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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Lupin Logic Number 6, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 6, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
The lupin breeders of Western Australia
Lupin varieties for 1991 by John Gladstones
Prospects for the next few years
Cucumber Mosaic Virus (CMV) testing
Prospects brighten for Koreanmarket by Rory Coffey, Grain Pool of W.A.
1989/90 Pool payments
Horticultural Capability Study Of Soils Adjacent To Plantations At Carnarvon, Western Australia, M R. Wells, J A. Bessell-Browne
Horticultural Capability Study Of Soils Adjacent To Plantations At Carnarvon, Western Australia, M R. Wells, J A. Bessell-Browne
Resource management technical reports
A detailed soil survey and horticultural capability assessment was undertaken over 1,804 ha of land adjacent to existing plantations on levees of the Gascoyne River near Carnarvon. The study provides mapped land resource data and advice in relation to land management and the possibility of further land release for horticulture. In the assessment of horticultural capability primary consideration has been given to the risk of erosion during flood events, to salinity, and to soil drainage conditions.
Lupin Logic Number 5, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 5, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
The 1991 lupincrop starts now with high quality seed
- Why test the seed
- Are farmers using the tests?
- Sample size and cost
Currency fluctuations - efffect on equity by Trevor Lovelle, Grain Pool of WA
Lupin Logic Number 4, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 4, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
Lupin harvesting
- Seed for 1991
- Green radish
- Calculating harvest losses
Deacreasing lupin harvesting losses by Edward Blanchard
- Cutterbar modifications
- Improving crop flow
Stubble survey by Wes Horwood
Seminar
Production and price outlook -1990
Food for thought
Lupin Logic Number 3, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 3, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
Heliothis by Kevin Walden
- Life cycle
- Research
- Walden's prediction for 1990
- Monitoring
- When to spray
- Heliothis - what to spray with
Superphosphate - Not just how much, but how much? where? and with what by Ron Jarvis
- Machinery modification
1989/90 Pool payments
Lupin Logic Number 2, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 2, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
Aphids
- Population increase
- Population decrease
- Aphid species
- Time of attack
- Damage to crop
Stubble handling seeders by Glen Riethmuller
Lupin Marketing by Rory Coffey
- Saudi Arabia
- Japan
- Lupin vs protien by-products
1989/90 Lupin Pool payments
Lupin Logic Number 1, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic Number 1, Peter Nelson
Lupin Logic
Contents
Welcome to the first issue of Lupin Logic
- What's it all about?
- Your help is needed
- Lupin Logic mailing list
Post-mortem on seeding
Grass weed control
Market outlook: Global: supply/demand
Market development: Human consumption update
Reconnaissance Investigation Of Fitzgerald Location 1646 And New Land Adjacent Fitzgerald Location 1998 Mt. Ridley, Tim D. Overheu
Reconnaissance Investigation Of Fitzgerald Location 1646 And New Land Adjacent Fitzgerald Location 1998 Mt. Ridley, Tim D. Overheu
All other publications
No abstract provided.
Phosphorus Retention Of Sandy Horticultural Soils On The Swan Coastal Plain, Ian Mcpharlin, Neil Delroy, Bob Jeffery, Greg Dellar, Maurice Eales
Phosphorus Retention Of Sandy Horticultural Soils On The Swan Coastal Plain, Ian Mcpharlin, Neil Delroy, Bob Jeffery, Greg Dellar, Maurice Eales
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Soils can be ranked according to their phosphorus retention capacity by the phosphorus retention index (PRI). This is the ratio of phosphorus adsorbed by soil to that remaining in solution under a set of standard conditions. Although it is a laboratory measurement, the PRI seems to be a good indication of what happens in practice.
Integrated Control Of Soil Insect Pests Of Potatoes, Stewart Learmonth, John Matthiesson
Integrated Control Of Soil Insect Pests Of Potatoes, Stewart Learmonth, John Matthiesson
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
One of the more difficult aspects of growing potatoes in Western Australia is controlling soil insect pests. These pests have become more troublesome because the highly effective and persistent organochlorine insecticides previously used to control the main soil pests, African black beetle and whitefringed weevil, were deregistered for agricultural use in 1987. Entomologists from the Department of Agriculture and CSIRO in Western Australia are collaborating to develop new management strategies for these pests that rely less on the use of chemical insecticides