Tips from the UMass Extension Landscape, Nursery and Urban Forestry Program on growing witch hazel are cited in an article about growing plants in winter.
News from the Media
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Yes, There Are Plants That Still Bloom in the Dead of Winter
January 4, 2022 -
Here’s the Beef: More Protein, Calories and Fat in Meat Burgers
December 21, 2021Data compiled and analyzed by a team led by Alissa Nolden, UMass food science, compared nutritional aspects of beef and alternative burgers available to U.S. consumers.
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Xing Finds Steam Disinfection of Baby Bottle Nipples Exposes Babies to Micro- and Nanoplastic Particles
December 1, 2021New research from collaborating scientists at UMass Amherst and Nanjing University in China found that steam disinfection of silicone-rubber baby bottle nipples exposes babies and the environment to micro- and nanoplastic particles.
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Fishing Guides React to Shark Depredation on Hooked Fish, Danylchuk Researches
December 1, 2021UMass Amherst researchers have found that anglers, and especially recreational fishing guides, who experienced depredation were more likely to have a negative response towards sharks and were thus more likely to target sharks for additional harvesting.
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Climate Change is Impacting Cranberry Harvest
November 30, 2021Hilary Sandler, extension professor, and director of UMass Cranberry Station, explains challenges to cranberry growers during climate change while interviewed on a national TV news segment. Warmer weather and record rainfall caused by climate change are making the berries grow more slowly.
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Making Cranberries More Resilient To Climate Change
November 30, 2021Hillary Sandler, extension professor and director of the UMass Cranberry Station, is quoted in a story examining the ways that growers are trying to make cranberries more resilient to climate change.
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Ticks Remain a Theat on Cape Cod
November 22, 2021There is a continuing threat of ticks and the danger of the diseases they carry notes that Stephen Rich, microbiology. His tick testing lab recently had to increase prices for having ticks tested for diseases due to an expiration of the grants that helped subsidize the costs.
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UMass Food Science and Agriculture Programs Rank Two of the Best in the World
November 8, 2021UMass Amherst’s food science program and agriculture program were ranked as two of the best in the world, according to the U.S. News & World Report’s 2022 global subject rankings.
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Peak Foilage Affected by Excessive Rain and More
November 8, 2021Rick Harper, environmental conservation, in a TV news story about this year’s excessive fall rain dulling foliage colors, explains that peak foliage time is also happening later.
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Rainy Summer Devastated Mass. Pumpkins and Other Crops
November 1, 2021Genevieve Higgins, UMass Extension Vegetable Program, is quoted in a story about how this year’s record-setting rains in parts of Massachusetts have promoted the growth of pathogens that have devastated crops including pumpkins and cranberries.
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Study Affirms Bright Future for Blue Economy
October 25, 2021UMass Amherst’s Gloucester Marine Station (GMS): Phase 1 conclusions of a study led by the GMS about the importance and impact of the Blue Economy on North Shore communities found that now is the time for the communities to use their unique strengths to build resilient, sustainable and equitable maritime economic development while also promoting and sustaining ocean ecosystem health.
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UMass Amherst Holds Construction Celebration for Cranberry Station Expansion in East Wareham
October 25, 2021A $7.75 million project to expand and modernize the UMass Amherst Cranberry Station, an important research facility for the commonwealth’s cranberry industry, was celebrated Oct. 22 with a construction celebration event at the station in East Wareham, Mass.
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Huge Numbers of Fish-Eating Jaguars Prowl Brazil’s Wetlands
October 13, 2021Todd Fuller, professor and Associate Department Head environmental conservation, is quoted in an article revealing new findings about the unusual flexibility in diet and lifestyle of jaguars in the Brazilian wetlands.
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Drinking Our Way To Sustainability, One Cup Of Coffee At A Time
October 8, 2021Coffee, that savior of the underslept, comes with enormous environmental and social costs. Thanks to a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant of $979,720, Timothy Randhir, University of Massachusetts Amherst professor of environmental conservation, and David King, of the USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station, will embark upon a five-year effort to make Honduran coffee sustainable across environmental, economic and social fronts.
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Locals Can Help Thwart Invasive Jumping Worms Found in Forests, Gardens
October 8, 2021An article describes how local residents can thwart a destructive and invasive species known as jumping worms extensively quotes from fact sheets recently published by the Center for Food, Agriculture and the Environment.
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Winter Prediction on the Amount of Acorns
October 7, 2021Rick Harper, environmental conservation, explains the causes of the current "mast year" for oak trees, resulting in a larger production of acorns.
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Abundant Apple Crops In Massachusetts This Year
October 5, 2021Jon Clements, UMass Extension educator, comments on the abundant apple crop this year in Massachusetts, attributed by growers to the lack of a late Spring frost.
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Water Wars in the Mojave Desert
September 27, 2021Anita Milman, environmental conservation, is quoted in an article examining increasing battles over water usage rights in California’s Mojave Desert.
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Growing Beans in New England
September 16, 2021UMass Extension is quoted in an article about lima beans, saying that “all beans, except lima, are relatively easy to grow in New England.”
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Fruit Research and YouTube Go Well Together
September 8, 2021Jon Clements, UMass Extension, has maintained a YouTube channel since 2006 giving advice and information for fruit growers. To date, he has published 153 videos.