Florida Newsletter
To keep growers’ heads from spinning, companies strive for the digital collaboration of myriad technologies.
Some growers report total losses in wake of storm’s super soaking. The preliminary assessments are in. Check out the figures and scenes from ground zero.
Mental health must be attended to and nurtured daily just like a crop.
Learn how this essential agribusiness in Florida is managing through the coronavirus while continuing to serve clients’ needs.
New studies show warming temperatures and changing rainfall will drive agriculture drastically northward. And it might happen sooner than you think.
But only 4% are already growing it, according to American Vegetable 2020 Grower’s State of the Vegetable Industry Survey.
Learn more about a USDA-backed project to help unearth the nitrogen cycling benefits of sunn hemp and others across organic vegetable systems in Florida.
Division of Plant Industry updates alert for an invasive species that has potential to harm the Sunshine State’s signature crop.
USDA to provide additional direct assistance to growers and ranchers impacted by the coronavirus.
There’s a lot that can go wrong when using biocontrols. Don’t add your application technique to the list.
Learn how to identify, the survival and spread, as well as management methods for this vegetable pest.
The Northern Hemisphere just had its hottest summer on record. La Niña is officially here, too. Oh, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
Collaborative study predicts $2.5 trillion hit in goods and services thanks to the pandemic. Find out the impact on ag compared to other sectors.
Learn more how this clean source of energy can be affordable and efficient.
A million followers can’t be wrong, right? Enter the virtual studio to visit with a wildly popular weather pundit who lives and breathes spaghetti models.
The vegetable industry is filled with inspiring producers. We can learn a lot from them.
It’s 2020. So, it stands to reason the upcoming weather outlook would come with an ominous theme. Check out what the Almanacs have to say about it.
These ‘wannabe proteins’ are being employed in the most recent insecticide to receive its own IRAC group.
Trump Administration-led probe to focus on negative impacts on seasonal perishable produce, particularly in Florida and Georgia.