UC Agriculture and Natural Resources (Audio) UCTV
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- Science
Programs from University of California division of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
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Flooding Orchards to Replenish Groundwater A UC Experiment in Groundwater Replenishment Strategies
The long California drought forced many growers to pump groundwater to irrigate their crops. With the establishment of California's Sustainable Groundwater Management Act replenishment of California's groundwater supplies is of utmost importance. To develop replenishment strategies, Professor Helen Dahlke joins fellow UC Davis researchers, UC Cooperative Extension and California farmers to test the impacts of irrigating almond orchards in the winter to recharge groundwater aquifers and to help manage water resources sustainably. Series: "UCTV Prime" [Science] [Show ID: 32526]
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UC Davis Veterinary Medicine Extension
An overview of the unseen ways that veterinary medicine and its advancement by UC Davis Veterinary Medicine Extension impacts life in California. Series: "UCTV Prime" [Science] [Show ID: 33168]
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Merging Conservation Tillage with Overhead Precision Irrigation
See how California farmers and UC agricultural researchers are working to merge both conservation tillage practices and precision irrigation to save time, labor, and water while reducing the cost of producing crops for California agriculture. Series: "Sustainable California" [Science] [Show ID: 32368]
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Minimum Tillage Systems
Farmers can't control the costs of seed, fertilizers, chemicals, water or the price they can get for their crops - but they can control tillage costs. Learn how California's farmers, ag industry and UC researchers are working together and finding ways to cut costs with minimum tillage practices. Series: "Sustainable California" [Science] [Show ID: 32367]
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Conservation Tillage Dairy Silage Cropping Systems
Explore how California dairy farmers are working together to perfect techniques to maximize the benefits of conservation tillage in producing dairy feed to reduce inputs and costs, increase quality and ensure healthier more productive and sustainable agricultural soils and production. Series: "Sustainable California" [Science] [Show ID: 32363]
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Conservation Tillage Tomato Cropping Systems
With an over 700 percent increase in productivity in the last century, the California tomato industry represents 95 percent of all processing tomatoes produced in the US. See how UC scientists and California farmers continue to develop methods to sustain this productivity, improve soils and reduce water use. Series: "Sustainable California" [Science] [Show ID: 32362]