News
10h
The East African on MSNHow aflatoxin threatens Tanzania’s food security?Food crop health experts estimate that Tanzanian farmers incur cumulative losses of about $203 million per year due to ...
While operators have historically served Western cuisines, a handful of modern safaris are offering local cuisines and native ...
1d
AllAfrica on MSNAfrica: What the Bees Are Telling Africa #WorldBeeDayGuest Column - Bees are speaking to us — not with sound, but through their presence, their absence, and their steady ...
Coffee growers across East Africa are hopeful the 2024-25 harvest will bring a recovery to communities in most regions ...
South African exports of various fruits, including apples and grapes, to Tanzania will be hit. Meanwhile, landlocked Malawi, ...
7d
Al Jazeera on MSN‘We need our bananas back’: Traders left in limbo amid Malawi-Tanzania spatTrade dispute between the southeast African neighbours left Malawian fruit sellers struggling for produce and income.
From midnight, Tanzania ban di entry of all agricultural imports from Malawi and South Africa in response to wetin e see as restrictions on some of im exports. South Africa don for years ban di entry ...
How can the genetic makeup of a cow help mitigate climate change? The International Livestock Research Institute’s Anthony ...
8h
The Citizen on MSNTanzania's beekeeping sector booms amidst growth in market access, reformsTabora. Tanzania’s beekeeping sector is undergoing transformation as policy reforms, technical assistance and access to ...
5h
allAfrica.com on MSNAfrica: Rabies Still Kills Thousands in Africa, But It's Entirely PreventableRabies remains one of the world's oldest and deadliest zoonotic diseases. Yet, with timely intervention, it is entirely ...
6d
The Citizen on MSNTanzania launches five-year plan for prison food self-sufficiencyTanzania Prisons Service, has developed a strategic framework to expand irrigation farming to boost food production. Dar es ...
South Africa’s wattled cranes are no longer critically endangered: why the birds’ numbers are rising
The size of the wattled crane population in KwaZulu-Natal – fewer than 400 birds – makes it incredibly vulnerable to catastrophic events, such as disease. This would put the species at risk of ...
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