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CABI is a not-for-profit international organization that improves people’s lives by providing information and applying scientific expertise to solve problems in agriculture and the environment. Our mission and direction is influenced by our member countries who help guide the activities we undertake. These include scientific publishing, development projects and research, and microbial services.
India’s vets should focus on prevention, not cure
Vets in India should focus on the prevention of livestock diseases rather than cure: that was the message from Shri Rudhra Gangadharan from India’s Ministry of Agriculture, when he addressed the the Expert Consultation on Strengthening the Veterinary Profession in India on 25 November 2011, jointly organized by CABI, the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, University of Edinburgh and WikiVet, and supported by Pfizer. Read more about the workshop >>
CABI’s Microbial Services team is working with Enzagen, to provide simple ready to use microbial “panels” as screening kits. Streptomet, the first kit comprises freeze-dried biomass from 20 different Streptomyces cultures. Further details, including ordering and prices are available through Enzagen, at www.enzagen.com or you can find out more about our unique Culture Collection.
They have caused famines that killed millions; they have precipitated the release of hundreds of megatonnes of carbon; they even turned the UK into a nation of tea-drinkers. And today they are still destroying around 40 per cent of the crops that we grow worldwide. Agricultural pests and diseases have a lot to answer for. CABI scientists have put together a list of what they consider to be some of the world’s worst, and published it on the BBC website.
New global plant health resource to improve food security From the devastating Coffee Wilt Disease to the infectious Wheat Stripe Rust: for the first time ever, distribution maps, diagnostic support and treatment advice for thousands of the world’s most damaging pests and diseases of plants and crops are being made available free of charge on the new Plantwise website, www.plantwise.org, launched today. Read more about the new Plantwise website >>
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