MUKONO, Uganda — Lynet Nalugo dug a cassava tuber out of her field and sliced it open.Inside its tan skin, the white flesh was riddled with necrotic brown lumps, as obviously diseased as any tuberculosis lung or cancerous breast.
“Even the pigs refuse this,” she said.
The plant was what she called a “2961,” meaning it was Variant No. 2961, the only local strain bred to resist cassava mosaic virus, a disease that caused a major African famine in the 1920s.
But this was not mosaic disease, which only stunts the plants. Her field had been attacked by a new and more damaging virus named brown streak, for the marks it leaves on stems.
That newcomer, brown streak, is now ravaging cassava crops in a great swath around Lake Victoria, threatening millions of East Africans who grow the tuber as their staple food.
Although it has been seen on coastal farms for 70 years, a mutant version emerged in Africa’s interior in 2004, “and there has been explosive, pandemic-style spread since then,” said Claude M. Fauquet, director of cassava research at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis. “The speed is just unprecedented, and the farmers are really desperate.”
Continue reading ‘Battling a Virus Ravaging East Africa’s Cassava Crops – New York Times’
Monthly Archive for May, 2010
By CHRIS HAMILTON, Staff WriterState Commission on Water Resource Management Chairwoman Laura Thielen on Friday called the panel’s decision last week to put millions of gallons of water a day back into East Maui’s streams "groundbreaking."
For more than 125 years, Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. has diverted water from the East Maui watershed for its sugar cane cultivation in Central Maui. Maui County also uses stream water to supply 10,000 customers Upcountry, including farmers and ranchers.
In a statement issued by the state Department of Land and Natural Resources, which Thielen also heads, she called Tuesday’s 5-1 vote during a Paia meeting "a flexible approach that meets most of the needs of competing water demands."
The commission’s decision also "strongly emphasized responsible management of public trust resources," Thielen said. For the first time, HC&S must monitor and report water in its irrigation system to the state. And Maui County must fix its leaky Waikamoi flume within three years, a process already under way.
"Maui County and HC&S need to make the necessary investments to repair existing infrastructure and to develop responsible and reliable alternative water sources to meet their critical domestic and agricultural water needs," Thielen said.
Continue reading ‘Thielen: Water decision meets most demands – The Maui News’
Hawaii and Related Agriculture Daily Charts for the week ending 05-28-2010

The annual charts have bee updated. CLICK HERE to view.
The 360 day comparative price, line and histogram charts, page has been updated also. CLICK HERE to view.
Maui Land and Pineapple (MLP) 05-28-2010

Whole Food Markets (WFMI) 05-28-2010

ML Macadamia Orchards LP (NNUT) 05-28-2010

Alexander and Baldwin (ALEX) 05-28-2010

Monsanto (MON) 05-28-2010

Syngenta (SYT) 05-28-2010

DUPONT E I DE NEM (DD) 05-28-2010

Continue reading ‘Hawaii and Related Agriculture Daily Charts for the week ending 05-28-2010′
Hui o Ko’olaupoko and KEY Project have partnered to host an educational watershed tour to help empower people to become familiar with them and to take actions to improve them.The tour is from 9 a.m. to noon June 12 at KEY Project, 47-200 Waihe’e Road.
The Waihe’e Watershed walk includes a visit to the wetland at the mouth of Waihe’e Stream, a historic house, lo’i sites in Waihe’e Valley and a hike to a nearby waterfall.
Space is limited and reservations are required; call 381-7202.
Participants should wear long pants, comfortable hiking shoes and sun protection. Bring water, lunch or snack, insect repellant and a camera.
Groups to host Waihee watershed tour June 12 | honoluluadvertiser.com | The Honolulu Advertiser
PAIA — State Commission on Water Resource Management members reached a historic compromise late Tuesday night, returning some water to six East Maui streams, but leaving both sides in the water dispute dissatisfied.Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar General Manager Chris Benjamin called it "another bite from the apple," noting that the commission’s action came in addition to losing millions of gallons a day in eight other streams in a commission decision two years ago. HC&S also is awaiting a contested case ruling that could mean that Hawaii’s last sugar producer will lose another 34.5 million gallons a day in the Central Maui Na Wai Eha, or four great streams, debate.
The complainants’ attorney, Alan Murakami, of Native Hawaiian Legal Corp., immediately called for — and had recognized — a contested case hearing request the moment the proceedings ended. That means the plaintiffs will seek binding arbitration for another, more favorable result.
The commission voted to restore water to four streams only in the wet season, Waikamoi, West and East Wailuaiki and Waiohue, with 1.68 million gallons per day, 2.46 mgd, 2.39 mdg and 2.07 mdg, respectively. In the dry season, West and East Wailuaiki and Waiohue will get 0.26 mgd, 0.13 mgd and 0.06 mgd, respectively.
Continue reading ‘Compromise decision reached on East Maui water diversion – The Maui News’
WAILUKU – Nearly six months after recommending that Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. restore water to only one of 19 streams in East Maui, staffers for the state Commission on Water Resource Management have changed their minds – at the direction of balance-seeking commissioners in the heated controversy.If commissioners follow the advice signed off by Deputy Director Ken Kawahara, HC&S will have to return water to a total of 14 of 27 streams in the East Maui watershed. Kawahara’s 64-page staff report advocates that six streams get some of their water back, totaling 10.46 million gallons a day.
The report was issued in time for a meeting at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Paia Community Center, where a number of decisions could be made. It’s a continuation of a meeting held in December when commissioners asked the staff and different sides to come back with more information and new compromises.
Since the public will be given an opportunity to testify and all the sides are asked to give presentations about their own recommendations, two additional meetings are scheduled for June 16 and June 21. The last meetings drew more than 100 speakers a day.
Continue reading ‘Stream study pushes for more water restoration – The Maui News’
During a good winter, when water levels remain high at the Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge, 120 or more endangered Hawaiian coot nests have been counted at the coastal wetland.This year, with the leeward side of Maui suffering extreme drought conditions, only a handful of nests were found at the north Kihei pond, according to refuge Manager Glynnis Nakai.
Low water levels also discouraged nesting by endangered Hawaiian stilts, she said.
There’s no telling whether the drought will have a long-term impact on native bird populations.
"We can only hope that they are traveling to Kanaha Pond or other islands where there is sufficient habitat," Nakai said.
Continue reading ‘Birds steer clear of arid Maui coast – The Maui News’
In the days after the immensity of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico became clear, some Nature Conservancy supporters took to the organization’s Web site to vent their anger."The first thing I did was sell my shares in BP, not wanting anything to do with a company that is so careless," wrote one. Another added: "I would like to force all the BP executives, the secretaries and the shareholders out to the shore to mop up oil and wash the birds." Reagan De Leon of Hawaii called for a boycott of "everything BP has their hands in."
What De Leon didn’t know was that the Nature Conservancy lists BP as one of its business partners. The Conservancy also has given BP a seat on its International Leadership Council and has accepted nearly $10 million in cash and land contributions from BP and affiliated corporations over the years.
"Oh, wow," De Leon said when told of the depth of the relationship between the nonprofit group she loves and the company she hates. "That’s kind of disturbing."
Continue reading ‘Nature Conservancy faces potential backlash from ties with BP’
Hawaii and Related Agriculture Daily Charts for the week ending 05-21-2010

The annual charts have bee updated. CLICK HERE to view.
The 360 day comparative price, line and histogram charts, page has been updated also. CLICK HERE to view.
Maui Land and Pineapple (MLP) 05-21-2010

Whole Food Markets (WFMI) 05-21-2010

ML Macadamia Orchards LP (NNUT) 05-21-2010

Alexander and Baldwin (ALEX) 05-21-2010

Monsanto (MON) 05-21-2010

Syngenta (SYT) 05-21-2010

DUPONT E I DE NEM (DD) 05-21-2010

Continue reading ‘Hawaii and Related Agriculture Daily Charts for the week ending 05-21-2010′
Maui Land & Pineapple Co. Inc. topped the list of Biggest Percentage Price Decliners among common stocks on the New York Stock Exchange at midday.
Maui Land & Pineapple, Red Robin Gourmet Burgers: Biggest Price Decliners (MLP, RRGB) – WSJ.com
PAIA – The state Commission on Water Resource Management will take up a petition next week to set new instream-flow standards for 16 East Maui streams.The panel will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Paia Community Center, where it could render a final decision in the ongoing dispute over East Maui stream water, much of it now diverted by ditches to irrigate Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. fields in Central Maui.
The meeting will continue hearings held in December to determine how much water the sugar plantation and Maui County can continue to take from the East Maui watershed. The county Department of Water Supply takes the water for domestic use by residents.
Decisions that come out of the meeting could have long-lasting impacts on all the parties involved. Previously, commissioners had asked the sides to come up with compromises to share the surface water resource, such as fixing leaky ditches and restoring water to streams in the rainy winter months.
The agenda for Tuesday’s meeting sets aside time for presentations from the state water commission staff, the Nahiku Community Association, Native Hawaiian Legal Corp., HC&S and county Department of Water Supply.
The commission, which is part of the Department of Land and Natural Resources, also will accept public testimony. If there is not time on Tuesday to make a final decision, the commission is tentatively scheduled to reconvene on June 16 and July 21, according to the agenda released Wednesday.
The long-fought battle over East Maui’s stream water has pitted environmentalists and Native Hawaiian taro farmers against HC&S, Maui County and Upcountry farmers and ranchers.
The water commission has already required HC&S to partially restore millions of gallons a day to several streams on the western half of the East Maui watershed.
With Maui still in a 3-year-old drought, HC&S has said that further claims on available surface water would hurt the company and jeopardize more than 800 agricultural jobs.
WAILUKU – A U.S. Geological Survey study 4 years in the making and released this week describes the effects of taking millions of gallons of water daily from "the Four Streams" of Na Wai Eha that originate in the West Maui Mountains.USGS also presented a complex matrix showing the amounts of stream water needed to return to each of the Central Maui streams to revitalize flora, fauna and aquatic life; to recharge the aquifer and to promote taro growing. The report also details the amount of water necessary to resume mauka-to-makai, or mountain-to-ocean stream flow, something not seen for more than a century of stream diversions to irrigate sugar crops.
"The idea is to give people and the commissioners the tools to understand the effects of a decision to divert water and adjust those diversions," said USGS hydrologist Delwyn Oki, who presented the findings of his 176-page report to about 50 people in Maui Economic Opportunity’s classroom Tuesday night.
Continue reading ‘USGS releases report on Na Wai Eha – The Maui News’
NEW YORK (TheStreet) — Through the first months of 2010, the Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF(MOO) has been punished as a storm of bad earnings reports and sliding food prices pressures the fund below its 200-day moving average, but this slide may not be over.
At the close of 2009, MOO was lauded by many as the go-to fund for investors looking for a chance to play a fertilizer industry turnaround in 2010. At the time, the global economy was well on the road to recovery and growth forecast in China’s markets was seen as a catalyst for food demand. In order to keep hungry mouths fed, farmers would need to step up yields, providing the fertilizer industry with an ideal window for growth.
Agricultural chemical companies make up more than 45% of MOO’s total portfolio, and with Potash of Saskatchewan(POT) and Mosaic(MOS) in the top-10 holdings, MOO appeared well equipped for any such windfall.
Unfortunately the first months of the year have passed with no such boost. Although names including Terra Industries(TRA), CF Industries(CF), Bunge(BG) and Vale(VALE) grabbed headlines when M&A activity heated up early in the year, any benefits from their respective deals have long been wiped away as investors focus on debt issues coming to a head in the eurozone and economic tightening in China.
Rather than living up to the optimistic forecasts for the fertilizer industry, POT and MOS have tumbled 6% and 19%, respectively, in 2010. Once bright, MOO’s future is now clouded in uncertainty.
Continue reading ‘Agribusiness Bulls Led to Slaughter | TheStreet.com’
Martin & MacArthur and Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods are launching a partnership to promote re-forestation of koa in Hawaii.
With every purchase of Martin & MacArthur furniture beginning Thursday, a new koa tree will be planted on the Big Island in the customer’s honor.
Additionally, for $59, customers may also fund the planting of a new koa tree, receiving a certificate of planting and naming rights to the tree.
The customer will receive a certificate recognizing the koa tree planted in honor of anyone or any event they designate. This certificate will also note the unique radio frequency identification code and GPS coordinates for this tree, enabling customers to track the exact location of the tree using mapping Web sites.
"While koa is not an endangered wood, we want to do our part in returning this historic land to lush koa forest," explains Michael Tam, Martin & MacArthur CEO. "Now our customers can directly help re-forest koa here in Hawaii."
Form 8-K for MAUI LAND & PINEAPPLE CO INC
Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
Item 5.07 Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
On May 13, 2010, Maui Land & Pineapple Company, Inc. (the "Company") held its 2010 annual meeting of shareholders, or the Annual Meeting. Proxies for the Annual Meeting were solicited pursuant to Regulation 14A under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The number of shares of the Company’s common stock, or the Common Stock that were outstanding as of March 12, 2010, which was the record date for the Annual Meeting, was approximately 8,518,033. The final results of the voting at the Annual Meeting are as follows:
Proposal 1: To amend the Company’s Restated Articles of Association to change the number of members of the Board of Directors to not less than five (5) nor more than nine (9), and to declassify the Board of Directors.
Shares voted for: 7,535,426 Shares voted against: 43,656 Shares abstained: 17,685 Broker Non-Votes: 0Proposal 2: Election of Directors to serve for a one-year term or until their successors are elected and qualified if Proposal No. 1 is approved:
Shares Voted Shares Broker For Withheld Non-Votes Stephen M. Case 5,972,951 60,694 1,563,122 Warren H. Haruki 5,971,766 61,879 1,563,122 David A. Heenan 5,575,123 458,522 1,563,122 Kent T. Lucien 5,971,401 62,244 1,563,122 Duncan MacNaughton 5,972,571 66,154 1,563,122 Arthur C. Tokin 5,972,571 61,074 1,563,122 Fred E. Trotter III 5,967,637 66,008 1,563,122Proposal 3: Election of Directors to serve for a three-year term or until their successors are elected and qualified if Proposal No. 1 is not approved:
Shares Voted Shares Broker For Withheld Non-Votes David A. Heenan 5,701,813 331,832 1,563,122 Kent T. Lucien 5,970,251 63,394 1,563,122 Arthur C. Tokin 5,966,446 67,199 1,563,122Proposal 4: To amend the Company’s Restated Articles of Association to authorize an additional 20,000,000 shares of the Common Stock:
Shares voted for: 7,139,064 Shares voted against: 416,117 Shares abstained: 41,586 Broker Non-Votes: 0Proposal 5: Ratification of Deloitte & Touche LLP as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2010:
Shares voted for: 7,543,956 Shares voted against: 47,624 Shares abstained: 5,187 Broker Non-Vote: 0
Haliimaile Pineapple Co. employees work to process fresh pineapples Thursday at the company’s renovated Haliimaile plant. The company closed a former Maui Pineapple Co. processing plant in Kahului and moved to Haliimaile to centralize plantings and packing there, said Vice President Rudy Balala. He said the weather has been “nice but kind of dry,” but replanting is on schedule. Haliimaile Pineapple took over about 1,000 acres when Maui Pineapple shut down at the end of the year. The new company handles about 75 tons of fruit per day, but most of it stays in Hawaii, with about 20 percent sold to customers on the Mainland, Balala said.
















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