-
He joins the center as an internationally distinguished plant geneticist and a member of the U.K.鈥檚 Royal Society and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.
-
How rare collard greens stewarded by generations of southerners ended up in an East St. Louis greenhouse. Plus, how they might help feed more people amid climate change.
-
Today鈥檚 agricultural staples are planted into the ground each growing season, but Kernza remains in the ground for years, improving soil conditions.
-
In the year since a nonprofit was established to run the innovation district, it鈥檚 made strides to build out more real estate and solidify St. Louis鈥 position as a leader in the plant sciences and agriculture sectors.
-
鈥淗ow do we create conditions where it makes more sense for a company to either stay in St. Louis, or move here, if they want to do something related to agtech?鈥 the innovation district鈥檚 executive director said.
-
The region鈥檚 growing geospatial and established agriculture and plant sciences sectors put it in a unique position to drive the innovations that will help farmers adapt to new climate conditions while reducing carbon emissions at the same time.
-
The new initiative aims to help Latin American startups in agtech or geospatial land in St. Louis and also help similar companies in St. Louis more easily expand to those international markets.
-
Agriculture companies are looking for people who are interested in science and the majority of jobs aren鈥檛 in rural areas of the country. Hiring managers are increasingly looking for people who don鈥檛 have traditional ag backgrounds.
-
Golden rice was recently approved for commercial propagation in the Philippines after years of discussion. Donald MacKenzie, executive director of the Institute for International Crop Improvement at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, explains what he did to bring it to fruition.
-
In 2017, plant scientist, Nadia Shakoor developed the PheNode device, a solar-powered environmental sensor and phenotyping station for crops. Sensors and cameras on the tool take real-time measurements of everything from humidity to soil pH. And this past summer, she won a $1.4 million federal grant to enhance the platform by adding an autonomous drone. It鈥檚 called FieldDock. And it just might be a game-changer.