Light - fingered chimpanzees are changing
the way subsistence farmers make a living in Africa by causing them to grow different crops and spend more time guarding their goods.
Not exact matches
The winners are Sakhiwe Shongwe and Bonkhe Mahlalela, both 14, and their winning project explores an affordable
way to provide hydroponics to poor
subsistence farmers, enabling them to grow their crops and vegetables in very large quantities and within limited space without using soil.
Access to modern veterinary care matched by an understanding of contemporary animal health and husbandry protocols can help create a pathway for
farmers in rural communities of developing countries to make their
way from
subsistence to productivity and profitability.