Researchers find that tiny plastic particles increase the absorption of environmental arsenic and pesticides in lettuce and human intestinal cells, raising new safety concerns about plastic pollution.
Micro- and nanoscale plastic particles can greatly increase how much toxic chemicals enter plants and human cells.
It is seed-starting time. I do not just mean the winter sowing that was discussed in a column a few weeks ago. It is time to do some planting for ...
There have been many important innovations in the produce industry and this trend continues with a novel crop and a new "grow ...
A lettuce producer in northern New Hampshire is closing in on its one-year anniversary in production and already looking to ...
A Mandan senior passionate about gardening recently got a FFA grant to run an indoor community garden that is now freshening ...
Despite the cold, cruel cloak of winter still wrapped tightly around my shoulders, I am taking the first tentative step ...
This is the time of year to transplant and get those early crops such as lettuce, radishes, kohlrabi and cabbages in the garden. Holly Gregor’s third-grade class at St. Anastasia Catholic ...
Longevity salads are all over TikTok, but do they work? Here, an RD weighs in on the benefits and shares a recipe for ...
Skagway’s biggest restaurant is hiring. They need an indoor gardener to tend to their aeroponic lettuce and herb farm. KHNS ...
As concerns grow about the impact of herbicides on manatees, new studies point to water lettuce’s roles in aquatic ecosystems.