Coffee’s story starts in the lush highlands of Ethiopia, the natural homeland of the delicate Coffea arabica plant. Although they are called “coffee beans”, the plant is not a legume ...
The plants that provide most of the world's coffee supply emerged around 600,000 to 1 million years ago when two other species of coffee cross-pollinated in the forests of Ethiopia, scientists ...
Researchers have mapped the DNA genome of the Coffee arabica plant, which is the only variety grown in Australia. It means scientists have figured out which genes create each coffee trait.
Arabica coffee is the most economically important coffee globally and accounts for 60% of coffee products worldwide. But the ...
Click to download / print the image. Label the parts of a plant. imageLabel the parts of a plant Click to download / print the image. Then use it to label the parts of a plant.
Arabica beans account for the vast majority of beans grown and roasted around the world. The plant originated in Ethiopia but Brazil is the largest exporter. Arabica's popularity is partly due to ...
Over 80% of judges could not tell the difference between Stenophylla and the world's most popular coffee, Arabica, in blind tastings, the researchers reported in the journal Nature Plants.
Managed Print was identified as an opportunity to save the institution and its students money. The Managed Print initiative seeks to reduce waste, increase efficiency, create accountability, ...
npj Science of Plants is an online Open Access journal dedicated to publishing high quality research in both fundamental and translational aspects of plant-related biological science.
Oct. 3, 2024 — Pockets of microbes have been found living within a sealed fracture in 2-billion-year-old rock. The rock was excavated from the Bushveld Igneous Complex in South Africa, an area ...
Senior Editor: Jun Lyu, PhD, Springer Nature, China. Before joining Nature Plants in 2014, Jun received his PhD from the Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, where he studied ...
(Bloomberg) -- A cup of coffee is set to get even pricier as persistent supply disruptions push costs for premium arabica beans to the highest in 13 years. Most Read from Bloomberg Pipeline Fire ...