Chickpeas– sustainable and climate-friendly foods of the future
Climate change has a negative impact on food security. An international research team led by Wolfram Weckwerth from the University of Vienna has now conducted a study to investigate the natural variation of different chickpea genotypes and their resistance to drought stress. The scientists were able to show that chickpeas are a drought-resistant legume plant with a high protein content that can complement grain cultivation systems even in urban areas. The study was recently published in the specialist magazine The Plant Biotechnology.
Long periods of drought stress have also become a reality in Central Europe due to climate change, a major threat to plant productivity, harvests and therefore food security. At the same time, there is a decline in the use of plant genetic diversity, and the global food system has become more and more uniform. While there are approximately 7,000 edible crops, two-thirds of global food production is based on just nine crop species. "This narrow genetic base can have several negative consequences, such as increased susceptibility of plants to diseases and pests, reduced resistance to factors such as drought and climate change, and increased economic fragility," explains molecular biologist Wolfram Weckwerth from the University of Vienna. "Maintaining adequate plant and genetic diversity is crucial for agriculture, which must adapt to future changing conditions. With our new study, we have taken an important step in this direction and looked at the chickpea as an important food of the future," says Weckwerth.
The most common hormonal disorder in women, PCOS, linked to disordered eating behaviour
Emotional eating and uncontrolled eating are more common in middle-aged women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). In particular, psychological distress increased the long-term risk of disordered eating behaviour. This finding is highlighted in a recent study by the University of Oulu and ODL Sports Clinic.
Previous research has shown that young women of reproductive age with PCOS experience more body dissatisfaction and have a risk of binge-eating disorder that is up to three times higher than that of others. The newly published study demonstrates for the first time that disordered eating behaviour is also prevalent among middle-aged women with PCOS.
Particularly, depression and anxiety, previous weight-loss attempts, and perceiving oneself as overweight increased the risk of disordered eating behaviour.
"In the management of PCOS, weight control is often central, but without appropriate support, weight-loss methods can be drastic and, at worst, lead to eating disorders. Weight-related stigma can also exacerbate the situation," says Doctoral Researcher Emilia Pesonen.
From waste to resource: recovering nutrients to fertilise the future
Europe faces growing food supply demands and a shortage of non-renewable raw materials for fertilisers. But producing more from available resources is possible, say researchers: "The nutrients we need are before our eyes, ready to be transformed."
European farmers face a monumental dual challenge: increasing food production while meeting daunting deadlines imposed by the green transition. Amid the drive to produce greener, more efficient fertilisers, new technologies seek to squeeze maximum potential from nutrients that have long been imported, but which until now have been under-exploited. “An important part of the nutrients we have been importing for years are here, ready to be transformed and to be given another life,” says Javier Brañas Lasala, Director of Research, Development and Innovation at the Spanish fertiliser producer Fertiberia. Using nutrients from bio-waste to reduce Europe’s dependency on non-renewable raw materials and increase the efficiency of new sustainable fertilisers is one of the main goals of B-Ferst, a 5-year European project he coordinates, due to end this October.
Rosmarino: la siccità controllata aumenta la resa e la qualità di olio essenziale
La siccità controllata può aumentare sino al 30 per cento la resa di olio essenziale del rosmarino rendendo questa pianta una candidata ideale per la valorizzazione di terreni agricoli marginali e con limitata disponibilità idrica. Il risultato arriva da uno studio pubblicato sulla rivista Industrial Crops and Products e realizzato dall’Università di Pisa, dall’Istituto Nazionale di Ottica INO-CNR Pisa, dalla Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna e dall’Università Catania. Le sperimentazioni sono state condotte in Sicilia, in aziende agricole della provincia di Ragusa, tra l’autunno del 2022 e la primavera del 2023.
Attività vulcanica intermittente nella Rift Valley: impatti ambientali e ruolo nell’evoluzione degli ominidi
Una ricerca condotta dall’Università di Firenze e dall’Istituto di geoscienze e georisorse del Cnr di Firenze, in collaborazione con varie università internazionali, ha messo in evidenza come l’attività vulcanica della Rift Valley non sia avvenuta in modo continuo bensì ‘a scatti’. Lo studio è stato pubblicato sulla rivista Communications Earth & Environment.
L’attività vulcanica della Rift Valley negli ultimi quattro milioni di anni non è stata costante e continua nel tempo ma è avvenuta ‘a scatti’, ossia con brevi periodi di intensa attività esplosiva
intervallati da periodi di quiete o ridotta attività. È quanto emerge da un lavoro dell’Università di Firenze e dell’Istituto di geoscienze e georisorse del Consiglio nazionale delle ricerche di Firenze (Cnr-Igg), in collaborazione con università di Etiopia, Francia e Regno Unito. La ricerca, pubblicata sulla rivista Communications Earth & Environment del gruppo Nature, offre per la prima volta un'analisi dettagliata dell'evoluzione vulcanica della Rift Valley in Etiopia. “Grazie ai dati raccolti durante diverse campagne sul campo e alla datazione in laboratorio dei numerosi campioni di rocce vulcaniche, abbiamo identificato un periodo principale di intensa attività vulcanica tra 3,4 e 3,8 milioni di anni fa, seguito da altre quattro fasi di forte vulcanismo, spiega Giacomo Corti del Cnr-Igg. “In ciascuna di queste fasi sono stati riconosciuti eventi esplosivi di grande entità, alcuni dei quali hanno prodotto depositi vulcanici spessi decine di metri”. Questi eventi hanno avuto un impatto significativo sul paesaggio, trasformando vaste aree e rendendole inospitali per lunghi periodi, con possibili conseguenze sul clima globale.