also enhancing agriculture through increased access to agricultural nut
270 oted to foster ecological intensification of agriculture through provisioning of ecosystem services.
271 d was then fostered through the emergence of agriculture throughout the Near East 12,000 years ago.
272 queous phase and recycle nutrients back into agriculture, thus increasing HTC efficiency and economic
274 al of in situ shifting of cultivars to adapt agriculture to climate change-including in major winegro
275 ntline antifungal class used in medicine and agriculture to control A. fumigatus, is complicating the
276 )-containing pesticides are commonly used in agriculture to control fungal and bacterial diseases, bu
277 ntial resource for crop improvement to adapt agriculture to ever-changing conditions like global clim
278 stunting decline focused on promoting rural agriculture to improve food security; decentralization o
279 eceived permission from the US Department of Agriculture to increase their production-line speeds saw
280 s a synthetic plant cytokinin widely used in agriculture to promote fruit size, that paradoxically in
283 farmers and plant scientists a new precision agriculture tool for early diagnosis and real-time monit
285 ever, a lowland site showed continuous maize agriculture until European conquest but very little subs
286 We analyze data from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Crop Progress and Condition (CPC) sur
287 search Database (IRD) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) database sets, as well as 19 GIS data
290 cosystem model (Dynamic Land Ecosystem Model-Agriculture Version 2.0) and meta-analysis covering 172
292 t lower levels of watershed urbanization and agriculture when compared to threshold responses in spec
293 All water bodies drain areas of extensive agriculture where phosphate-rich fertilizer is applied.
295 nal fisheries closure system (akin to fallow agriculture), which helped to increase the biomass of re
296 otinoid contamination could include reducing agriculture within a wetland below a threshold of 25% ar
297 at in a highly mechanized scenario of global agriculture without any conservation measures, long-term