Australia - Crops suffer significant damage from fast-moving currents

19.03.2018 279 views

Ingham's sugar crop has been hit hard by flooding with about 80 per cent of cane ­affected.

Farmers said crops suffered significant damage from fast-moving currents. Canegrowers Herbert River chairman Michael Pisano said it was a tough situation for growers. “It is really a mixed bag, people are saying they’ve had very little, while others have had stacks of damage,” he said. Mr Pisano said he had seen photos of young sugar cane wiped out by strong currents. Flooding of sugar cane near Ingham. Some farms near Ingham and further north still have some of their crop underwater. “After about three days (in water) you start getting some big losses,” Mr Pisano said. Besides the damage to sugar cane, one of the biggest ­expenses for farmers was infrastructure damage, he said. “Growers are always impacted by damage to infrastructure and it’s very expensive too.” Although the flood peaked last Friday at a similar level to the 2009 floods, Mr Pisano said some members told him the numbers were higher than in any other flood. He said growers out near Cordelia were reporting the flood was higher than the ­record levels in 1967. Mr Pisano knows first hand how much damage has been done around Ingham, as he owns a farm outside the town, on the way to Forrest Beach. “We’ve been really lucky though, unlike some of the other growers around the ­district,” he said. His property is too far from the river to be affected by flooding. Canegrowers chief executive officer Dan Galligan said it was taking time to access all the flooded farms to assess the damage. “This situation causes us a lot of concern,” he said. “We’re hoping that over the coming days all of the water will recede and the ground will start to dry out. “Only then will we get a clear picture of what the flooding means for cane yields, in terms of tonnage and sugar content. “Where total losses are being seen it is in blocks of young plant cane that has been submerged and where fast-moving water has caused erosion, washing out sections of paddocks and taking plants with it. “Where plants have ­survived, the flooding may mean slower growth and a ­setback to the development of the sugar in the stalks.” Source - http://www.heraldsun.com.au
15.06.2025

South Korea grapples with surging prices for livestock, processed foods

Livestock and processed food prices in South Korea have soared, fueled by multiple factors including currency depreciation and rising raw material costs, further straining residents' cost of living.  

15.06.2025

Tanzania roles out national livestock vaccination, identification campaign

The government is set to launch a nationwide livestock vaccination and identification campaign on June 16, 2025, aimed at boosting animal health and opening up access to regional and international markets.  

15.06.2025

India - Growers welcome Centre's move to include tea in weather insurance scheme

Tea growers hailed the government's decision to bring the sector under the Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS), which they said would help mitigate losses due to erratic rainfall and rising temperatures.  

15.06.2025

Storm Wutip triggers floods, landslides, and crop losses across central Vietnam

Heavy rains triggered by Wutip, the first storm to enter Vietnamese waters this year, have caused landslides, severe flooding, and extensive crop damage across central regions including Quang Tri, Hue, Da Nang, and Quang Nam.

15.06.2025

USA - Winds up to 80 mph, ‘gustinadoes’ in northern Iowa storm

Wednesday’s storm that hit Sibley and other areas of northwest Iowa caused damage to crops, trees, buildings and power lines, but Peter Rodgers, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Sioux Falls, says videos of the storm posted online do not show it was a tornado.  

15.06.2025

USA - Commercial bee colony collapse threatens Washington apple, berry agriculture

Hundreds of flatbed loads of honey bees are trucked into Washington every spring, enabling the production of apples, cherries, pears and berries in the state.  

12.06.2025

WorldFish launches USD 10 million genetically improved tilapia project in Kenya

A USD 10 million (EUR 8.8 million) fish-farming project has launched in Kenya, focusing on expanding farmers’ access to genetically improved strains of tilapia.  

12.06.2025

Limits on moving livestock into Wales due to virus

Limits are to be placed on moving livestock from England into Wales in response to the spread of the bluetongue virus.  

istanbul escort şişli escort tbilisi escort şişli escort şişli escort maslak escort istanbul escort beşiktaş escort taksim escort izmir escort ümraniye escort mecidiyeköy escort şişli escort taksim escort ümraniye escort kartal escort şirinevler escort maltepe escort istanbul escort ümraniye escort kadıköy escort vip escort mersin escort istanbul escorts ataköy escort avcılar escort beylikdüzü escort okmeydanı escort şişli escort tuzla escort işitme cihazı sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop
istanbul escort