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         Corn Crops:     more books (100)
  1. The Business of Breeding: Hybrid Corn in Illinois, 1890-1940 by Deborah Kay Fitzgerald, 1990-08
  2. Wheat, Oats, Barley, Rye, and Buckwheat, Corn, Hay and Pasture Crops, Potatoes, Root Crops, Tobacco, Soiling Crops (1911? ) by International library of technology, 2009-10-21
  3. Wheat, Oats, Barley, Rye, and Buckwheat, Corn, Hay and Pasture Crops, Potatoes, Root Crops, Tobacco, Soiling Crops by International library of technology, 2010-01-09
  4. MARKETS: USDA PredictsRecord Corn Crop.(Brief Article): An article from: Food Ingredient News
  5. All bets are off in corn and bean country this year.(Crop Stress)(Industry Overview): An article from: Top Producer
  6. Be prepared to start 2009-crop corn marketings.: An article from: Pro Farmer by Gale Reference Team, 2009-03-28
  7. Farm Folk Save the Corn Crop by John Breach, 1987-07-01
  8. Swap beans for corn? Size up your situation before trading crop rotations and including more years of corn.: An article from: Farm Journal by Darrell Smith, Charlene Finck, 2004-02-01
  9. Future Vision: Have we weather-proofed the corn crop?: An article from: Top Producer
  10. USDA pushes old-crop corn carryover to 877 mil. bu.; bean carry to 615 mil bu.: An article from: Pro Farmer by Gale Reference Team, 2007-04-14
  11. The yellow albatross: revered corn crop hangs like a millstone around nation's agro-industrial neck.: An article from: Business Mexico by John Moody, 2004-04-01
  12. Corn Reacts to Crop Tour Results.(Column): An article from: Farm Journal by Bob Utterback, 2006-08-24
  13. High-stakes game: flexibility in pricing is the key to winning this year: pricing 2004 and later corn and bean crops is tricky, but some strategies keep ... An article from: Top Producer by Linda H. Smith, 2004-03-22
  14. USDA: 2009 corn & bean crops record ... so far.: An article from: Pro Farmer by Unavailable, 2010-01-16

21. Highest Quality Corn Crops << Maizecor News
GMO Update For the latest detailed information on our Identity Preserved Schemefor the supply of nonGMO maize, please contact either Roger Scott, Roger
http://www.maizecor.com/news.asp
GMO Update
For the latest detailed information on our Identity Preserved Scheme for the supply of non-GMO maize, please contact either Roger Scott Roger Slingsby or Irene Wiles Logistics
At Maizecor, we operate a modern near dedicated transport fleet, to compliment our strong philosophy on the traceability of maize products, from farm to table and to maintain optimum levels of product transportation. Expanded Capacity
In order to satisfy the needs of our customers, we are constantly striving to maintain low production costs, without sacrificing the high quality of our products. With this objective in mind, we continue to implement a program of increased capacity and reduced overheads that promises to sustain our position in the highly competitive European and global marketplaces. Planting for the New Crop Year
We are now working closely with our French supply cooperative to ensure that we again receive high quality maize from the 2001 crop so as to continue to supply high quality products to our customers in the 2001-2002 season.

22. Record US Corn Crops This Season
Record US corn crops this season. Charles Abbott Washington US farmerswill harvest their biggest corn and soybean crops ever, the
http://www.financialexpress.com/fe/daily/20000814/fco14007.html
Monday, August 14, 2000
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Record US corn crops this season
Charles Abbott Washington US farmers will harvest their biggest corn and soybean crops ever, the Government said Friday in its first estimate of the fall harvest - an astounding 10.369 billion bushels of corn and 2.989 billion bushels of soybeans. The mammoth outpouring, vastly larger than 1999's crops, would be accompanied by the second-largest cotton crop on record, 19.2 m bales weighing 480 lbs each, and a moderate 2.26 billion bushels of wheat, the Agriculture Department said. Huge crops would mean a fourth year in a row of low grain and soybean prices. "There's no floor on how low it can go," said private consultant John Schnittker. Analyst Greg Doud of the firm World Perspectives pointed to the possibility that hot, dry August weather might reduce crop size, especially soybeans in a critical reproductive stage, but large crops seemed certain.

23. Biotech Companies Broke Law When Planting Crops ~ Newsroom ~ News From CSPI
inspectors. The provisions violated are designed to protect neighboringcorn crops from breeding with the experimental biotech crops. The
http://www.cspinet.org/new/200208131.html
For Immediate
Release:
August 13, 2002
Related Links:
Letter to EPA

Biotech Companies Broke Law When Planting Crops
Violations Raise Questions About Compliance Elsewhere
For the first time, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) took enforcement actions against two biotechnology companies whose plantings of experimental genetically engineered crops were found by EPA inspectors to violate the law. That August 5 crackdown was hailed by the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), which today said that EPA should conduct more frequent inspections of genetically engineered crops to ensure that biotech companies comply with regulations designed to protect human health and the environment. In one case, Mycogen Seeds, a unit of Dow AgroSciences, failed to isolate its experimental insect-resistant corn with a border crop of hybrid corn and failed to plant trees to act as windbreaks. In the second case, Pioneer Hi-Bred International, a DuPont subsidiary, planted its experimental corn crop at an unapproved location too close to other crops. Both companies’ violations were in Hawaii and uncovered by EPA Region 9 inspectors. The provisions violated are designed to protect neighboring corn crops from breeding with the experimental biotech crops. The two corn crops at issue are engineered to be resistant to the pest corn rootworm by using genetic material from bacillus thuringiensis , a bacterium. Such crops—referred to as “Bt corn”—produce their own pesticide, reducing the need for spraying with conventional chemical pesticides. Corn rootworm destroys millions of dollars worth of corn each year.

24. Agronomic Crops Team On–Farm Research Projects 2000, Special Circular 179–01
Summary. These fields were selected because of a history of rootwormdamage on past corn crops. Economic thresholds for root damage
http://ohioline.osu.edu/sc179/sc179_37.html
Corn Rootworm Insecticide Comparison Alan Sundermeier, Extension Agriculture and Natural Resources Agent
Bruce Eisley, Integrated Pest Management Research Associate
Objective
To evaluate corn response to soil rootworm insecticides in a field following soybeans.
Background
Cooperator: Roland and Rob Rettig Nearest Town: Napoleon County: Henry Soil type: Millgrove loam Tillage: No-till Soil test: pH 6.2, P 82 ppm, K 346 ppm,
CEC 10.8 Previous crop: Soybean Fertilizer: 180 lbs 19-17-0/A,
200 lbs/A K2O,
150 lbs/A N Herbicides: Bicep Variety: Golden Harvest N58D1 Planting date: April 27, 2000 Planting Population: 30,000/A Row Width: 30 inch Harvest Population: See text Harvest date: November 1, 2000
Methods
A randomized, complete design used four replications of three treatments. The design was duplicated at two fields about one mile apart with the same cropping history. The treatments included a check with no insecticide, corn seed encapsulated with Force insecticide, and liquid Regent insecticide applied in furrow at planting. Individual plots were 15 feet wide and 300 feet long. On July 20, 2000, corn roots were evaluated for rootworm damage. For each treatment, five root masses were dug, washed, and inspected for rootworm damage. The Iowa scale of 1 = no damage to 3 = economic impact to 5 = severe root pruning was used.

25. Corn Crops Fields Scenic Posters And Art Prints
Corn Posters Art Prints. Your Online Source For Posters Art Prints. Home Scenic Fields Crops Corn. OTHER CROPS. Corn. Cotton. Grain. Hay. CORN GALLERY
http://www.posterparlor.com/3/n7313-corn-crops-fields-scenic.html
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26. ISU Extension News Release
It will increase by $0.03 per bushel for the 2004 through 2007 corn cropsbecause of a $0.03 reduction in the loan rate for those years.
http://www.extension.iastate.edu/newsrel/2003/feb03/feb0302.html
Extension Communications
3614 Administrative Services Building
Ames, Iowa 50011-3614
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contacts:
Robert Wisner, Ag Economics, (515) 294-6310, rwwisner@iastate.edu
Jean McGuire, Continuing Education and Communication Services, (515) 294-7033, jmcguire@iastate.edu Understanding Corn and Soybean Counter-Cyclical Payments in the New Farm Bill Ames, Iowa - Farmers, landowners, and agricultural lenders should be aware of important differences between counter-cyclical payments (CCPs) of the new farm program and the old deficiency payment system that was used in pre-1996 federal farm programs. Both payment plans are based on target prices established by Congress, but there are some important differences that give target prices a different role than past programs, according to ISU Extension Economist Robert Wisner. The second component of the safety net is the direct payments, which are $0.28 per bushel for corn and $0.44 per bushel for soybeans for the 2002 through 2007 crops. Direct payments are made on 85% of the Farm Service Agency (FSA) base acreage and historical yields for the respective crops. These payments remain unchanged, even at extremely high or extremely low prices for their respective crops. Counter-Cyclical Payments
The third component of the safety net is the CCPs. Like LDPs, CCPs, are price-sensitive. They also are made on 85% of FSA base acreage and yields. Yields for these payments may be updated to a recent four-year average. Wisner pointed out that with marketing year average prices moderately above the loan rates but well below target prices, CCPs drop to zero. He used a corn CCP example to illustrate how the calculations are made. First, CCPs are based on a weighted national average marketing year price paid to farmers. For corn and soybeans, the marketing year runs from Sept. 1 through Aug. 31. The marketing year average price is calculated by weighting monthly average prices by the volume of grain farmers sell each month during the year. If CCPs are made, each farmer receives the same CCP per bushel, regardless of geographic location.

27. Iowa Grain Quality Initiative
October 1, 2002. Nebraska corn crops Spared from Serious AflatoxinDamage So Far. By Bill Hord. Source Omaha WorldHerald, Neb. Oct.
http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Pages/grain/news/newsarchive/02igqinews/021001i
October 1, 2002 Nebraska Corn Crops Spared from Serious Aflatoxin Damage So Far By Bill Hord Source: Omaha World-Herald, Neb. Oct. 1LINCOLN, Neb.Nebraska's corn crop is apparently avoiding serious problems with a toxic, drought-induced mold known as aflatoxin, state officials said Monday. Tests throughout the state indicate that aflatoxin, which shows up to some degree every year, is more common than usual in this year's crop but mostly at safe levels. In incidents of high levels, the corn can be mixed with other corn to lower the concentration, diverted to animal feed or, in the most extreme cases, plowed into the ground. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration allows aflatoxin levels up to 20 parts per billion in food-grade corn. Corn with up to 300 parts per billion is safe as a feed for cattle being fattened for slaughter. At higher levels, aflatoxin is a risk to cause cancer. It does not affect the meat of animals but can pass through to milk in dairy animals. So far, the highest levels have been found in southeast Nebraska, according to Rich Reiman, director of plant industry for the Nebraska Agriculture Department.

28. AgJournal
download here. AgJournal.com, Thursday, March 20, 2003. How weatherworks. corn crops in jeopardy January 15, 2002 Corn is currently
http://www.agjournal.com/story.cfm?story_id=1719

29. Consumer And Environmental Groups Demand Epa Delay Re-Registration Of All Geneti
Consumer and Environmental Groups Demand EPA Delay ReRegistration of All GeneticallyEngineered Bt corn crops Cite Failure to Conduct Critical Health Test.
http://www.consumersunion.org/food/epacpi1100.htm
Press Release
Friday, Oct. 20th Contact:
Larry Bohlen
, FoE, 202-783-7400 x251
202-270-1547 cell
Richard Caplan , U.S. PIRG, 202-546-9707 x329 Michael Hansen , CU, 914-378-2455
Consumers Union
Consumer and Environmental Groups Demand EPA Delay Re-Registration of
All Genetically Engineered Bt Corn Crops
Cite Failure to Conduct Critical Health Test
Washington, DC - Consumers Union, Friends of the Earth, and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group today demanded that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) not re-register Bt corn crops until it has conducted fundamental allergy testing available to the agency for over a year. The EPA is concluding three days of hearings regarding the crop re-registrations today.
"EPA scientists have the allergy test, so they should use it," said Michael Hansen, Ph.D., Research Associate at Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports, who discussed the study in testimony at EPA today. The study, entitled "Immune Responses in Farm Workers after Exposure to Bacillus thuringiensis Pesticides" appeared in the July 1999 issue of Environmental Health Perspectives published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
Farm and mill workers may be most at risk for developing allergies, according to the study. The study looked at whether conventional Bt pesticide sprays might lead to allergic sensitivities in farm workers. The study found 2 out of 123 workers who picked and packed vegetables on a farm where Bt is used exhibited reactivity to the Bt pro delta endotoxin. This natural pesticide has now been introduced via genetic engineering into some 20 percent of the corn grown in the United States today. The Bt delta endotoxin is present in genetically engineered corn at a level at least 50 times that found in the conventional sprays in the study, according to Hansen.

30. Farm Disaster ResourceNet: News: Growers Question Corn Approval
Deegan. McAvoy said that Starlink corn crops represent less than onehalf of 1 percent of the corn crops grown domestically. And
http://www.farmdisasters.org/news/news.php?entry=27

31. Wnbc.com - Weather - Drought Devastated Corn, Other Crops
We fought off the worst of the drought with a lot of our own water, added GaryDonaldson, who lost half his pumpkin and sweet corn crops in Mansfield.
http://www.wnbc.com/weather/1948576/detail.html
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32. Current Research:  Forestry
Generally, corn crops grown during droughty conditions are more susceptibleto invasion by a specific group of mycotoxins known as aflatoxins.
http://www.amesplantation.org/ForestryWildlife/forestryresearch.htm
Forestry and Wildlife Research Unit Current Research "Oak as a Component of the Forest Ecosystem." Project Personnel: S. E. Schlarbaum, H. A. Fribourg, and A. Houston. "Tree Crops for Tennessee Landowners." Project Personnel: John Rennie, George Hopper, and Allan Houston. "Genetic Improvement of Forest Trees for Timber, Christmas Trees, Mast and Nut Production." Project Personnel: S. E. Schlarbaum, J. T. Ammons, D. E. Deyton, A. E. Houston, D. W. Lockwood, C. E. Sams, O. J. Swartz, R. N. Trigiano, and R. A. Cox. > "Virginia Pine Seedling Seed Orchard"
> "Northern Red Oak Open-Pollinated Progeny Test"
> "White Oak Progeny Test"
> "Yellow-Poplar Regional Variation Study"
> "Yellow-Poplar Controlled Pollinated Progeny Test"
> "White Pine Seedling Seed Orchard"
> "Loblolly Pine Seed Source Test"
> "Species Comparison and Provenance Test"
> "Baldcypress/Dawn Redwood Genetic Test"

33. Chinaproducts.com - Where China Trade Begins
Weather Impacting US and China corn crops (Jul 20). Hot, dry weatherin the northwest Corn Belt including much of Iowa, northern
http://www.chinaproducts.com/eng2/content/contf551.phtml

34. Questions And Answers
3. How will you prevent a pharmaceuticalcontaining crop from affecting workers,the environment, or other corn crops destined for food use? 4.
http://www.dow.com/plantbio/grow/faq.htm
Growing Pharmaceuticals in Plants
Producing Pharmaceuticals in a New Way

Product Stewardship
Plant Transgenic Technology ... Producing Therapeutics in Plants Questions and Answers
Why use plants to produce pharmaceuticals? Why not use traditional methods?
Why is Dow using corn as the transgenic crop? How will you prevent a pharmaceutical-containing crop from affecting workers, the environment, or other corn crops destined for food use? How do you know that a human allergen will not be present in a pharmaceutical that you derive from plant material?
Why use plants to produce pharmaceuticals? Some of the pharmaceuticals under development now will be producible only by plant-based technology. There is not enough manufacturing capacity to produce by other means. And the efficiency and cost of production will expand future therapeutic possibilities for patients and their doctors. For some conditions that could be treated with protein-based therapeutics, current treatment options are restricted because of a medicine's high production cost or high dosage requirements. Plant-based production is a way to make some medicines more available to patients who need them in higher dosage levels. The benefits of plant-based production include:
  • Accommodation of a wide range of protein types, and unique cellular machinery that can enable production of certain novel therapeutic proteins.

35. Teaching Treasures Corn Project Page
Farmers grow corn crops for animals too. Below is an essay from Jemima who wroteus a story about corn. What is sorghum? How do pests effect corn crops?
http://teachingtreasures.com.au/corn_project.html
CORN European explorers sailed across the Atlantic to new countries. When they found the New World of North, Central and South America they not only discovered gold and silver they also found maize (corn). Christopher Columbus took maize back to Europe and from then on people started growing corn for themselves and their animals. In many tropical and subtropical countries corn is the main food people eat. It is eaten as a vegetable or ground into flour or cornmeal. Corn needs lots of sunshine to grow properly. It will grow in cool, mild or hot climates as long as there is plenty of sun. There are lots of varieties of corn and they have different colours too. Some corn is yellow, golden, red or black, striped, speckled or spotted. Locusts are often a major pest to corn growers. Huge swarms of over 50 billion insects can come and destroy a farmer's crop in no time, they strip the plants of their leaves and stems. Locusts plagues often cause famine and starvation in some countries. Corn is a beautiful vegetable to eat if steamed or boiled. Not only humans eat corn. Farmers grow corn crops for animals too. Below is an essay from Jemima who wrote us a story about corn. If you like corn or would like to know more about corn and how to grow it, how to store it, what diseases attack corn etc then this project is for you. Read Jemima's story and then tackle your own. Questions are given to help you along with your project. You can use these to research about corn or find out your own facts from library books or the Internet. Make sure you ask an adult before searching the net. Not all web sites are suitable for children.

36. PNAS -- News Archive120202
Limits on corn crops genetically engineered to produce the insecticidal toxin Bacillusthuringiensis (Bt) may help maintain the longterm utility of similarly
http://www.pnas.org/misc/archive120202.shtml
PNAS News Archive: December 2 - December 6, 2002
Selected articles appearing in PNAS the week of December 2
High Altitude Living, Ethiopian Style
from December 5 50-Year-Old Math Problem Solved from December 4 Managing Insect Resistance to Engineered Crops
from December 3 Culture Key to New Rice Hybrid from December 2 Memory Genes Identified from December 2 Tiny Fossils Reveal Large-Scale Climate Change
from December 2 News Archive Index This Week in PNAS Information for Journalists High Altitude Living, Ethiopian Style
Huts in the high-altitude Ambaras Region of the Semien Mountain National Park in North Gondar, Ethiopia. Ethiopians living at high altitudes have apparently adapted to low oxygen levels differently than similar populations in the Andes and the Tibetan plateau. As altitude increases, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere decreases. With fewer oxygen molecules in every breath, a smaller percentage of red blood cells' hemoglobin actually carries oxygen. For travelers to high altitudes, such as mountain climbers, this can bring on potentially fatal altitude sickness. Populations indigenous to high altitudes, however, have adapted to the lower concentrations of oxygen. A well-studied Andean population has an elevated concentration of hemoglobin to compensate for the reduced oxygen carrying capacity. In contrast, hemoglobin concentration is not elevated in Tibetans, who are able to cope with low oxygen saturation. In PNAS this week

37. Washington's Five Farms: Crops: Corn
Crops Corn, (27k). Corn was a staple crop for almost all Americanfarmers during the colonial period. The plant had many purposes
http://www.mountvernon.org/pioneer/farms/corn.html
Crops: Corn Corn was a staple crop for almost all American farmers during the colonial period. The plant had many purposes; the kernels provided food and the leaves and stalks could be used as fodder for livestock. The husks were often used to make brooms. Even the cobs could be used for fires, or for an even more practical purpose in the "necessary" or outhouse. Corn was Washington's second major crop, grown primarily for home use to feed the slaves and other workers on the plantation. It also provided food for his own household. Learn more about how corn was grown at Mount Vernon by following the planting cycle below. Spring Summer Fall Winter ... Internship Information For further information, Email Mount Vernon

38. Land And Livestock Post>Crops
One possible exception is the karner blue butterfly, an endangered species that feedson lupine plants that could show up near corn crops in northern Wisconsin
http://www.landandlivestockpost.com/crops/072501btcornokayformonarchs.htm
Home TheEagle.com Aggiesports.com Subscribe ... Weather July 25, 2001 EPA says biotech corn appears safe for monarch butterflies
By PHILIP BRASHER
AP Farm Writer
While there is a small chance that one in 100,000 monarch caterpillars could be affected by toxic corn pollen, research suggests even those larvae will mature into healthy butterflies, the agency reported.
The agency has declined to release the data because of confidentiality claims by biotech companies involved in the research. Agency officials said they hoped to release the data before the Sept. 30 deadline for renewing the Bt corn licenses.
Critics of the biotech industry said the agency should not renew the registrations until it has released the research data and allowed the public to review and comment on it.
But she said the agency was not justified in allowing the continued planting of a third, more toxic type of Bt corn, developed by Syngenta. Syngenta voluntarily dropped the product but has been given until 2003 to phase out its use.
Another type, known as StarLink, was withdrawn from the market last year after it was discovered in food products without being approved for human consumption. It is the only Bt corn variety not approved for food use.

39. The State PIRGs' Campaign On Genetically Engineered Foods
Consumer and Environmental Groups Demand EPA Delay ReRegistration of All GeneticallyEngineered Bt corn crops Cite Failure to Conduct Critical Health Test.
http://www.pirg.org/alerts/route.asp?id2=4810

40. The State PIRGs' Campaign On Genetically Engineered Foods
00. Consumer And Environmental Groups Demand EPA Delay ReRegistrationOf All Genetically Engineered Bt corn crops 10/20/00. Genetically
http://www.pirg.org/alerts/route.asp?id2=4793

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