Why crop rotation works
New research could help explain the dramatic effect on soil health and yield of crop rotation
Read the storyNew research could help explain the dramatic effect on soil health and yield of crop rotation
Read the storyCrop geneticist Dr Cristobal Uauy has been awarded tenure at the John Innes Centre in Norwich after successfully completing a five-year tenure track
Read the storyNew research shows that to prevent starvation at night, plants perform accurate arithmetic division
Read the storyAn antibiotic has been found to stimulate its own production
Read the storyProfessor Cathie Martin, plant biologist and editor-in-chief of the American monthly journal The Plant Cell, has been made an MBE in recognition of her work
Read the storyThe first sequence data for a survivor of the ash dieback epidemic has been made available by scientists from The Genome Analysis Centre (TGAC) as part of a research collaboration led by the John Innes Centre and The Sainsbury Laboratory
Read the storyWork undertaken at the John Innes Centre describes new Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) protocols to identify and footprint protein-DNA interactions in a cost effective and semi-automated way
Read the storyJohn Innes Centre scientists will participate in new €2 million EU-funded research to programme more “intelligent” and adaptable robot swarms
Read the storyTomatoes, said to be the world’s most popular fruit, can be made both better-tasting and longer-lasting thanks to UK research with purple GM varieties. “Working with GM tomatoes that are different to normal fruit only by the addition of a specific compound, allows us to pinpoint exactly how to breed in valuable traits,” said Professor...
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