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  • Press release - 11/10/2023

    Land Use: Producing More Food and Storing More Carbon

    Doubling food production, saving water, and increasing carbon storage capacity – this may sound paradoxical, but would be theoretically feasible. Reaching this goal, however, would require a radical spatial reorganization of land use. This is the conclusion of researchers from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and the Heidelberg Institute for Geoinformation Technology (HeiGIT) of Heidelberg University.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/landnutzung-mehr-nahrung-produzieren-und-gleichzeitig-mehr-kohlenstoff-speichern
  • Press release - 09/10/2023

    Microalgae: Environmentally friendly and healthy alternative to fish

    Researchers at the University of Hohenheim are working on an alternative to fish consisting of microalgae. Advantage: Microalgae have high quality ingredients and also contribute to carbon storage.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/microalgae-environmentally-friendly-and-healthy-alternative-fish
  • Press release - 27/09/2023

    Raw material requirements for reducing global poverty calculated for the first time

    Researchers at the University of Freiburg quantify the amount of material needed to enable people to live without poverty. 1.2 billion people live in poverty. To lift them out of it, an average of about six tons of raw materials are needed per person and year – in particular minerals, fossil fuels, biomass and metal ores. This is the result of a study by researchers from the Chair of Sustainable Energy and Material Flow Management.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/raw-material-requirements-reducing-global-poverty-calculated-first-time
  • Press release - 26/09/2023

    Local Food Systems: How sustainable are the business models for local food chains?

    Mobile units for processing fruit and vegetables on-site may play an important role in food supply in 2035. The EU’s FOX project investigated the form that such local food chains might take. To this end, Fraunhofer ISI developed future scenarios that could be used to test the viability of business models for regional food processing and distribution.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/local-food-systems-how-sustainable-are-business-models-local-food-chains
  • Press release - 30/08/2023

    Soil Salinity: Wild Grapevine Defends Itself

    Rising sea levels due to climate change and artificial irrigation cause soil salinity to increase. This has a negative impact on agriculture, including viticulture. The plants die, yields decrease. Researchers of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) have therefore studied a wild grapevine of higher salt tolerance. Their goal is to identify the genetic factors that make the grapevine resilient.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/soil-salinity-wild-grapevine-defends-itself
  • Press release - 07/08/2023

    Vegan trend in Europe: In Germany, milk substitutes from plants are most popular alternative

    Germany has the most active market, Southern Europe wants more variety, and people in Poland find dairy substitutes too expensive, according to a recent study by the University of Hohenheim.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/vegan-trend-europe-germany-milk-substitutes-plants-are-most-popular-alternative
  • Press release - 25/07/2023

    Glyphosate impairs learning in bumblebees

    What impacts do agrochemicals have on the ongoing global insect decline? Biologists at the University of Konstanz have found out that aversive learning is impaired in bumblebees exposed to glyphosate. Their study is published in the journal Science of the Total Environment.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/glyphosate-impairs-learning-bumblebees
  • Press release - 21/07/2023

    Biosurfactants might offer an environmentally friendly solution for tackling oil spills

    Can biosurfactants increase microbiological oil degradation in North Sea seawater? An international research team from the universities of Stuttgart und Tübingen, together with the China West Normal University and the University of Georgia, have been exploring this question and the results have revealed the potential for a more effective and environmentally friendly oil spill response.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/biosurfactants-might-offer-environmentally-friendly-solution-tackling-oil-spills
  • Press release - 12/07/2023

    Danger for the world's oceans and biodiversity

    Insightful study with participation from the University of Konstanz warns of human-induced impacts on the marine ecosystem.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/gefahr-fuer-weltmeere-und-biodiversitaet
  • Press release - 10/07/2023

    Freiburg researchers investigate wildlife populations in ten large protected areas in Germany for the first time

    7591 red deer, 3443 roe deer, 4876 wild boar, 36 wolves, 16 lynxes and 227 red foxes: These are the results of the first standardised monitoring of wildlife populations in ten large protected areas in Germany. It was carried out by scientists at the University of Freiburg led by Prof. Dr. Marco Heurich and Dr. Christian Fiderer from the Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/freiburg-researchers-investigate-wildlife-populations-ten-large-protected-areas-germany-first-time
  • Press release - 30/06/2023

    Rain-Retaining Living Wall combines densification with flood protection

    Climate change is causing temperatures to rise and storms to increase. In inner cities, summers are becoming a burden for people. Densification increases the amount of sealed surfaces. Green facades bring more green into cities. If textile storage structures are used, they can even actively contribute to flood protection. The German Institutes of Textile and Fiber Research (DITF) have developed a "Living Wall".

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/rain-retaining-living-wall-combines-densification-flood-protection
  • Press release - 26/06/2023

    How coral reefs can survive climate change

    Astonishing results published from individual projects of the Tara Pacific expedition studying coral reefs – the entire dataset is made publicly available – coordinator is a biologist from the University of Konstanz

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/how-coral-reefs-can-survive-climate-change
  • Press release - 21/06/2023

    Technology Assessment: KIT Advises Bundestag for Another Five Years

    The Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) has been entrusted with the continued operation of the Office of Technology Assessment at the German Bundestag (TAB) in the next five years until 2028. This unanimous decision was taken by the Parliament Committee for Education, Research, and Technology Assessment during today’s meeting (June 21, 2023).

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/Technology-Assessment-KIT-Advises-Bundestag-for-Another-Five-Years
  • Innovative materials - 14/06/2023 A brown, rectangular, wood-based piece of material with black writing "CIBSS".

    Reinventing ‘wood’ with programmable bacteria

    Conserving wood by producing furniture and other objects from wood-based materials with the help of microorganisms? That is exactly what a team of researchers from the University of Freiburg and the Leibniz Institute for New Materials (INM) in Saarbrücken is working on in the DELIVER project. The aim is to create a database of materials with a broad range of controllable properties for various applications that can be produced from wood waste.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/reinventing-wood-programmable-bacteria
  • Press release - 30/05/2023

    Light conveyed by the signal transmitting molecule sucrose controls growth of plant roots

    Team of Freiburg researchers shows how information about the quantity of absorbed light passes from the leaves to the roots. Plant growth is driven by light and supplied with energy through photosynthesis by green leaves. It is the same for roots that grow in the dark – they receive the products of photosynthesis, in particular sucrose, i.e. sugar, via the central transportation pathways of phloem.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/licht-steuert-das-wachstum-von-pflanzenwurzeln-vermittelt-durch-das-signalmolekuel-saccharose
  • Press release - 22/05/2023

    How plants use sugar to produce roots

    Along with sugar reallocation, a basic molecular mechanism within plants controls the formation of new lateral roots. An international team of plant biologists has demonstrated that it is based on the activity of a certain factor, the target of rapamycin (TOR) protein.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/how-plants-use-sugar-produce-roots
  • Press release - 03/05/2023

    Rapeseed makes more than just oil – it’s a source of proteins too

    At the Fraunhofer Center for Chemical-Biotechnological Processes CBP in Leuna, Germany, representatives from politics, research and industry opened a novel pilot plant for the mild processing of rapeseed to increase the added-value potential of rape as a raw material.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/nicht-nur-oel-auch-proteine-aus-raps
  • Press release - 02/05/2023

    Tenure-track professorship for Soft Machines established

    Milana will strengthen the research of the Cluster of Excellence Living, Adaptive and Energy-autonomous Materials (livMatS) in the field and work closely with scientists from the Freiburg Center for Interactive Materials and Bioinspired Technologies (FIT) and the Freiburg Materials Research Center (FMF).

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/tenure-track-professur-fuer-soft-machines-eingerichtet
  • Press release - 26/04/2023

    Simply EGG-genious: Students invent edible packaging from eggshells

    Ready-made meals are ideal for quickly satisfying hunger. However, the quick snacks produce a lot of environmentally harmful plastic waste. To tackle this problem, the student team EDGGY from the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart rolled up its sleeves and developed edible packaging made from eggshells and other plant-based raw materials. And even better: they simply dissolve in the hot water and can be eaten as an additional protein boost.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/Simply-EGG-genious-Students-invent-edible-packaging-from-eggshells
  • Press release - 30/03/2023

    Green composite material made from flax and chitosan

    Composite materials provide stability in aircraft parts, sports equipment, and everyday household items. However, most of these materials have a poor carbon footprint and are not naturally degradable. A more sustainable alternative has been developed by a team from the University of Stuttgart. This completely bio-based composite material is made of flax fibers and the biopolymer chitosan.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/green-composite-material-made-flax-and-chitosan
  • Press release - 01/03/2023

    Mulching time of forest meadows influences insect diversity

    Researchers at the University of Freiburg have examined how mulching at different times affects insect flower-visitors and larvae.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/der-mulchzeitpunkt-von-waldwiesen-beeinflusst-die-insektenvielfalt
  • Press release - 20/12/2022

    Strong and biodegradable

    A polyester plastic of great mechanical stability, which is also easily recyclable and even compostable: Stefan Mecking, chemist at the University of Konstanz, and his research group present a new material.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/strong-and-biodegradable
  • Press release - 08/12/2022

    Tübingen Environmental Researcher Lars Angenent Receives the Leibniz Prize

    Tübingen biotechnologist Lars Angenent is being awarded the Leibniz Prize by the German Research Foundation (DFG) in appreciation of his outstanding work in the field of environmental biotechnology, it was announced in Bonn on Thursday. The DFG said: “In view of climate change and the resulting need to develop a sustainable food, chemistry and energy economy, his work is highly relevant.”

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/tuebingen-environmental-researcher-lars-angenent-receives-leibniz-prize
  • Press release - 08/12/2022

    Leibniz-Prize for Prof. Achim Menges

    The German Research Foundation (DFG) has awarded the 2023 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize to Prof. Achim Menges, head of the Institute for Computational Design and Construction at the University of Stuttgart. The award, which is endowed with EUR 2.5 million, is considered by many the most important research prize in Germany.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/leibniz-preis-fuer-prof-achim-menges
  • With insects to the circular economy - 30/11/2022 Skins of larvae

    InBiRa: Insect biorefinery turns food leftovers into new products

    Insect larvae can convert food leftovers and waste into secondary raw materials for technical products and cosmetics. Researchers are looking to establish an insect biorefinery for this purpose at the Fraunhofer IGB in Stuttgart. The InBiRa project is financed with a total of 3.8 million euros in EU and Baden-Württemberg state funding.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/inbira-insect-biorefinery-turns-food-leftovers-new-products

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