Clemson, USDA scientists work to boost cotton production scnow.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scnow.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Innovative research at Clemson University and USDA aims to enhance U.S. cotton production through DNA markers, customized cropping systems, and broadened genetic base.
Clemson University
Clemson assistant professor Sruthi Narayanan and graduate student Zolian Zoong Lwe study how heat stress affects peanuts as they work to develop heat-tolerant peanut varieties. The latest venture focuses on how lipids (fats) in peanut plant anthers are altered by heat stress.
Heat stress caused by climate change is threatening to reduce peanut crop yields and burnout this source of income and food for millions of people worldwide.
But a group of researchers led by Clemson University Plant and Environmental Sciences assistant professor Sruthi Narayanan is working to develop heat-tolerant peanut varieties they hope will help maintain peanut production and profitability. Their latest venture focuses on how lipids (fats) in peanut plant anthers are altered by heat stress.