Madera

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Figure 5. Leaf twisting and curling were just as prevalent in the 2nd planting.
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Residual Road Herbicide and Replanted Tomatoes

April 21st, 2020
By C Scott Stoddard
Last summer, I was called out to view what appeared to be a herbicide drift incidence in a commercial tomato field. The leaves of affected plants were distorted with cupping and twisting that is characteristic of the growth regulator herbicides such as 2,4-D and dicamba (Figure 1).
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UC Cooperative Extension scientists monitor rangeland forage growth by clipping and measuring one square foot of area, and then calculating the data by acre. (Photo: Royce Larsen)
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Rancher wisdom can be improved with science

April 17th, 2020
When California was part of the Wild West, it took a certain amount of guesswork to move cattle from their home range to summer pastures while making sure sufficient forage was left behind to hold the cattle over till fall rainfall spurred new growth.
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Amsinckia 3
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Weeds from Droughty Winters

April 6th, 2020
As of February 20, fiddleneck (Amsinckia spp.) was flowering in Fresno County. Zero rain fell in the city of Fresno during the month of February. By February 27, a date when the temperature reached 79F in Fresno, the U.S.
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Phoebe Gordon
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Water management as farming practice

March 23rd, 2020
Water management is one of the most important farming practices you or your clients should be practicing, full stop, wrote Phoebe Gordon, UC Cooperative Extension orchard systems advisor in Madera and Merced counties.
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ANR in the news Feb. 1-15, 2020

February 29th, 2020
By Pamela S Kan-Rice
Labor costs drive mechanized pruning technology (Farm Press) Todd Fitchette, Feb. 14 As labor costs in California escalate, growers are becoming more interested in cost-saving technology. The Sunpreme variety of raisin grapes, developed by the U.S.
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Spotted lanternfly
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Viñedos amenazados por una plaga que le encantan las uvas

February 13th, 2020
Una nueva plaga invasiva que lleg a Pensilvania, hace cinco aos, y se ha extendido a lo largo de cuatro condados es una amenaza potencial para los hermosos viedos de California porque le encantan las uvas, as como una amplia variedad de frutas con semillas como manzanas, cerezas y plantas ornamental...
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EPICON sorghum field. Understanding how sorghum survives harsh conditions could help researchers identify cereal crop cultivars that are more resilient to climate change. (Photo: Peggy Lemaux)
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Genomic gymnastics help sorghum plant survive drought.

January 10th, 2020
Scorching temperatures and parched earth are no match for the sorghum plant this cereal crop, native to Africa, will remain green and productive, even under conditions that would render other plants brown, brittle and barren.
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Mechanical removal of winegrape shoots can reduce the amount of hand labor needed for vineyard management. Photo by Kaan Kurtural
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UC releases new cost studies for mechanized winegrape production

December 17th, 2019
By Pamela S Kan-Rice
New studies provide details about trellis type, planting density, cost and potential benefit of vineyard mechanization UC Agriculture and Natural Resources' Agricultural Issues Center has released four new studies detailing the costs and returns of wine grape production in the southern San Joaquin V...
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