Eating

Additive (4)
Beverages (179)
Cooking (17)
Eating (15)
Food (545)
Food chain (9)
Food characteristics (1)
Food companies (17)
Food crisis (3)
Food industry (7)
Food safety (18)
Food security (10)
Foods (661)
Fresh food (1)
Grocery store (13)
Healthy food (2)
Nutrition (12)
Pasteurization (1)
Restaurants & cafes (36)
Soy (7)
Soy sauce (1)
Traceability (10)
Vegetable oil (2)
Vegetarianism (12)

Synopsis: 3. food & berverages: Eating:


impactlab_2011 00573.txt

#Anyone who has an apple tree growing in their yard knows how difficult it is to grow one that is worthy of eating straight off the tree.


impactlab_2011 00969.txt

eating markets far larger than the technology industry has historically been able to pursue. Instead of constantly questioning their valuations,


impactlab_2012 01495.txt

#Anyone who has an apple tree growing in their yard knows how difficult it is to grow one that is worthy of eating straight off the tree.


Livescience_2014 01041.txt

and many would not suffer from the Eeeew factor many Westerners associate with eating insects.


popsci_2013 01048.txt

and female rats the death rates for the animals fed GMO corn was two to three times higher than the animals eating non-GMO corn.

GMO-eating females developed more mammary tumors as well as pituitary gland and hormonal abnormalities. GMO-eating males developed significantly more cases of liver damage liver failure

and severe kidney malfunctions. 4. Profit Pro a crop analysis and management company recently released a report that showed staggering nutritional deficiencies in GMO corn


ScienceDaily_2014 01939.txt

of which are aggressive feeders on oak trees in Central europe and might threaten North american oaks in urban


ScienceDaily_2014 16745.txt

and the specialized fig-eating Short-faced bat Centurio senex (C). They then analyzed the models to determine structural strength and mechanical advantage--the efficiency and hardness of the bats'bite.

Nectar feeders have very low mechanical advantage--a trade-off for having long narrow snouts that fit into the flowers in

fig-eating frugivores: E) Artibeus jamaicensis F) Chiroderma villosum; and short-faced bats: G) Phyllops falcatus H) Centurio senex.


ScienceDaily_2014 17070.txt

while short-faced bats have exceptionally short wide palates for eating hard fruits. Species that eat other foods have shaped snouts somewhere in between.

One was the long narrow snout of nectar feeders the second was the extremely short and wide snout of short-faced bats

Nectar feeders have very low mechanical advantage which is a trade-off for having long narrow snouts that fit into the flowers in


WS_1452 00806.txt

and anything else that the eater in question did absorbed not want into his or her body and hold onto it.


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