Research found that the consumption of vitamins D and K can lower the risk of neurodegenerative disorders.
Tellus Articles
ARS technology helps cotton industry eliminate plastic contamination.
Five years on, the ARSX competition continues to drive scientific innovation
ARS researchers use genetic panel to improve crop quality and marketability
Growing switchgrass in non-irrigated pivot corners may help make farmers’ ends meet
Researchers find eating vegetables improves emotional wellbeing.
ARS researchers are studying the relationships between psychological stress, diet, and health outcomes.
Website provides season guide to Northern and Midwest growers.
ARS researchers are studying how Mormon crickets can be controlled to protect agriculture and natural resources.
Study reveals that invasive pest is attracted to vibration
ARS researchers are collaborating with the University of Alaska Fairbanks on projects focused on Alaskan agriculture.
Research found that taste perception could influence diet quality.
Isochoric freezing is offering the promise of longer-lasting, higher-quality food products.
ARS-funded research helped to empower military families with nutritional knowledge.
Researchers are studying how honey’s bioactive compounds can help against foodborne pathogens.
Researchers have uncovered a promising avenue for enhancing food safety.
ARS researchers tap into the fungi’s potential to ease many farm-to-fork maladies
Researcher develops technique to turn dairy waste products into bioplastic.
Researchers study the pathways of plant disease – and more – through the air.
ARS works with foreign scientists to prevent overseas diseases from spreading to the United States.
Researchers search for solutions to a deadly livestock virus that hides in plain sight.
This year marks the Agricultural Research Service's 70th anniversary.
Researchers train the next generation for the science of upheaval.
The ARS Three Sisters Project plants the seeds of agricultural science careers.
ARS researchers help students understand the world around them.
BlueSTEM, Oklahoma schools are partnering with ARS to cultivate curiosity
Like ‘mad cow,’ chronic wasting disease in deer currently has no cure.
See how ARS researchers are using insects to reduce the presence of Arundo, a fast-growing invasive grass.
A site in the middle of Missouri provides critical agricultural research on the national scale.
ARS researchers are downscaling climate data to improve modeling techniques.
ARS researchers are working on improving fish fillet quality.
ARS researchers look to improve diagnosis, testing, and vaccines for leptospirosis.
Researchers fine-tune taste buds and train discriminating palates.
A new workshop unites practice with research on the beneficial effects of fire.
The black soldier fly can reduce waste, serve as feed, and reduce emissions.
New uses for leftover agricultural products promise more revenue and less waste.
Before you know it, you might be fueling your car from a tree or bale of hay.
Advanced research and technology could squeeze every drop from feedstocks.
A new variety of wheat has shown modest improvements in the plant’s ability to withstand drought.
BRIDGEcereal quickly and accurately analyzes genomic data for cereal crops to improve crops.
Unique antibodies found in camels could be used to produce nanobodies that quickly block pathogens.
Adding catfish bone powder to breading mix increases profits, nutrition, and sustainability
Research and commerce use a two-pronged ‘fork’ approach to deal with invasive fish
The infamous spike protein doesn’t just help spread viruses – it can also be weaponized to stop them.
Small herbivores consider restoration seedlings a delicacy.
ARS joins research project to help organisms survive a drier world.
Scientists repurpose natural chemicals to kill disease-carrying insects.
