Botany One
@botany.one
BlueSky account for https://botany.one the weblog of the Annals of Botany Company. Non-Profit All Science since 1887.
Posts by @alunsalt.bsky.social or @caordonezparra.bsky.social and scheduled well in advance through Buffer.
Posts by @alunsalt.bsky.social or @caordonezparra.bsky.social and scheduled well in advance through Buffer.
Reposted by Botany One
Any historians of science want to jump in to discuss how Friedrich Laibach, a (Jewish, by several accounts) member of the Nazi Party, managed to flourish during and after WWII? Laibach first proposed Arabidopsis as a model organism.
November 4, 2025 at 2:43 PM
Any historians of science want to jump in to discuss how Friedrich Laibach, a (Jewish, by several accounts) member of the Nazi Party, managed to flourish during and after WWII? Laibach first proposed Arabidopsis as a model organism.
Cover Image: Sunflower field in Ukraine. Photo: samudri7 / Canva www.canva.com/photos/MAFcj...
You can read this post on one page at wp.me/pdRZhH-mDp
You can read this post on one page at wp.me/pdRZhH-mDp
War is turning Ukraine’s fertiliser problem into a catastrophe
Long-term declines in nutrients, and soil damage, have been turbo-charged by the Russian invasion. But a new plan may...
wp.me
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Cover Image: Sunflower field in Ukraine. Photo: samudri7 / Canva www.canva.com/photos/MAFcj...
You can read this post on one page at wp.me/pdRZhH-mDp
You can read this post on one page at wp.me/pdRZhH-mDp
Medinets, S. et al. (2025) “Nutrient asymmetry challenges the sustainability of Ukrainian agriculture,” Communications earth & environment, 6(1). Available at: doi.org/10.1038/s432... (FREE)
Nutrient asymmetry challenges the sustainability of Ukrainian agriculture - Communications Earth & Environment
Fertilization use in Ukraine declined sharply following the Ukraine war in early 2022, associated with severe national nutrient deficits and underscoring an urgent need for an integrated nutrient…
doi.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Medinets, S. et al. (2025) “Nutrient asymmetry challenges the sustainability of Ukrainian agriculture,” Communications earth & environment, 6(1). Available at: doi.org/10.1038/s432... (FREE)
Supporting Ukraine’s farmers is critical for food security and prosperity, but this proposal also offers aid to the environment. Surplus nutrients from fertilisers can result in toxic algal blooms, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. A post-war Ukraine could be both rich and healthy. (15/15)
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Supporting Ukraine’s farmers is critical for food security and prosperity, but this proposal also offers aid to the environment. Surplus nutrients from fertilisers can result in toxic algal blooms, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. A post-war Ukraine could be both rich and healthy. (15/15)
“We propose that an Integrated Nutrient Management Plan for Ukraine be incorporated into the agriculture sector recovery under the Ukraine Recovery and Reconstruction (URR) budget, which currently accounts for 10.5% of the total planned URR budget of USD 524 billion.” (14/15)
Updated Ukraine Recovery and Reconstruction Needs Assessment Released
An updated joint Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment estimates that as of 31 December 2024, the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is $524 billion over the next decade.
www.worldbank.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
“We propose that an Integrated Nutrient Management Plan for Ukraine be incorporated into the agriculture sector recovery under the Ukraine Recovery and Reconstruction (URR) budget, which currently accounts for 10.5% of the total planned URR budget of USD 524 billion.” (14/15)
Medinets et al say action is urgent: “Developing such a plan, evidence-backed by our scenario analysis, should not wait until the war is over. While the war makes conditions harder, all the measures listed could already start with appropriate investment.” (13/15)
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Medinets et al say action is urgent: “Developing such a plan, evidence-backed by our scenario analysis, should not wait until the war is over. While the war makes conditions harder, all the measures listed could already start with appropriate investment.” (13/15)
Zhang et al. (2015) show integrated management, blending organic manure with precision-applied synthetic fertilisers, can improve nutrient efficiency. The Medinets study recommends exactly this approach: recycle that wasted manure, apply fertilisers precisely, & restore soil health. (12/15)
Managing nitrogen for sustainable development - Nature
Careful management of nitrogen fertilizer usage is required to ensure world food security while limiting environmental degradation; an analysis of historical nitrogen use efficiency reveals…
www.nature.com
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Zhang et al. (2015) show integrated management, blending organic manure with precision-applied synthetic fertilisers, can improve nutrient efficiency. The Medinets study recommends exactly this approach: recycle that wasted manure, apply fertilisers precisely, & restore soil health. (12/15)
Medinets et al look at modernisation. Modern agriculture treats manure as a waste product not a resource. Livestock farms & crop farms operate separately, making it difficult to recycle nutrients. In Ukraine, this separation means 90% of manure produced, worth $2.2bn, never reaches cropland. (11/15)
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Medinets et al look at modernisation. Modern agriculture treats manure as a waste product not a resource. Livestock farms & crop farms operate separately, making it difficult to recycle nutrients. In Ukraine, this separation means 90% of manure produced, worth $2.2bn, never reaches cropland. (11/15)
Worse, the FAO/World Bank found Ukraine's chernozems were already degraded by poor management and erosion, losing 500 million tonnes of soil yearly. That's 10 tonnes of soil eroded for every tonne of grain produced. The war is turning a chronic problem into a catastrophe. (10/15)
Soil Fertility to Increase Climate Resilience in Ukraine
Ukraine is known as the region’s breadbasket thanks to its black “chernozem” soil. But despite these favorable agricultural conditions, a major challenge today is soil erosion, which results in a…
www.worldbank.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Worse, the FAO/World Bank found Ukraine's chernozems were already degraded by poor management and erosion, losing 500 million tonnes of soil yearly. That's 10 tonnes of soil eroded for every tonne of grain produced. The war is turning a chronic problem into a catastrophe. (10/15)
However, Certini et al. show modern warfare causes soil changes requiring "years or even centuries" to recover. Heavy tanks compact Ukraine's naturally fluffy Chernozem soils. Explosives mix soil horizons. Fuel contaminates farmland. These impacts layer onto decades of erosion damage. (9/15)
The impact of warfare on the soil environment
One of the most dramatic ways humans can affect soil properties is through the performance of military activities. Warfare-induced disturbances to soi…
doi.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
However, Certini et al. show modern warfare causes soil changes requiring "years or even centuries" to recover. Heavy tanks compact Ukraine's naturally fluffy Chernozem soils. Explosives mix soil horizons. Fuel contaminates farmland. These impacts layer onto decades of erosion damage. (9/15)
This natural fertility might make war's environmental damage seem temporary. Craters fill in, vegetation returns, and life resumes. After World War II, European farmlands recovered. It’s easy to assume that Ukraine's soils will simply bounce back after peace, fertilised by the dead. (8/15)
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
This natural fertility might make war's environmental damage seem temporary. Craters fill in, vegetation returns, and life resumes. After World War II, European farmlands recovered. It’s easy to assume that Ukraine's soils will simply bounce back after peace, fertilised by the dead. (8/15)
The fertility comes from Chernozem, "black earth" in Russian & Ukrainian, named as they’re so rich in organic matter they appear nearly black. Covering 60% of the country, these carbon-rich soils store approximately 7% of the planet's total soil carbon. They’re the envy of farmers worldwide. (7/15)
Chernozems
Chernozems are typically found in the long-grass steppe regions of the world, particularly in Eastern Europe and North America (Canada and the USA).
isric.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
The fertility comes from Chernozem, "black earth" in Russian & Ukrainian, named as they’re so rich in organic matter they appear nearly black. Covering 60% of the country, these carbon-rich soils store approximately 7% of the planet's total soil carbon. They’re the envy of farmers worldwide. (7/15)
Ukraine's farms are effectively mining their soil by taking out more nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium in harvests than they're putting back. The war slashed fertiliser use by up to 54%, turning a manageable deficit into a severe threat to the world's most fertile farmland. (6/15)
TRT World - What’s so special about Ukraine’s black soil?
Ukraine was looking to increase grain exports to world markets when Russia launched an assault
www.trtworld.com
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Ukraine's farms are effectively mining their soil by taking out more nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium in harvests than they're putting back. The war slashed fertiliser use by up to 54%, turning a manageable deficit into a severe threat to the world's most fertile farmland. (6/15)
They write: "The combined NPK deficits in 2023 for the three crops exceeded those of any year since 2000"
"We anticipate a substantial further increase in NPK deficits, leading to soil nutrient mining in Ukrainian agriculture, ultimately degrading soils and decreasing yields if the war continues."
"We anticipate a substantial further increase in NPK deficits, leading to soil nutrient mining in Ukrainian agriculture, ultimately degrading soils and decreasing yields if the war continues."
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
They write: "The combined NPK deficits in 2023 for the three crops exceeded those of any year since 2000"
"We anticipate a substantial further increase in NPK deficits, leading to soil nutrient mining in Ukrainian agriculture, ultimately degrading soils and decreasing yields if the war continues."
"We anticipate a substantial further increase in NPK deficits, leading to soil nutrient mining in Ukrainian agriculture, ultimately degrading soils and decreasing yields if the war continues."
Sergiy Medinets and colleagues looked at three key nutrients, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K), for wheat, maize and sunflowers. The authors find a gradual decline in NPK in the soil, then the war started and things changed dramatically. (4/15)
Nutrient asymmetry challenges the sustainability of Ukrainian agriculture - Communications Earth & Environment
Fertilization use in Ukraine declined sharply following the Ukraine war in early 2022, associated with severe national nutrient deficits and underscoring an urgent need for an integrated nutrient…
doi.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Sergiy Medinets and colleagues looked at three key nutrients, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K), for wheat, maize and sunflowers. The authors find a gradual decline in NPK in the soil, then the war started and things changed dramatically. (4/15)
The World Food Programme says that Ukraine’s exports of wheat, sunflower oil, and peas, help feed 400 million people worldwide. The WFP is working to overcome attacks on Black Sea ports, & ship food to Africa & the Middle East. This new study, by Medinets and colleagues finds a new challenge. (3/15)
docs.wfp.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
The World Food Programme says that Ukraine’s exports of wheat, sunflower oil, and peas, help feed 400 million people worldwide. The WFP is working to overcome attacks on Black Sea ports, & ship food to Africa & the Middle East. This new study, by Medinets and colleagues finds a new challenge. (3/15)
Bioengineer.org reports on a new study published in Communications Earth & Environment that shows the war in Ukraine is causing its soils to lose vital crop nutrients. It threatens to leave Ukraine with a long-term drop in crop production, & the repercussions could be felt far beyond Europe. (2/15)
Soil Depletion in Ukraine Poses Risks to Global Food Security Long-Term
Ukraine’s agricultural legacy as the “breadbasket of Europe” faces an unprecedented threat, not merely from the ongoing conflict but from a hidden crisis beneath its soil. Recent research indic
bioengineer.org
November 4, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Bioengineer.org reports on a new study published in Communications Earth & Environment that shows the war in Ukraine is causing its soils to lose vital crop nutrients. It threatens to leave Ukraine with a long-term drop in crop production, & the repercussions could be felt far beyond Europe. (2/15)