The latest edition of ENDURE News is now available online. For those who are not familiar with the newsletter, it offers a handy summary of the news added to the website over the past six months.
Our Events calendar for the second half of 2022 is looking busy after the cancellation of events or changes in format over the past two years because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
With the five-year IWMPRAISE project (Integrated Weed Management: Practical implementation solutions for Europe) due to end this November, members have been busy, staging a mini-symposium in Athens the day before June’s European Weed Research Society (EWRS) symposium, presenting its work at the latter event, and producing useful tools for those involved in weed management.
If you missed the final conference of DiverIMPACTS, which examined systems approaches to support agroecological transitions in the agri-food system, you can now watch proceedings on the project’s YouTube channel.
Data and the results of the analyses of recent crop diversification experiences and scientific literature conducted by the DiverIMPACTS project are now publicly available through two updated web-based applications.
The IPMWORKS project devoted much of its first year on establishing its hubs of demonstration farms and reports that 22 new hubs are up and running. And in a further big step, the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions earlier this year meant that the project’s hub coaches could meet for a capacity building session in France.
More than 100 people attended May’s EuroBlight workshop in Switzerland, either physically or virtually. EuroBlight, the potato late blight network for Europe, has also released details of its 2021 sampling campaign, which saw the collection and genotyping of almost 2,500 samples from 26 countries.
A multidisciplinary 46-strong group of experts has completed a two-year collective scientific expertise analysing the impacts of plant protection products (PPP) on biodiversity and ecosystem services.
Researchers from Germany’s Julius Kühn Institute (JKI) have tested 500 wheat accessions, including cultivars, gene bank accessions and wild species, for their resistance to wheat dwarf virus (WDV). A subsequent genome-wide association study (GWAS) has raised the possibilities of breeding future WDV-resistant varieties.
Experts from Wageningen University & Research (WUR) and Solynta, a Dutch hybrid potato breeding company, have completed a major survey on all the factors that determine whether commercial plant breeders can produce hybrid varieties of food crops.
Last update: 28/07/2022 - ENDURE © 2009 - Contact ENDURE - Disclaimer