That coffee you slurped this morning? It’s 600,000 years old. Using genes from coffee plants around the world, researchers built a family tree for the world's most popular type of coffee, known to ...
Arabica coffee is a type of coffee plant (the scientific name is coffea arabica). In fact, 60% of the sweet, fragrant coffee we drink comes from the fruit of the arabica plant; the remaining 40% of ...
The key to growing coffee plants that can better resist climate change in the decades to come may lie in the ancient past. Researchers co-led by UB have created what they say is the highest-quality ...
The key to growing coffee plants that can better resist climate change in the decades to come may lie in the ancient past. Researchers co-led by the University at Buffalo have created what they say is ...
The vast majority of coffee grown around the world consists of only two species: arabica (Coffea arabica) and robusta (Coffea canephora). The dependence on only these two species of coffee is proving ...
Arabica coffee is the most economically important coffee globally and accounts for 60% of coffee products worldwide. But the plants it hails from are vulnerable to a disease that, in the 1800s, ...
When you take that first sip of morning coffee, it’s likely there’s little on your mind beyond getting a jolt of caffeine to jumpstart the day. But there’s a lot to learn about what’s brewing inside ...
Ilse Fernanda Ferrari, Giovanna Arcolini Marques, Welington Luis Sachetti Junior, Bárbara Bort Biazotti, Matheus Pena Passos, Julieta Andrea Silva de Almeida, Jorge Maurício Costa Mondego and Juliana ...
That coffee you slurped this morning? It’s 600,000 years old. Using genes from coffee plants around the world, researchers built a family tree for the world’s most popular type of coffee, known to ...
Researchers have traced the origins of arabica coffee, the world's most popular type. Using genes from coffee plants around the world, they found that it dates back to approximately 600,000 years ago.
University at Buffalo researchers have created what they say is the highest quality reference genome to date of the world’s most popular coffee species, Arabica. BUFFALO, N.Y. — The key to growing ...