Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Agrigold Reporting – Viruses to Battle Bacteria


Viruses that infect bacteria may prove cleaner alternatives to antibiotics. Most agricultural livestock in the U.S. receive antibiotics to prevent and treat infections that can spread through farms. But this practice kills off healthy bacteria in animals' digestive tracks and pollutes the environment as the animals excrete the medicine. And it may also create bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics in both animals and humans.

Scientists at the College of Veterinary Medicine are developing a better solution. Rodrigo Bicalho, assistant professor of dairy production medicine, is working on an alternative treatment called bacteriophage ('phage') therapy. A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria. They are among the most common biological entities on earth. Bicalho's project, which is funded by the U.S. Department of

Agriculture and the Cornel Center for a Sustainable Future, is focused on finding bacteriophages that can kill bacteria, and creating a cocktail of them that will ultimately replace antibiotic therapy in livestock. But finding a new treatment is not a simple task. There are thousands, perhaps millions, and each one only impacts a specific species and strain of bacteria. "A bacteriophage that is effective against one species of bacteria will not be active against another,' Bicalho said, "This has advantages, because you can target the bacteria you want to kill much more easily."

But to create an effective treatment, Bicalho must find a combination of bacteriophages that will kill a wide range of bacteria strain and species. To develop a broad-spectrum treatment, Bicalho is studying the genotype of common bacteria that infect livestock and the genotypes of the bacteriophages. "We are trying to find genetic markers that can predict what bacteriophages will be effective against a specific bacterium," he explained.

To date, his lab has assembled two large collections of bacteriophages: one collection composed of phages active against the bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which causes respiratory, skin and urinary tract infections in both humans and cattle; and the second composed of phages that are active against E. Coli, which causes gastrointestinal infections. The lab is currently conducting a clinical trial of four bacteriophages to prevent skin infections in New York commercial dairy cattle.

"There is a lot to be learned, but I am confident we can find successful uses for bacteriophages," Bicalho said.

Extracted from Agrigold Swarna Sedyam

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Agrigold Reporting - National farmers’ innovative showcases new inventions


The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has taken the lead in recognizing farmers’ innovations. A National farm innovators meet was organised recently at JSS Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Suttur, Mysore District, Karnataka. About 200 farm innovators (innovative farmers) representing 25 states viz., Maharashtra, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh, Tripura, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Karnataka, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Uttarkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Manipur, Assam, Himachal Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Haryana, Nagaland, Bihar, Mizoram, Rajasthan, Gujarat participated in the meet.

A publication entitled “Farm Innovators 2010” published by the Division of Agricultural Extension, ICAR, New Delhi was also released. Each farmer was allotted 5 minutes to explain his/her innovation or modification of existing technology/practice with power point presentation. Farmers explained their brief bio-data, name of innovation, description of innovation and practical utility of innovation.

Questions and answers were allowed immediately after farmers’ presentations in each session for discussion. Each session was concluded with Chairman and Co-chairman’s remarks.

Extracted from Agrigold Swarna Sedyam 

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Modernised Agriculture is the Need of the Hour


At the Farmers Awareness meet, Joint Director of Agriculture, Kadapa Ramaswami Reddy Stressed the need of modernized agriculture to make agriculture a profitable vocation. The meet was held in Agri Gold Indigenous Agricultural Field at Agraharam in Porumamilla Mandal. He advised the farmers to use organic manures to get best yields and told them not to yield to attractions of money to sell the fertile lands to real estate promoters.

A.V.S.N.Rao (Kumar) Vice-Chairman of Agri Gold Group exhorted the farmers to dedicate their efforts to agriculture and reap profits. He said that Agri Gold presents reward of ten thousand rupees to those model farmers selected by the district agricultural officers. Field managers, JDs, Agri Gold staff and the farmers as well as the best farmer awardees attended.

Extracted from AgriGold Swarna Sedyam