Fruits
Feedback from latest State of the Fruit Industry survey says growers wrestle with heat and heavy rain, but frost is enemy #1.
Data- and AI-driven robotic operations are quickly becoming the solutions farmers turn to, not only to speed up operations, but to protect their workers.
Ag officials have declared the end of the Oriental fruit fly quarantine in Sacramento and Santa Clara counties following eradication of the invasive pest.
Promise the best environment for your starter plants by exploring groundbreaking perspectives and technologies you can use in your operations.
Newly published study from University of Florida scientists finds way for growers to reduce insecticide use and still gain control of the pest.
U.S. fruit growers, particularly those of berries, stay positive despite another year of rising input costs, extreme weather, and labor woes.
Cornell researchers confirm damaged grape skin combined with fruit fly pressure make for increased chances of sour rot in vineyards.
With declining domestic production, imports of fresh fruits and vegetables have grown substantially over recent years. Experts analyze the numbers.
Dig into numbers harvested by USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service for grapes in California and Washington State.
Researcher seeks biopesticide control input from West Coast specialty crops industry stakeholders, especially California growers.
California producers are enjoying preliminary success with T-REX, the Tree-Crop Remote Sensing of Evapotranspiration Experiment.
Mangoes? Melons? Coffee? Wasabi? Yes, they all might be a fit for you — if you do your homework.
The invasive pest from Asia loves grapes. American Fruit Grower Lead Editor asks: Does catastrophe await?
U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council awarded $1.3 million from USDA’s Regional Agricultural Promotion Program.
Multiple reports indicate corn earworm and lygus bugs infesting various strawberry fields in North Carolina and Virginia.
The world’s fruit production continues to grow. Learn more about Bloom Fresh International opening in India as a new company.
Environmental control inside the growing structure makes berries feel right at home.
On the upside, growers just posted their best production season ever. At the same time, the threat of oversupply is alarming, as are rising costs.
Longer, warmer autumns mean more flying, raising chance of colony collapse in the spring.