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1 ost important crop in Africa for smallholder farmers.
2 poral scales that are not always relevant to farmers.
3 ood production and impose financial costs on farmers.
4 riation in the face of recent gene flow from farmers.
5 ement can be beneficial for both animals and farmers.
6 rm and substantial financial losses to dairy farmers.
7 us infection has been favored by traditional farmers.
8 n exposure to some pesticides and RA in male farmers.
9 allergic and non-allergic wheeze among male farmers.
10 ible admixture, between hunter-gatherers and farmers.
11 dmixture events between hunter-gatherers and farmers.
12 economic losses and threaten livelihoods of farmers.
13 ies have found lower risks of lung cancer in farmers.
14 o European and Anatolian and Levantine early farmers.
15 ls of genetic admixture among European early farmers.
16 directional differences between foragers and farmers.
17 l and peripheral nerve conduction of Chinese farmers.
18 be focused remotely, a convenience to shrimp farmers.
19 persistence arose in a haplotype present in farmers.
20 ridging knowledge and action gaps for shrimp farmers.
21 reached levels later found in early European farmers.
22 the strong and consistent role of innovative farmers.
23 lation that was the source of Europe's first farmers.
24 ed in pottery vessels of Neolithic Old World farmers.
25 aptation, particularly for rural subsistence farmers.
26 umans and can pose severe economic losses to farmers.
27 on from catchments cultivated by smallholder farmers.
28 ; however, the approach is rarely adopted by farmers.
29 e livelihoods and production of small-holder farmers.
30 -62% of Sardinian ancestry is from its first farmers.
31 and from seven Anatolian and Levantine early farmers.
32 ral sustainability assessment tools aimed at farmers.
37 A total of 72 Thai families, consisting of a farmer, a spouse, and a child, participated in this stud
38 r is still attributable to warming; even the farmers' activities in these seasons mirror, to a lesser
39 These influences are distinct from the early farmer admixture that transformed the genetic landscape
41 ns and farmers' concerns were addressed, the farmers adopted recommended management practices, thereb
42 cultural scientists living in villages among farmers, advancing participatory innovation and technolo
43 articular food supply chains is necessary if farmers, agri-food industries and consumers are to share
44 ion technologies have been widely adopted by farmers, allowing both reduced water and energy use.
45 hunter-gatherer-related admixture into early farmers also increased over the course of two millennia.
47 in terms of contributions to food security, farmer and beekeeper livelihoods, social and cultural va
48 ations totackle disease resistance and other farmer and consumer priorities for agricultural crops.
49 ethnic origin [Han and non-Han], occupation [farmer and non-farmer], annual household income [< yen10
51 portant economic and welfare issue for sheep farmers and a valuable naturally occurring animal model
52 tract farming-a preharvest agreement between farmers and buyers-can facilitate smallholder market par
53 virus-associated yield losses in cassava for farmers and can additionally enable the exploitation of
56 er reproductive allocation conflicts between farmers and cultivars constrain crop yield, possibly exp
57 , genetic affinities between later Anatolian farmers and fourth to third millennium BC Chalcolithic s
58 s same threshold also predicts the mixing of farmers and hunter-gatherers as estimated from ancient D
60 uld they continue, may increase costs for US farmers and may even destabilize crop production over ti
61 d 6.06% in produce products (P < 0.001) from farmers and organic retail markets, but none from conven
62 nefits of biological control that will allow farmers and others to internalize the benefits that ince
63 The portable leaf-clip Raman sensor offers farmers and plant scientists a new precision agriculture
66 r rapid point-of-care diagnostics for citrus farmers and small nurseries in low resource settings.
67 o the environment poses a grand challenge to farmers and society, and necessitates achieving improved
68 ivestock monitoring is anticipated to assist farmers and the agricultural industry to improve animal
69 enetic dissimilarity between early Anatolian farmers and the inhabitants of Ganj Dareh supports a mod
72 een Mediterranean and Central European early farmers and those of Greece and Anatolia, extending the
73 pigs, and the potential impact of improving farmers and traders' clinical diagnosis ability-its time
75 rin was the main insecticide (97.5%) used by farmers, and Anopheles coluzzii was the main mosquito id
76 e attainable level to 97.0% among 71 leading farmers, and from 62.8% to 79.6% countywide (93,074 hous
78 of a similar length to those from Neolithic farmers, and shorter than those of Caucasus and Western
79 and 13 low-As plots managed by 16 different farmers, and we explore the implications for mitigation.
81 Han and non-Han], occupation [farmer and non-farmer], annual household income [< yen10 000, yen10 000
82 y associated with adherence, whereas being a farmer (AOR = 0.07, 95 % CI: 0.01-0.75, p < 0.028), havi
83 rtion of Europeans descending from Neolithic farmers approximately 10 thousand years ago (KYA) or Pal
85 it from fallow landscapes, and that mountain farmers are at a growing economic risk worldwide due to
89 ibetan originating with north Chinese millet farmers around 7200 B.P. and suggest a link to the late
91 tion between Mesolithic hunter-gatherers and farmers as well as differences between transitional and
96 ly Aegean ancestry for continental Neolithic farmers, but also variable admixture with local Mesolith
97 his crop alone, and bats may further benefit farmers by indirectly suppressing pest-associated fungal
98 increased yield beyond that of high-yielding farmers by up to 7% in small plots (8 site-years) and 15
99 sting fertilizer type and application rates, farmers can achieve desired crop yields with lower produ
102 ses recognized by consumers along with three farmers' checks at nine on-farm locations in Uganda for
103 ating BAFF levels were maximal at birth, and farmers' children had higher BAFF levels than nonfarmers
105 em in game theory; that is to say, if enough farmers choose to grow Bt maize then because the pest is
108 uce prevalence, but those most acceptable to farmers combine specific information about lactation per
110 ter economic benefits for Indian smallholder farmers compared with growing the Asiatic cotton Gossypi
111 tions that have diluted this early Neolithic farmer component, explaining why modern-day Sardinian po
113 ximizing long-term cultivar performance: ant farmers could neither increase carbohydrate provisioning
115 erraces are also created by feedback between farmers' decisions and the ecology of the paddies, which
117 propose an evolutionary game, based on local farmers' decisions that predicts specific power laws in
118 al pathogenesis is therefore of value to the farmer, diagnostician, phytobacteriologist, and taxonomi
120 or and undernourished people are smallholder farmers, diversifying production on these smallholder fa
122 eed to be considered by sorghum breeders and farmers during sorghum production to produce grain with
126 ade has demonstrated that European Neolithic farmers (ENFs) were descended primarily from Anatolian N
127 It is not understood if, or how, nonhuman farmers evaluate local conditions to increase payoffs.
128 riculture may lead to downstream exposure of farmers' families to pesticide residues inadvertently ta
130 ecline in the response diversity of wheat in farmers' fields in most European countries after 2002-20
131 ently, 30% of the identified accessions from farmers' fields were matched to specific released variet
132 native method to track released varieties in farmers' fields, using cassava, a clonally propagated ro
133 ns, first with a migration wave of Anatolian farmers followed by varying degrees of admixture with au
136 ahead which enables national governments and farmers forecast crop yield to ensure supplies of afford
138 ctices study was conducted with 75 vegetable farmers from Houeyiho and Seme to determine the main agr
139 arts of Europe by migrations, first of early farmers from the Near East and then Bronze Age herders f
143 millions of years, suggesting that nonhuman farmers have evolved the means to evaluate and balance c
145 the alterations in pesticide use may benefit farmer health in China and globe, which has positive imp
146 ives from a lineage leading to early Iranian farmers, herders, and hunter-gatherers before their ance
149 s, which are often dominated by small-holder farmers, implies that they may be in response to reduced
150 he Agricultural Health Study enrolled 52,394 farmers in 1993-1997 and collected additional informatio
151 d evaluated yield potential by surveying 735 farmers in 2008-2012 and then conducting 6 rice field ex
153 mated to have separated from Early Neolithic farmers in Anatolia some 46,000 to 77,000 years ago and
154 e] is a staple food for more than 90 million farmers in arid and semi-arid regions of sub-Saharan Afr
155 essential to the food security of many small farmers in Asia and Africa and is a model system for oth
156 variables: an anthropological survey of rice farmers in Bali and a cohort study on health inequality
157 birds was an important adaptation for early farmers in China's arid north, and that management pract
158 g provides livelihoods for around 15 million farmers in Ethiopia and generates a quarter of the count
162 fferences between transitional and intensive farmers in mandibular variation which is consistent with
163 is a significant economic problem for sheep farmers in many countries and is a valuable animal model
167 ultural Health Study, a prospective study of farmers in North Carolina and Iowa, we evaluated the ass
168 d from the same ancestral gene pool as early farmers in other parts of Europe, suggesting that migrat
170 he etiological agent of plague, in Neolithic farmers in Sweden, pre-dating and basal to all modern an
172 plex interactions among hunter-gatherers and farmers in the Danube basin, demonstrating that in some
173 he relationship between hunter-gatherers and farmers in the Lower Danube basin, a geographically inte
175 e made during the domestication of barley by farmers in the southern and northern regions of the Leva
178 tan and all Sudan wheat-growing regions) and farmers in these regions will be hit hardest by increasi
180 idence among wives of pesticide applicators (farmers) in the prospective Agricultural Health Study.
182 nge in low input systems will be modified if farmers intensify maize production with balanced nutrien
183 rainforest hunter-gatherers and neighboring farmers is characterized by an ancient divergence more t
184 Africa, P. megakarya poses a major threat to farmer livelihood and the stability of cocoa production.
188 d iron (Fe) and the effects of soil type and farmer management on extractable soil Zn and Fe and subs
190 arms' environment and their products sold in farmers markets and warrants taking necessary measures t
191 ction accompanied by recommendations to help farmers match the best variety with their field contexts
196 costs of biochar production for smallholder farmers, mostly because of labour cost, outweighed the p
199 and include increase in yields, increase in farmers' net revenue and reduction in pesticide applicat
200 t is neither ancestral to the first European farmers nor has contributed substantially to the ancestr
201 come and labor demand, finding that contract farmers obtain higher incomes than their counterparts wi
202 y were more likely to be traders rather than farmers (odds ratio [OR], 6.15; 95% confidence interval
204 -90%) between the hunter-gatherers and early farmers of Anatolia and detect two distinct incoming anc
205 and synchronously after the arrival of early farmers of Anatolian origin [1-3], who largely replaced
207 ta from five hunter-gatherers and five first farmers of Estonia whose remains date to 4,500 to 6,300
208 lethal crisis of the first Central European farmers of the Early Neolithic Linearbandkeramik Culture
210 s of their ancestry from the first Neolithic farmers of western Anatolia and the Aegean, and most of
211 n backyard and small-scale herds, where poor farmers often attempt to limit the disease's economic co
212 ration, tail docking, teeth clipping), which farmers often reluctant to avoid, claiming it would incr
213 cultivation, harvesting and dependence of a farmer on a crop - is known from fungi farmed by ants, t
215 , and 8.38% in chicken meat (P < 0.001) from farmers, organic, and conventional retail markets respec
216 keratitis was significantly associated with farmers (P = 0.0001), daily laborers (P = 0.0001), unemp
218 ractions, and the important role subsistence farmers play in actively maintaining crop biodiversity a
219 ene: the northwestward movement of Anatolian farmer populations during the Neolithic and the westward
221 tion in N applications of 55-60% compared to farmers' practice and/or further 20% N saving compared w
222 Survey results indicate that high-yielding farmers produced 14% more grain compare to the regional
224 trol strategies failed to account for forest farmers' prolonged stays at forest farms/fields (61% dur
225 E. coli shared among farms, flies, dogs and farmers, providing direct evidence of carbapenem-resista
227 elect more resistant individuals and to help farmers reduce parasite transmission by identifying and
228 ional post-harvest operations by smallholder farmers, reduce post-harvest losses and improve the qual
229 s without yield declines or economic harm to farmers, reducing the potential for pest resistance, non
230 ures show evidence for previously undetected farmer-related ancestry from different contact zones, wh
231 Europe by at least 2500 BC, whereas Iranian farmer-related ancestry was present in Aegean Europe by
233 , and laboratory experiments showed that ant farmers representing subsequent domestication stages str
235 zing on the explosion of data emanating from farmers, researchers, and the public, as novel sampling
239 eople, testing for HIV was more common among farmers (RR 0.73, 95% CI 0.67-0.79) and students (0.73,
241 f the 18 basil populations were planted in a farmer's field, and the seed saturated (palmitic and ste
243 effort to improve the welfare of smallholder farmers, several governments have led major reforms in i
245 Mesolithic whereas all other European early farmers show greater genetic similarity to modern-day Sa
246 a from ancient hunter-gatherers and European farmers showed that the Kalash share genetic drift with
247 more control on application of pesticides by farmers, simple and effective postharvest practices by c
249 percentages of advancing (~75%) trends, but farmers' spring activities were the only group with rein
252 r, but sizeable, contribution from Anatolian farmers, suggesting multiple admixture events between hu
256 (e.g., federal crop insurance) and laggards (farmers that are slow to adopt) that fail to acknowledge
257 Cooperation between waste managers, the farmers that purchase the recovered products, and the po
260 By approximately 6,000-5,000 years ago, farmers throughout much of Europe had more hunter-gather
262 tion of different exposure pathways from the farmer to their children can provide clear targets to re
263 l Authority could offer contracts to private farmers to change land use to increase dry-season water
265 esistant 'mega' rice lines that will empower farmers to plant lines that are most likely to resist ri
268 rtunately, digestive health is difficult for farmers to routinely monitor in large farms due to many
270 demic researchers, industry researchers, and farmers to understand and manage plant-microbiome intera
272 e, water, is more and more limited and force farmers to use new deficit irrigation (DI) strategies wi
273 pulations of rainforest hunter-gatherers and farmers, together with 40 newly generated, low-coverage
275 all ancestry derived from the island's early farmers until the first millennium BC, with the exceptio
276 modern-day flood mitigation efforts, ancient farmers used floodwaters to develop otherwise marginal l
277 enue does not significantly increase because farmers using irrigation spend significantly more than f
278 atest AHS follow-up (2013-2015) among 11,232 farmers, using farmers without HPEEs as the reference or
279 find that genetic diversity in the earliest farmers was conspicuously low, on a par with European fo
280 e find that mobility among European Holocene farmers was significantly higher than among European hun
281 N partial factor productivity (PFPN) of the farmers were 336.7 kg ha(-1), 8131.8 kg ha(-1) and 24.2
285 The first was a 53-year old diabetic male farmer who presented with 2 nontender right eye scleral
287 .3; 15 statistics, five studies] in homes of farmers who applied pesticides more recently or frequent
288 hic people were mostly descended from Aegean farmers who followed the Mediterranean route of dispersa
290 We also provide the first evidence that farmers who use neonicotinoid seed coatings reduce the n
291 riven by the rapid dispersal of Near Eastern farmers who, over a period of 3,500 years, brought food
292 opulation closely related to Early Neolithic farmers, who had colonized Europe 4000 years earlier.
293 data indicate interbreeding between incoming farmers, whose ancestors ultimately came from western An
294 me-wide ancient DNA from Anatolian Neolithic farmers, whose genetic material we obtained by extractin
296 asma samples from orchard workers and cotton farmers with long-term exposure to organophosphorus pest
297 ntroduced to Britain by incoming continental farmers, with small, geographically structured levels of
298 w-up (2013-2015) among 11,232 farmers, using farmers without HPEEs as the reference or unexposed grou
300 ing yield gaps (that is, differences between farmers' yields and what are attainable for a given regi