PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?

2025-08-15
(Press-News.org) As the world’s largest wheat producer, China’s annual wheat output reaches 136 million tons, and the stability of its production is directly related to global food security. However, in recent years, China’s wheat imports have continued to rise, reaching 9.96 million tons in 2022. Meanwhile, environmental problems caused by excessive fertilizer application have become increasingly prominent. How to ensure output while reducing resource consumption and environmental costs has become a core issue for sustainable agricultural development.

Recently, a research team led by Professor Zhaohui Wang from the College of Natural Resources and Environment at Northwest A&F University proposed a technical framework for green wheat production and a regionally adapted model, providing ideas to solve this problem. The related paper has been published in Frontiers of Agricultural Science and Engineering (DOI: 10.15302/J-FASE-2025606).

The study constructed a green wheat production framework from three systematic levels: soil, root zone, and canopy. The soil system focuses on improving fertility and stress resistance, and improves soil structure through technologies such as organic fertilizer application and straw returning. The root zone system achieves precise matching of nutrient supply and demand by optimizing water and fertilizer management. The canopy system enhances light energy utilization through variety improvement and planting density regulation. This multi-system collaborative technical system breaks through the limitations of traditional single technologies and lays a foundation for integrated innovation.

Based on this framework, the researchers verified the practical effects of several core technologies. In terms of soil improvement, the combined application of organic fertilizer and mineral fertilizer can increase soil organic carbon sequestration efficiency to 26% and wheat yield by 15.1%; straw returning increases soil carbon storage by 302 kg·ha–1·yr–1 and yield by 6.6%. In the field of nutrient management, the combination of deep fertilizer application and slow/controlled-release fertilizer technology can increase nitrogen use efficiency by 8.3%–16.6% while reducing nitrogen loss by 24%–50%. In terms of water management, drip irrigation technology saves 41% more water than traditional flood irrigation while increasing yield by 5%, and precise regulation of irrigation timing can further increase yield by 7.1%.

Targeting the characteristics of different agricultural ecological zones, the researchers developed differentiated technical models. In the dryland of the Loess Plateau, the “Year-round Plastic Mulching” (YPM) technology increases soil water storage by 7% and yield by 11% through full-period mulching, while reducing nitrate leaching by 63%. In the Guanzhong irrigation area, the “Efficient Nutrient and Water Management” (ENWM) model, through the coupling of soil nitrate monitoring and drip irrigation, reduces irrigation water and nitrogen fertilizer usage by 33% and 30% respectively, while increasing yield by 10% and nitrogen partial factor productivity by 57%.

To promote technology transformation, the research constructed a “Multi-subject Joint Innovation Technology” (MJIT) promotion model. Guided by policies, this model integrates resources from universities, enterprises, agricultural technology extension departments, and other parties. Through the “Science and Technology Courtyard” zero-distance service model, the technology has been applied to over 100 kha of farmland, achieving comprehensive benefits of “yield increase, fertilizer saving, and water saving”.

The study points out that future efforts should focus on strengthening the research and development of regionally adaptable technologies and improving market-oriented promotion mechanisms. This achievement provides a replicable technical path for the green transformation of China's wheat industry and offers a reference for the coordinated development of global food security and ecological protection.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Green high-yield and high-efficiency technology: a new path balancing yield and ecology

2025-08-15
As a staple food for more than half of the global population, the high and stable yield of rice is directly related to food security. As the world’s largest rice producer, China has increased rice yield per unit through intensive fertilization and flood irrigation, but this model has also brought problems such as soil degradation, water pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. How to ensure food supply while breaking through resource and environmental constraints? Xusheng Meng and colleagues from Nanjing Agricultural University proposed a green, high-yield, and high-efficiency rice technology system in a review study, providing a solution to this problem. The ...

How can science and technology solve the problem of increasing grain yield per unit area?

2025-08-15
The North China Plain is an important “granary” in China, with its winter wheat and summer maize planting areas accounting for 73.6% and 30.6% of the national total for wheat and maize respectively. However, its agricultural production has long been trapped in the dilemma of “high input, low efficiency”—fertilizer usage has increased more than 4 times compared with 40 years ago, while grain output has only risen by 1.2 times. Problems such as over-exploitation of water resources and soil degradation have also become increasingly prominent. How to balance ...

New CRISPR technique could rewrite future of genetic disease treatment

2025-08-15
A new generation of CRISPR technology developed at UNSW Sydney offers a safer path to treating genetic diseases like Sickle Cell, while also proving beyond doubt that chemical tags on DNA — often thought to be little more than genetic cobwebs — actively silence genes. For decades, scientists have debated whether methyl groups — small chemical clusters that accumulate on DNA — are simply detritus that accumulates in the genome where genes are turned off, or the actual cause of gene repression. But now researchers at UNSW, working with colleagues in the US at the St Jude Children’s Research Hospital (Memphis), have shown in a paper published recently ...

he new tech that could improve care for Parkinson's patients

2025-08-15
The number of people living with Parkinson's disease globally has doubled in the past 25 years. Yet the treatment and monitoring of the neurological disease seems many decades behind. Clinicians typically gauge the severity of the disease using subjective rating scales, and a shortage of doctors trained to treat Parkinson's means that people can go months — or years — between clinic visits. This leaves patients in a troubling spot, often unsure how quickly their disease is progressing and whether they are responding appropriately to medications. Now, ...

Sharing is power: do the neighbourly thing when it comes to solar

2025-08-15
Australian researchers have found that households with solar panels could boost their returns by selling surplus power directly to their neighbours, known as peer-to-peer (P2P) energy sharing, helping to stabilise the electricity grid and negotiating a better price than retailers currently offer. Worldwide, around 25 million households already rely on solar panels, with forecasts predicting 100 million by 2030. In 2024, the world installed an estimated 597 GW of solar power, a 33% increase compared to 2023. Australia has one of the highest rates of solar panels ...

Sparring saigas win 2025 BMC journals Image Competition

2025-08-15
A striking photograph of two male saiga antelope sparring on the banks of a steppe lake is the winner of the 2025 BMC Ecology and Evolution and BMC Zoology image competition. The annual competition spotlights the beauty, struggles, and survival strategies of remarkable life on earth, while celebrating the researchers striving to understand the natural world in the fields of ecology, evolutionary biology, palaeontology, and zoology. Along with the overall winning image, the judges selected winners and runners-up in four categories: Collective ...

Researchers discover dementia-like behaviour in pre-cancer cells

2025-08-15
Cancer Research UK-funded scientists have uncovered dementia-like behaviour in pancreas cells at risk of turning into cancer. The findings provide clues that could help in the treatment and prevention of pancreatic cancer, a difficult-to-treat disease linked to 6,900 deaths in the UK every year.* The research was published today (15 August) in the journal Developmental Cell**, and was funded by Cancer Research UK, with additional support from Wellcome, the Medical Research Council, and the Biotechnology ...

Medical pros of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) exaggerated while cons downplayed, survey findings suggest

2025-08-14
The medical pros of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) are being exaggerated while the risks are being downplayed, suggest the findings of a survey on the type of information patients and their relatives/friends recall having been given before the procedure, and published online in the Journal of Medical Ethics. Based on the responses, the researchers calculate that patients were nearly 4 times more likely to recall being told that resulting memory problems were temporary rather than long term. And they were 6 times more likely ...

Experts recommend SGLT-2 and GLP-1 diabetes drugs only for adults at moderate to higher risk of heart and kidney problems

2025-08-14
SGLT-2 inhibitor and GLP-1 receptor agonist drugs should be used in all or almost all adults with type 2 diabetes at higher risk of cardiovascular and kidney complications, and in the majority of adults at moderate risk of complications, say a panel of international experts in The BMJ today. But for those at lower risk, they advise against routinely recommending these drugs, and suggest doctors discuss treatment options with their patients, noting that decisions are likely to be more contextual and based on what’s most important to the individual.  For ...

Global study finds heart failure drug spironolactone fails to lower cardiovascular risk in dialysis patients

2025-08-14
A large international study has found that spironolactone, a medication for high blood pressure and heart failure, does not reduce the risk of heart-related death or hospitalizations in people with kidney failure receiving dialysis, despite earlier smaller studies suggesting benefit. The findings were published on August 14 in The Lancet and presented at ERA Congress 2025. The study enrolled 2,538 participants from 143 dialysis centres across 12 countries, making it the largest trial to date on spironolactone ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?

Green high-yield and high-efficiency technology: a new path balancing yield and ecology

How can science and technology solve the problem of increasing grain yield per unit area?

New CRISPR technique could rewrite future of genetic disease treatment

he new tech that could improve care for Parkinson's patients

Sharing is power: do the neighbourly thing when it comes to solar

Sparring saigas win 2025 BMC journals Image Competition

Researchers discover dementia-like behaviour in pre-cancer cells

Medical pros of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) exaggerated while cons downplayed, survey findings suggest

Experts recommend SGLT-2 and GLP-1 diabetes drugs only for adults at moderate to higher risk of heart and kidney problems

Global study finds heart failure drug spironolactone fails to lower cardiovascular risk in dialysis patients

Deprivation and transport density linked to increased suicide risk in England

Flatworms can replace rats for breakthrough brain studies

Plastic from plants: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering professor uses material in plant cell walls to make versatile polymer

Leaders at Huntsman Cancer Institute drive theranostics expansion to transform cancer care

Thin films, big science: FSU chemists expand imaging possibilities with new X-ray material

66th Supplement to the Check-list of North American Birds publishes today in Ornithology

Canadian crops beat global emissions—even after 17 trips across the Atlantic

ORC2 regulation of human gene expression shows unexpected breadth and scale

Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae

A Mount Sinai-Led team creates model for understanding how the brain’s decision-making is impacted in psychiatric disorders

A new way to study omega fatty acids

Targeting ferroptosis in cancer stem cells: A promising approach to enhance cancer treatment

As the atmosphere changes, so will its response to geomagnetic storms

First transfer of behavior between species through single gene manipulation

A new network could help predict health problems in your pup

Connecting biofuel and conservation policies

Deep learning model successfully predicted ignition in inertial confinement fusion experiment

Maternal antibodies in breast milk regulate early immune responses in mouse gut

Densely planted maize communicates with neighboring plants to defend against pests

[Press-News.org] Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?