Is your landscape’s water garden looking more like a fish pond than a garden? Are your container water gardens full of water but missing, you know, the actual plants? To help get you started, we have ...
I ’ll be honest: I’m not a coffee snob. Give me a cup — pretty much any old cup — and I won’t complain. However, that doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate a particularly good one.
I brew my coffee at home every day, and while I’m not greatly picky about my beans, I do know what a pain it can be to run out of a fresh stash. (This is usually when I find myself at my local ...
Coffee wilt disease is caused by Fusarium xylarioides, a soil-borne fungus that invades coffee plants through the roots, eventually blocking water uptake and causing the plants to wilt. While arabica ...
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They found that F. xylarioides is made up of at least four distinct lineages: one specialized to live on arabica coffee plants, one adapted to robusta coffee plants and two historical lineages ...
The fungus that causes coffee wilt disease repeatedly took up segments of DNA from a related fungal pathogen, which contributed to successive outbreaks of the disease, according to a new report.
Credit: Gary Licker While the wild coffee plant probably originated in Africa, it was in Yemen that the tree was first cultivated, the beans (technically, seeds) first roasted and turned into a ...