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Eat This, Riverside: Experimental Pomegranates!

This week, as pomegranate season peaks and trees all over Riverside are bowed over with heavy fruit, Seth learns about a project at UCR that aims to diversify the world of pomegranates with research into varied and delightful cultivars beyond the Wonderful.

Careers for growth and greener futures

Climate change stats are alarming. Around 3.6 billion people live in areas highly susceptible to extreme weather events. Approximately 250,000 additional deaths per year will come from undernutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and heat stress alone, according to the World Health Organisation. In an era of environmental challenges and the pressing need for sustainable solutions, the landscape...

University of California, Riverside: Equipping tomorrow’s plant biologists with a cutting-edge education

Born in Colombia and raised in Costa Rica and San Diego, Danilo has harboured a lifelong fascination with plants. His interest in flora, particularly epiphytic plants — those that grow on the surface of other plants — inspired him to pursue a career in plant biology. This led him to choose the Department of Botany...

Katie Dehesh on how to be POWERFUL

Professor Katayoon “Katie” Dehesh knows all about planting and replanting roots — in biology and in life.

The NASA Deep Space Food Challenge

Martha L. Orozco-Cárdenas (Co-Principal Investigator), Director of the Plant Transformation Research Center (PTRC-BPS), and Professor Feng Jiao of Washington University in St. Louis, won $250,000 as runners-up in NASA’s prestigious Deep Space Food Challenge. The team developed a novel food production system utilizing artificial photosynthesis described in Nature Food.

Century-old experiment secures beer and whiskey’s future

Thanks to an experiment started before the Great Depression, researchers have pinpointed the genes behind the remarkable adaptability of barley, a key ingredient in beer and whiskey. These insights could ensure the crop’s continued survival amidst rapid climate change.

Free-forming organelles help plants adapt to climate change

Plants’ ability to sense light and temperature, and their ability to adapt to climate change, hinges on free-forming structures in their cells whose function was, until now, a mystery.

‘A whole lot hotter’ for rich people: Research suggests the wealthy’s ‘luxury’ shield against climate change is melting

Dion Kucera and Darrel Jenerette's work on climate change and urban vegetation in the Los Angeles area was featured in an article with Fast Company.

UCR In the News: Norman Ellstrand

Work from 2019 by Norman Ellstrand and Shana Welles on the Salsola ryannii tumbleweed appeared in an NPR article about a recent sighting of a giant tumbleweed.

Q&A With Katayoon Dehesh

Katayoon Dehesh, Ernst and Helen Leibacher Endowed Chair in Botany and Plant Sciences and Director of the Institute for Integrative Genome Biology participated in an interview with the Association of American Universities. The article here spotlighted both her work as a researcher and her personal growth.

How to help save plants from extinction

Louis Santiago is featured in the UCR campus news for his work defining the critical limits plants can survive in response to stresses such as water loss and heat. Santiago's work has implications in identifying rare plant species that are at risk from stressors caused by changing climates.

Luna UCR avocado is one of TIME's '2023 best inventions'

Mary Lu Arpaia and Eric Focht are recognized in TIME magazine's 2023 Best Inventions for the release of their new Luna UCR avocado variety. Botany and Plant Science's Gray Martin, late David Stottlemyer and B.O. "Bob" Bergh were also credited for the decades of work they contributed towards developing the breed.

These Plants Change Color When Exposed to a Pesticide

Sean Cutler and Ian Wheeldon have developed a technique to make the Arabidopsis thaliana plant change color in response to the pesticide azinphos-ethyl. In an article with Wired, they explained the process of harnessing genes in the plant's stress response system to achieve this color change and its possible applications in indicating the presence of...

A report from the groves: UCR horticulturists describe their quest for a better avocado

Mary Lu Arpaia and Eric Focht have bred avocado trees in association with the University of California, Riverside, for decades. In the video below, they describe their quest for a better avocado that resulted in the release this year of the Luna UCR™, a new variety that is the great-grandchild of the Hass. Speaking from...
By DAVID DANELSKI |

Congratulations to 2023 ASPB Award Recipients

The American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB) is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2023 awards, which honor distinction in service, outreach, education, and research. ASPB Innovation Prize for Agricultural Technology Renata Bolognesi, Stanislaw Flasinski, Sergey Ivashuta, Daniel Kendrick, Curtis Scherder, Gerrit Segers Bayer, Chesterfield, Missouri Charles Albert Shull Award José Dinneny Stanford University...
By Sylvia Lee |
Dehesh

NEVERTHELESS, SHE PERSISTED

Katayoon “Katie” Dehesh once had to make an impossible choice: leave her Persian homeland forever to pursue a life of science or stay near family and give up her passion for independence. She knew leaving Iran would not be easy, and she’d have to build her life again from scratch. Nevertheless, she persisted — and...
By Jules Bernstein |

Landscaping for drought: we’re doing it wrong

Despite recent, torrential rains, most of Southern California remains in a drought. Accordingly, many residents plant trees prized for drought tolerance, but a new UC Riverside-led study shows these trees lose this tolerance once they’re watered. One goal of the study was to understand how artificial irrigation affects the trees’ carbon and water use. To...
By JULES BERNSTEIN |

National Academy of Inventors elects UCR faculty as Fellows

UCR Published the Following Article by Jules Bernstein on December 8, 2022. Two UCR faculty have been elected fellows of the National Academy of Inventors, or NAI. They are Sean Cutler, distinguished professor of plant cell biology, and Charles Wyman, distinguished professor of chemical and environmental engineering. NAI fellowship is the highest professional distinction awarded...
By Jules Bernstein |

Scientists classify entire planet’s ecosystems for the first time

A global cross-disciplinary team of scientists has developed the first comprehensive classification of the world’s ecosystems across land, rivers, wetlands, and seas. The ecosystem typology will enable more coordinated and effective biodiversity conservation, critical for human well-being. Distinguished Professor Emerita Janet Franklin became involved in this international effort through her scientific advisory role as a...
By JULES BERNSTEIN |

The no-tech way to preserve California’s state grass

Though it is disappearing, California’s official state grass has the ability to live for 100 years or more. New research demonstrates that sheep and cattle can help it achieve that longevity. Purple needlegrass once dominated the state’s grasslands, serving as food for Native Americans and for more than 330 terrestrial creatures. Today, California has lost...
By JULES L BERNSTEIN |
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