Home Knowledge Base Orchard

Orchard

No mentions found

This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.

Related Articles from SNS

Toby Carvery to pay for orchard planting after causing outrage by felling 500-year-old oak

Restaurant chain took chainsaw to ancient oak tree in Enfield without permissionThe restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute after taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission by agreeing to pay for the restoration of a lost orchard. The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament.

The Guardian UK 31m ago

Toby Carvery to pay for orchard planting after causing outrage by felling 500-year-old oak

Restaurant chain took chainsaw to ancient oak tree in Enfield without permissionThe restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute after taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission by agreeing to pay for the restoration of a lost orchard. The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament.

The Guardian Business 31m ago

Toby Carvery to pay for orchard planting after causing outrage by felling 500-year-old oak

Restaurant chain took chainsaw to ancient oak tree in Enfield without permissionThe restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute after taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission by agreeing to pay for the restoration of a lost orchard. The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament.

The Guardian World 31m ago

Scouting ecological drivers of natural enemies in citrus orchards: implications for biological control in the Corsican agricultural landscape

1. Effective pest control requires a better understanding of natural enemy ecology, particularly how their distribution responds to landscape structure and local management. Agricultural intensification has simplified landscapes, reducing biodiversity and constraining pest control. Landscape-scale surveys are therefore needed to identify strategies that support natural enemies in agricultural systems.

bioRxiv 9d ago

Police officer wept as he faced drug-driver who left him with life-changing injuries

Police officer wept as he faced drug-driver who left him with life-changing injuries Shaun Orchard, 23, has been jailed for three years and two months for crashing into a police vehicle and leaving PC Rushton with life-changing injuries in Stockport in April last year A cocaine and alcohol-fuelled driver who crashed into a police vehicle and left an officer with life-changing injuries has been jailed. Shaun Orchard, 23, was sentenced to three years and two months in prison after the...

Daily Mirror 3d ago

Dieback disease killing mango trees is spreading in the NT

Mango twig tip dieback spreading in the NT as more trees get bulldozed Wed 3 Jun 2026 at 6:31am In short: A fungal disease called mango twig tip dieback is spreading across orchards in the Darwin region of the NT. The chief executive of Australian Mangoes says the disease has become a "serious issue" for the industry.

ABC Australia 7d ago

Millions of Bees Have Thrived Under a New York Cemetery for More Than a Century

A morning walk through East Lawn Cemetery in Ithaca, New York, uncovered an immense colony of some 5.5 million subterranean bees. The discovery, which a Cornell University research team published in April in the journal Apidologie, documents one of the largest aggregations of these insects ever recorded. The population, belonging to the species Andrena regularis, occupies an area of about 1.25 acres and is crucial for pollination of the region's orchards, demonstrating that historic...

Wired 11d ago

A New York cemetery was hiding 5.5 million bees underground

A casual walk through an Ithaca cemetery led to the discovery of a gigantic hidden bee population — roughly 5.5 million ground-nesting bees packed beneath the soil. Scientists believe it may be one of the largest bee aggregations ever documented and say the insects are crucial pollinators for apple orchards and other crops. The bees have likely lived there for more than 100 years, thriving in the cemetery’s undisturbed sandy soil.

Science Daily 13d ago

Attention mechanisms and transfer learning for robust peach leaf damage classification under domain shift

Announce Type: new Abstract: Artificial intelligence provides a practical framework for crop damage assessment from imagery data, supporting early decision-making in agricultural management. In peach orchards, climate change increases abiotic stress and biotic pressures, including pests and diseases, which often produce visually similar foliar symptoms. This overlap makes manual diagnosis difficult, especially across multiple fields with varying environmental conditions, highlighting the...

arXiv CS 8d ago

The big Hapus crisis: How climate shocks are threatening India's iconic Alphonso mango

There was a time when the arrival of Alphonso mangoes felt as predictable as summer itself. Every year, as temperatures climbed and school holidays began, crates of the golden fruit would start appearing in markets across the country. For many families, Alphonso mangoes were more than a seasonal indulgence.

Times of India 10d ago