Search 
 
 
  Archives
CHILDREN'S
SECTION

 
 

TERRAGREEN SUBSCRIPTION (Print + online) / (online)

Title Cover Price You Pay
Rs (₹) USD ($) Rs (₹) USD ($)
MAY 2015  
Breakthroughs
Bees: More Important than Fertilizer

Lack of bees and other wild insects to pollinate crop plants can reduce harvest yields more drastically than lack of fertilizer or a failure to provide the crops with sufficient water. When crops are adequately pollinated, on the other hand, the plants bear more fruit and their nutrient content changes. These are the findings of an experiment on almond trees conducted in California by the Freiburg ecologist Prof. Alexandra-Maria Klein and her colleagues from the USA. The team published articles presenting their findings in the journals, Plant Biology and PLOS ONE.

Alexandra-Maria Klein received the CULTURA Prize for the project and other research projects on the importance of insects for the pollination of crop plants. Conferred by the Alfred Toepfer Foundation, the prize recognizes European scientists for innovative and exemplary research approaches in the areas of nature conservation, agriculture and forestry, and related sciences.

Together with students and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, Klein manipulated almond trees by preventing bees from pollinating blossoms with the help of cages, or pollinating them by hand. In addition, the researchers watered and fertilized trees in accordance with local practices and gave them only little water or no fertilizer. In the case of several almond trees, they combined the various manipulations in order to study in isolation and in combination, the effects on harvest yield and the composition of nutrients in the nuts. The almond trees that were pollinated by hand produced more nuts, but they were also very small. By contrast, a tree that was left unpollinated hardly produced any nuts at all—but the few that it did produce were very large. The yield of the trees pollinated by bees was roughly 200 per cent higher than that of self-pollinated trees.

Fertilization and watering only had an effect on harvest yield in combination with the pollination manipulations. However, the inadequately watered trees lost more leaves and the leaves of the unfertilized trees increasingly turned yellow. This led the scientists to the conclusion that an almond tree can compensate for a lack of nutrients and water in the short term by directing stored nutrients and water to the fruits but cannot compensate for insufficient pollination. Furthermore, the scientists demonstrated that the composition of nutrients differs, depending on the pollination mode: Nuts from the self-pollinated trees contained a lower proportion of linoleic acid but a higher proportion of Vitamin E.

Source: www.sciencedaily.com

   
© TERI 2024
Close

Nominations open for CSP Today India awards 2013


The inaugural CSP Today India awards ceremony takes place on March 12, and CSP developers, EPCs, suppliers and technology providers can now be nominated.

CSP has made tremendous progress since the announcement of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission in 2010. With Phase I projects now drawing closer to completion, the first milestone in India's CSP learning curve is drawing closer. CSP Today has chosen the next CSP Today India conference (12-13 March, New Delhi) as the time for the industry to reflect upon its progress and celebrate its first achievements.

At the awards ceremony, industry leaders will be recognized for their achievements in one of 4 categories: CSP India Developer Award, CSP India Engineering Performance Award, CSP India Technology and Supplier Award, and the prestigious CSP India Personality of the Year.

Matt Carr, Global Events Director at CSP Today, said at the opening of nominations that “CSP Today are excited to launch these esteemed awards, which will enhance the reputation of their recipients. I am particularly excited to launch the CSP India Personality of the Year award, a distinguished honor for the industry figure deemed worthy by their peers."

All eyes will be on the CSP Today India 2013 Awards when nomination entry closes on March 4 and the finalists are announced on March 11. The awards are open to all industry stakeholders to nominate until March 4 at
http://www.csptoday.com/india/awards-index.php or by e-mail to awards@csptoday.com

Contact:
Matt Carr
+44 (0) 20 7375 7248
matt@csptoday.com