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

Pecan ipmPIPE: Harnessing the Internet for stakeholders in production agriculture

2011-10-19
(Press-News.org) A new, open-access article (http://tinyurl.com/5voksnc) in the Journal of Integrated Pest Management examines the Pecan Pest Information Platform for Extension and education (PIPE), a program that provides a new informatics resource that targets 5,000 pecan stakeholders located primarily in the southern tier of the United States.

Pecan scientists and producers working with information technology experts have developed and delivered this program via the Internet since 2009. Stakeholder participation in and adoption of this resource has grown since inception and is expected to continue as new upgrades are made. More than 41,000 visits have been recorded annually, page loads have increased by 312%, unique visitors have increased by 205%, and return visitors have increased by 32%.

Major program features are the interdisciplinary organization of information relevant to conducting pecan integrated pest management aided by search engines that provide real time access to information for the status of the Pecan Nut Casebearer tailored to any location across the pecan belt, and the interactive involvement of scientists and producers in real time that is enabled by informatics.

Producers are discovering, contributing to, and using more resources from the Internet to incorporate into their programs, including Pecan ipmPIPE. Simultaneously, all stakeholders are rethinking and reshaping the role the Internet can play in their respective efforts to improve the pecan industry.

###"Pecan ipmPIPE: Harnessing the Internet for Stakeholders in Production Agriculture" is available for free at http://tinyurl.com/5voksnc.

The Journal of Integrated Pest Management (http://entsoc.org/Pubs/Periodicals/jipm), an open-access, peer-reviewed, extension journal covering the field of integrated pest management, is published by the Entomological Society of America. Founded in 1889, ESA today has more than 6,000 members affiliated with educational institutions, health agencies, private industry, and government. Members are researchers, teachers,extension service personnel, administrators, marketing representatives,research technicians, consultants, students, and hobbyists.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Toms River Cosmetic Dentist Offers Brighter, Whiter Smiles for Life

2011-10-19
Leading Toms River cosmetic dentist, Dr. Stan Mahan, is pleased to offer new patients free whitening for life when scheduling an appointment. All new patients can now receive free whitening for life when they schedule a new patient exam with full mouth x-ray and prophy. When new patients make their appointment with Dr. Stan Mahan, emergency dentist in Toms River, they can mention the online coupon to receive their free whitening for life. This special is not to be combined with any other coupon. "I want my patients to smile longer and brighter than they have ...

New provincial atlas; information on lab testing key to managing diabetes among Albertans

2011-10-19
Edmonton, AB - A report just released by the Alberta Diabetes Surveillance System (ADSS) shows a need for more teamwork among patients and their health-care providers and more effective use of medical records to aid Albertans with getting the laboratory tests necessary to help manage and prevent long-term complications of the disease. This is the first time that the Alberta Diabetes Atlas has included additional sources of data. With this enhancement it has become a vital tool for front line health-care providers and policy makers. According to the Atlas, many Albertans ...

Researchers find possible link between bacterium and colon cancer

Researchers find possible link between bacterium and colon cancer
2011-10-19
BOSTON¬—Scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Broad Institute have found strikingly high levels of a bacterium in colorectal cancers, a sign that it might contribute to the disease and potentially be a key to diagnosing, preventing, and treating it. In a study published online in the journal Genome Research, investigators report the discovery of an abnormally large number of Fusobacterium cells in nine colorectal tumor samples. While the spike does not necessarily mean the bacterium helps cause colorectal cancer, it offers an enticing lead for further research, ...

Pasadena Cosmetic Dentist Adds New Features to Social Media Sites - Facebook and Twitter

2011-10-19
Dr. H. Robert Stender, Pasadena cosmetic dentist, is pleased to announce the recent addition of informative articles and testimonials of his practice to Facebook and Twitter. Patients are encouraged to become fans of Dr. Stender's Facebook and to "follow" him on Twitter, as well, for frequent updates. "Facebook and Twitter are quickly becoming more popular as technology quickly advances. A majority of my patients actively utilize the benefits of the Internet through social media sites, making the decision to launch my own a necessity. With the launch of ...

Research examines approaches to treating substance abuse among African-Americans

2011-10-19
A new study is the first to examine the effectiveness of a widely used counseling approach to treating substance abuse among African-Americans. The study found that African-American women were more likely than men to continue a counseling approach to treating substance abuse, but their substance-abuse issues continued. The study led by LaTrice Montgomery, a doctoral student in the University of Cincinnati Department of Psychology, is published this month in "Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology," a journal of the American Psychological Association. The study ...

Links in the chain: Global carbon emissions and consumption

2011-10-19
Washington, D.C. — It is difficult to measure accurately each nation's contribution of carbon dioxide to the Earth's atmosphere. Carbon is extracted out of the ground as coal, gas, and oil, and these fuels are often exported to other countries where they are burned to generate the energy that is used to make products. In turn, these products may be traded to still other countries where they are consumed. A team led by Carnegie's Steven Davis, and including Ken Caldeira, tracked and quantified this supply chain of global carbon dioxide emissions. Their work will be published ...

2011 a banner year for young striped bass in Virginia

2011 a banner year for young striped bass in Virginia
2011-10-19
Preliminary results from a 2011 survey conducted by researchers at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) suggest the production of a strong class of young-of-year striped bass in the Virginia portion of Chesapeake Bay. The 2011 year class represents the group of fish hatched this spring. The results are good news for the recreational and commercial anglers who pursue this popular game fish because this year class is expected to grow to fishable size in 3 to 4 years. The results are also good news for Chesapeake Bay, where striped bass play an important ecological ...

New research links common RNA modification to obesity

New research links common RNA modification to obesity
2011-10-19
An international research team has discovered that a pervasive human RNA modification provides the physiological underpinning of the genetic regulatory process that contributes to obesity and type II diabetes. European researchers showed in 2007 that the FTO gene was the major gene associated with obesity and type II diabetes, but the details of its physiological and cellular functioning remained unknown. Now, a team led by University of Chicago chemistry professor Chuan He has demonstrated experimentally the importance of a reversible RNA modification process mediated ...

NewBlueFX Announces Titler Pro Bundle With Sony Vegas Pro 11

2011-10-19
Innovative video effects creator and technology developer NewBlue, Inc. announces the inclusion of their new Titler Pro with Vegas Pro 11 from Sony, along with 13 other NewBlue plug-ins from 6 best-selling video plug-in collections. NewBlue Titler Pro (MSRP $299.95) is designed for the professional editor's schedule; to make it easy for editors to quickly create 2D & 3D graphics on a timeline. Titler Pro title animations use the computer's GPU to blend sophisticated 3D modeling with 2D raster processing to generate imagery in real time. Titler Pro also boasts an ...

Farmland floods do not raise levels of potentially harmful flame retardants in milk

2011-10-19
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12, 2011 — As millions of acres of farmland in the U.S. Midwest and South recover from Mississippi River flooding, scientists report that river flooding can increase levels of potentially harmful flame retardants in farm soils. But the higher levels apparently do not find their way into the milk produced by cows that graze on these lands. That's the reassuring message in the latest episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS) award-winning "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions" podcast series. Iain Lake, Ph.D., notes in the podcast that the flame ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SwRI, U-Michigan engineers create more effective burner to reduce methane emissions

Dental implants still functional after forty years

A hot droplet can bounce across a cool pan, too

Synthetic microbiome therapy suppresses bacterial infection without antibiotics

New mouse study: How to trick the body's metabolism

Rates of population-level child sexual abuse after a community-wide preventive intervention

Rural-urban disparities in cervical cancer incidence and mortality among US women

Tele-buprenorphine initiations for opioid use disorder without in-person relationships

Researchers reveal key mechanism behind bacterial cancer therapy

Who carries and uses Naloxone in the U.S.?

Complete breakdown of Plexiglas into its building blocks

New study suggests a shift in diabetes testing after pregnancy to improve women's health

FOME alliance pioneers VR innovation in management education

Evidence expanding that 40Hz gamma stimulation promotes brain health

Teaching kids how to become better citizens

Pusan National University researchers develop a novel 3D adipose tissue bioprinting method

Scientists use AI to better understand nanoparticles

We feed gut microbes sugar, they make a compound we need

One of the largest psychotherapy trials in the world has implications for transforming mental health care during pregnancy and after birth

It’s not just what you say – it’s also how you say it

Sleep patterns may reveal comatose patients with hidden consciousness

3D genome structure guides sperm development

Certain genetic alterations may contribute to the primary resistance of colorectal and pancreatic cancers to KRAS G12C inhibitors

Melting Antarctic ice sheets will slow Earth’s strongest ocean current

Hallucinogen use linked to 2.6-fold increase in risk of death for people needing emergency care

Pathogenicity threshold of SCA6 causative gene CACNA1A was identified

Mysterious interstellar icy objects

Chronic diseases misdiagnosed as psychosomatic can lead to long term damage to physical and mental wellbeing, study finds

Omalizumab treats multi-food allergy better than oral immunotherapy

Sleep apnea linked to increased risk of Parkinson’s, but CPAP may reduce risk

[Press-News.org] Pecan ipmPIPE: Harnessing the Internet for stakeholders in production agriculture