Production Agriculture

canola root scan.
By Kaine Korzekwa

Fertilizer is used worldwide in farming. It’s used to give plants a boost, increasing yield and ultimately farmers’ profits.

Researcher taking soil sample in field.
By Susan V. Fisk

Soil organic matter has long been known to benefit farmers. The carbon in this organic matter acts as a food source for soil microbes, which then provide other nutrients to the crops grown. Microbes, insects and small soil critters produce materials that can improve soil structure and water retention. It’s a healthy ecosystem every farmer wants to encourage.

Tractor and implement tilling field.
By Rachel Leege

Just as we blend, cut, and fold ingredients together to follow a recipe, farmers use equipment to stir together soil and crop residue (stalks and roots of previous crops) before planting. This mechanical action is called tillage.

Masa comparison - left is white, right is yellow.
By Kaine Korzekwa

Products we commonly buy at the supermarket, such as tortillas and corn chips, are made from food grade corn. The corn is grown, harvested, bought by a food company, turned into masa (dough from ground corn) through a chemical process, and then made into our favorite products.

Aranas variety coffee plant
By Adityarup “Rup” Chakravorty

Each day, more than 2 billion cups of coffee are consumed worldwide.

Coffee plant with red berries

Developing countries produce about 90% of the beans used to make all those lattes, espressos and mochas. That makes coffee a key source of revenue and livelihood for millions of people worldwide.

Two people in field looking at soybeans
By Riley Steinbrenner

Farmers have been innovators and experimenters for millennia. They developed new types of crops and methods of farming.

Two men in field looking at soybeans growing.

removing intact slab of soil.
By Kaine Korzekwa

We’ve all heard about the magical combination of being in the right place at the right time. Well for fertilizer, it’s more accurate to say it should be in the right place at the right rate. A group of Canadian scientists wanted to find the perfect combination for farmers in their northern prairies.

hands removing slab of soil in field.

Corn cob infected with aflatoxin
By Adityarup “Rup” Chakravorty

It’s not fun when a fungus contaminates crops.  Safe native fungi, however, show promise in the fight against toxic fungal contamination.

Corn infected with aflotoxin

Time lapse of take off
By Kaine Korzekwa

Farmers irrigating their crops may soon be getting some help from space. In 2018, scientists launched ECOSTRESS, a new instrument now attached to the International Space Station. Its mission: to gather data on how plants use water across the world.

The ECOsystem Spaceborne Thermal Radiometer Experiment on Space Station (ECOSTRESS) helps scientists answer three broad questions:

hands holding gypsum
By Susan V. Fisk

Warren Dick has worked with gypsum for more than two decades. You’d think he’d be an expert on drywall and plastering because both are made from gypsum. But the use of gypsum that Dick studies might be unfamiliar to you: on farmland.