Press Releases
Engineers Create 3D Model to Help Biologists Combat Blue Tongue Virus
A large 3D model of the Blue Tongue virus has been created by WMG
engineering researchers at the University of Warwick that will help
biologists devise new ways to combat the virus and protect millions of
livestock from infection.
Researcher condemns European Commission for turning down boost for biopesticides
University of Warwick researcher Professor Wyn Grant has condemned the European Commission's decision to reject two amendments from the European Parliament designed to help the wider use of biologically based pesticides on European crops.
£600,000 Research Programme to Stop Wipe Out of Key Kenyan Crops
Researchers at the University of Warwick’s plant science department, Warwick HRI, have been given just over £600,000 to help protect two key Kenyan food crops - Kale and cabbage that frequently have complete harvests wiped out by Black Rot.
Warwick Researchers in £6 million programme to help crops cope with climate change
The UK’s main public funder of life science research, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), has today announced that it is to award the University of Warwick over £6 million to undertake research to help crops cope with climate change.
Bureaucracy threatens farmersÂ’ green revolution
Britain could throw away a lead in biopesticides because of outmoded styles of regulation, researchers at a University of Warwick conference have warned today (31 October 2007).
Biopesticides – Green pest control using natural predators such as insects, fungi and bacteria – are the subject of a conference for scientists and industry experts at the University of Warwick this week ‘Biopesticides, the Regulatory Challenge’.
Bacteria Genome Research Could Save Orchards and Assist Blood Transfusions
Research led by the
University Warwick into the genomes of two bacteria could save orchards from a
previously almost incurable disease and also assist in treating complications
arising from human blood transfusions.