Irrigation Systems
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Related Articles from SNS
Experts suspect state policy is putting some farmers in artificial drought
Farmer says flood plain harvesting has forced him to run cattle by the roadside Fri 5 Jun 2026 at 5:30am Paul Cameron watches his mob of thirsty cattle sink their heads into the Goan waterhole on the outskirts of Trangie in western New South Wales. Mr Cameron has driven his cattle to graze the scrubby patches of Crown land hugging the public billabong for more than a year. "I've been walking the stock to town … because we haven't got any water in our own system," Mr Cameron said.
Iran’s lakes are vanishing: Satellite images show a deepening water crisis
Iran’s lakes are vanishing: Satellite images show a deepening water crisis Years of drought, falling rainfall and unsustainable water use have been worsened further by the US-Israel war. For many Iranians, the most immediate threat is no longer just war, but water. Years of drought, falling rainfall and unsustainable water use have pushed the country into severe water stress, depleting reservoirs, rivers and groundwater reserves.
The Best Pool Accessories to Upgrade Your Summer (2026)
This is not news to anyone who owns one, but an inordinate amount of daily labor and chores lie behind that clear, sparkling, perfectly chlorinated (or salted) water. Luckily, pool tech has come a long way in the past decade—gone are the hours spent scooping leaves and dead bugs out of the water with a long-handled net, laboring over pH strips, and trying to relax on floaties too small for your adult-sized behind. We've now got robots that clean your pool, apps that monitor water quality...
Bees can swim and use visual cues to survive water crashes
Bees can swim and use visual cues to survive water crashes Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor When a bee crashes into water, it may still be able to swim to safety. New research from Michigan State University confirms that honeybees can propel themselves across the water's surface, and their movement is purposeful and directional. They swim toward darker areas—likely using visual cues to locate the shoreline and escape.
Rising pop culture star Rachel Pizzolato concludes massive May at Miami Swim Week, Ric Flair's health & MEAT
The sun is shining bright, Monday Screencaps is dialed in, the birds are chirping away, summer is in the air, a skunk unloaded in the early morning hours (thankfully not on my dogs) and it's officially June 2026. Guys, let's face it, this is going to be a massive month for the United States and the world. We have the World Cup, America 250, Trump's birthday UFC event, there's an intriguing NBA Finals (if you're into that sort of thing), the NHL Finals are ready to roll and there's even that...
AI offers promise for agriculture, but smallholder farmers risk being left behind
AI offers promise for agriculture, but smallholder farmers risk being left behind Robert Egan Associate Editor Globally, agriculture faces mounting pressures. These are driven by climate change, land degradation, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions and the demand for food from a growing population. At the same time, productivity is uneven.
Enhancing Strawberry Yield Forecasting with Backcasted IoT Sensor Data and Machine Learning
Announce Type: replace Abstract: Rapid global population growth underscores the need for digitally enabled agricultural systems that support sustainable food production and data-driven resource management for farmers and stakeholders. The adoption of Internet of Things (IoT) technologies, capable of capturing real-time environmental (e.g., temperature, humidity) and operational (e.g., irrigation) parameters, is a crucial step toward enabling advanced applications such as AI-based yield...
Water availability has stronger effects on West Nile virus dynamics in water-limited regions
West Nile virus dynamics are shaped by hydrological conditions that influence mosquito habitat and pathogen transmission, but identifying causal relationships is difficult in managed landscapes where irrigation decouples local water conditions from precipitation, complicating climate-disease inference. We address this challenge using a 21-year panel of more than 19 million Culex tarsalis mosquitoes from California's Central Valley, applying fixed-effects panel models to estimate how surface...
Exploring the meanings of plants and hair, from Amazon pastures to suburban lawns and groomed bodies
Exploring the meanings of plants and hair, from Amazon pastures to suburban lawns and groomed bodies Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Cultivated lawns, cleared cattle pastures and carefully groomed hair all reflect a shared cultural logic, according to a new book by UC Santa Barbara anthropology professor Jeffrey Hoelle. In "Cultivated: Plants, Hair, and the Aesthetic of Control", Hoelle explores how people shape both landscapes and bodies through practices tied to...
The future of agriculture
The future of agriculture Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor It's a mild early spring morning at the historic Cottonwood Field Station in western South Dakota, and a herd of 150 Angus steers are scheduled to move to a new pasture rotation. Moving cattle can be tricky and often requires some extra help, electrical fencing and quite a bit of time. But today, there are no extra ranchers, no gates swinging open and no temporary fences in place.