This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
Looking for some reading material about farming?
One place to look is
the science magazine of the United States Department of Agriculture. The
descriptions of work by the department's Agricultural Research Service can be
complex. But the monthly magazine, called Agricultural Research, is generally
easy to understand without having to be a scientist.
Subjects in January included how researchers in the state of Mississippi have
identified tens of thousands of genes in catfish. The American industry in
farm-raised catfish is worth billions of dollars. That includes processors, feed
producers and other related industries. Learning the secrets of the catfish
genome could lead to increased quality and production.
Paid subscriptions to Agricultural Research are available for printed copies.
But an electronic version of the magazine is free of charge on the Internet. The
easiest way to find the address is to do a search for the words "Agricultural
Research magazine."
Many universities in the United States have agricultural extension services
that provide information and advice. The Extension Service at Oregon State
University, for example, has a new publication for small farms. This is
available online for free at smallfarms.oregonstate.edu.
The Fruit Growers News is a monthly publication from the Great American
Publishing Company of Sparta, Michigan. Growers get industry news along with
advice and information from experts. Some of the articles can be read for free
at fruitgrowersnews.com.
The Vegetable Growers News, a related publication at
vegetablegrowersnews.com, also offers some of its material free on the Web.
And so does a business magazine from Great American Publishing called
Spudman, Voice of the Potato Industry. It deals with new products and methods
and tells about research. The Web site is spudman.com.
For almost 125 years, Grit was a newspaper produced in Pennsylvania. Now
Grit is a colorful magazine out of Kansas. It deals with many subjects, from how
to care for baby goats to how to choose the right tractor to drive around the
farm. These are just two of the stories in the current Grit. Some articles can
be read free of charge at grit.com.
And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn
Watson. I'm
Steve Ember.
點(diǎn)擊進(jìn)入更多VOA慢速
(來(lái)源:VOA 英語(yǔ)點(diǎn)津姍姍編輯)