LAC Soil Carbon 2025

At the end of June, RI will attend the Latin American and Caribbean Soil Carbon Research Symposium. As a long standing member of the 4 per 100 initiative, and having a seat as Vice-presidents of the initiative, we will participate in this meeting  to raise awareness of the international 4 per 1000 initiative and the soil carbon international research consortium recognise the essential role of agriculture for food security and food sovereignty, exchange experiences among Latin American and Caribbean countries on the role of soil in relation to climate and promote the importance of traditional practices and knowledge for regenerative soil management, ecosystem health and biodiversity.

Vapor Pressure Deficits – Regenerating the Local Climate

Avoiding bare ground by maximizing vegetation cover is crucial for reducing VPDs and increasing SOM. SOM enhances the soil's ability to capture and retain rainfall, improve fertility, and prevent the erosion of fertile topsoil during heavy rain events. Adopting these regenerative organic practices is essential for reversing the trend of increasing adverse weather events and ensuring a productive future for our farming and ranching systems, as well as providing our civilization with healthy, nutritious, poison-free food. We can avoid repeating the past's failures.

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How Agroecology Is Quietly Formulating Food Ingredients of The Future

ALTHOUGH formal advertisements might be spreading the impression that fast foods are taking over African food systems, social media channels are showing how future-oriented African food scientists and indigenous food formulators are quietly using agroecology ingredients to alter the global food landscape.

Native Colored Cotton Rescue Project in la Costa Chica of Oaxaca, Mexico

Ñu’u Ndito (living Earth in Mixteco) is a group of 25 farmers from six municipios in the Costa Chica cultivating and conserving native colored cotton along with native corn and other food crops. The work began in 2011 with the dual purpose of re-learning sustainable farming practices and rescuing native cotton for use by artisans who identify with the colored fiber.

34 Ways to Raise Nature-Loving Kids

Kids can’t help but explore when they’re in natural areas. They climb on fallen logs, leap over tiny streams, and wander through tall grasses. Their imaginations are as activated as their senses. These kinds of experiences open new worlds to them. In Sharing Nature with Children, Joseph Cornell writes, ‘It is very helpful—almost essential—for people at first to have startling, captivating experiences in nature. This kind of first contact extinguishes for a moment the self-enclosing preoccupations and worries that keep us from feeling our identity with other expressions of life. From that release into expanded awareness and concern, love naturally follows. And memories of moments of love and expansion act as reminders of, and incentives to, a more sensitive way of living.’

Racial Disparities in Exposure to Ag Pesticides Documented while Trump Administration Dismantles Programs

A study in Birth Defects Research bolsters existing evidence that agricultural workers, and specifically Hispanic workers in California, are disproportionately bearing the burden of pesticide exposure. Caroline Cox, formerly of the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, and Jonathan K. London, PhD of the University of California, Davis, examine how currently-used agricultural pesticides unequally affect communities along racial and ethnic gradients. Ms. Cox is a member of Beyond Pesticides’ board.