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- Specimens by Name (22)
- Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany (13)
- All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023 (8)
- Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications (7)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 79
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Northeast Research Station Watertown, South Dakota Annual Progress Report, 1958, Agricultural Experiment Station, Agronomy Department
Northeast Research Station Watertown, South Dakota Annual Progress Report, 1958, Agricultural Experiment Station, Agronomy Department
Agricultural Experiment Station and Research Farm Annual Reports
This is the 1958 annual progress report for the Northeast Research Station in Watertown, South Dakota. This report is issued by the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station and the South Dakota State College Agronomy and Plant Pathology Department. This report includes information on the 1958 crop season, insect control, small grain variety testing, soybean and sorghum variety testing, corn yield testing, grass and legume testing, plant disease control, potato, soybean, flax, and small grain diseases.
Southeast Research Farm Annual Progress Report, 1958, Agricultural Experiment Station, Agronomy And Plant Pathology Departments
Southeast Research Farm Annual Progress Report, 1958, Agricultural Experiment Station, Agronomy And Plant Pathology Departments
Agricultural Experiment Station and Research Farm Annual Reports
This is the 1958 progress report for the Southeast Research Farm, Agricultural Experiment Station at Menno, South Dakota State College. This document represents the research conducted at the Station during the 1958 crop season including: small grain variety testing, sorghum and soybean variety testing, corn breeding testing, grass and legume testing, and plant disease control.
Zoology Of The Upper Colorado River Basin: 1. The Biotic Communities, C. Lynn Hayward, D Elden Beck, Wilmer W. Tanner
Zoology Of The Upper Colorado River Basin: 1. The Biotic Communities, C. Lynn Hayward, D Elden Beck, Wilmer W. Tanner
Brigham Young University Science Bulletin, Biological Series
No abstract provided.
End Matter, Vol. 1 No. 3
Brigham Young University Science Bulletin, Biological Series
No abstract provided.
Front Matter, Vol. 1 No. 3
Brigham Young University Science Bulletin, Biological Series
No abstract provided.
South Dakota Horticulture, November/December 1958, State Horticultural Society
South Dakota Horticulture, November/December 1958, State Horticultural Society
North and South Dakota Horticulture
Volume 31, Number 6
Make a Christmas Wreath
Florists and Nurserymen Meet at Brookings
Woodward Named Director of GFP
New and Worthwhile Bedding Plants
Hort Industry Booms
Storage Requirements for Fruits and Vegetables
Fruit Plantings Need Protection
Premium Schedule Available for New York Show
Chemical Company Lists Films
Effie Preston Kindred Rates SDFGC Salute
Nat'l Christmas Slide Contest Closes Feb. 15
Some Ideas for Feeders and Feed
Cash Awards Offered in Membership Contest
Conservation Includes
Wyoming Woman Rates Well in Sterling Bowl Contest
53 Attend District I Meeting in Britton
Design and Depth Important in Flower Arrangements
Better Birding
Mrs. …
Centunculus, Randel Bell
Influence Of Seed Irradiation With X-Rays And Thermal Neutrons Upon Cell Size And Mitotic Activity In Root Tips Of Maize, Francis A. Haskins, Merwyn Davidson, Russell Beers
Influence Of Seed Irradiation With X-Rays And Thermal Neutrons Upon Cell Size And Mitotic Activity In Root Tips Of Maize, Francis A. Haskins, Merwyn Davidson, Russell Beers
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications
In recent years a number of reports (for example, Caldecott et al., 1952, 1954, 1955; Schmidt and Frolik, 1951; Schwartz, 1954; Schwartz and Bay, 1956; Spencer and Cabanillas, 1956; Yagyu and Morris, 1957) have appeared which deal with the effects of treating seeds with various high energy radiations. In all cases it is reported that seedlings grown from appropriately-irradiated seeds are reduced in stature. This reduction in stature must necessarily result from irradiation-induced decreases in number and/or size of the cells comprising the seedlings. Although some quantitative data relating to irradiation-induced changes in cell size and mitotic activity are available …
Bulletin No. 10: The Connecticut Arboretum, Richard H. Goodwin, William A. Niering, Fleur A. Grandjouan, Robert Fulton Logan
Bulletin No. 10: The Connecticut Arboretum, Richard H. Goodwin, William A. Niering, Fleur A. Grandjouan, Robert Fulton Logan
Bulletins
An annotated list with seasonal records and an account of the breeding bird census program. 24 pp.
Native Grassland Of Southwestern Iowa, J. E. Weaver
Native Grassland Of Southwestern Iowa, J. E. Weaver
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications
Studies of the prairie by the writer and Fitzpatrick during 1922-33 were both extensive and intensive. They were extensive in that they included an area of 60,000 sq. mi. in western Iowa, eastern Nebraska and portions of the four adjoining states. They were intensive in that a record of the kinds and distribution of grasses, the abundance and relative importance of forbs, and other pertinent data were ascertained and recorded separately for each of 135 selected areas. Since most of these prairies were examined two or more times each growing season, and many repeatedly during a five-year period, a clear, …
South Dakota Horticulture, September/October 1958, State Horticultural Society
South Dakota Horticulture, September/October 1958, State Horticultural Society
North and South Dakota Horticulture
Volume 31, Number 5
Secretary's Notes, Dean Martin
Winners of Prizes at State Fair Horticulture-Garden Club Exhibit
Forty Three Purple Ribbon Placings in State Fair 4-H Garden Exhibits
Apple Enemy No. 1 -- The Apple Maggot, S.A. McCrory
Mum's the Word, Willard Witte
A Handful of Busy Men, Duane Hammer
Litterbugs are Costly Menace
Badger Clark Memorial Attracts 1,000 Visitors per Month
Some Favorite Dakota Wildings, Fannie Mahood Heath
The Art of Flower and Foliage Arrangement, Anna Hong Rutt
New Campground Operating at Capacity
More Awards Approved at Annual SDFGC Board Meeting in Huron
1959 State Convention to be at …
Spraguea Umbellata Torr., Albert Steward, Celia B. Steward
Spraguea Umbellata Torr., Albert Steward, Celia B. Steward
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Food Habits Of The Uinta Ground Squirrel (Citellus Armatus Kennicott) On Some Meadows Of Mt. Timpanogos, Utah, Robert K. Shaw
Food Habits Of The Uinta Ground Squirrel (Citellus Armatus Kennicott) On Some Meadows Of Mt. Timpanogos, Utah, Robert K. Shaw
Theses and Dissertations
Food habits of the Uinta ground squirrel were investigated on some open meadows on the south-east slope of Mt. Timpanogos. Special emphasis was placed on species of plants eaten; and preference of plants in relation to season, succulence, and phenology. Other investigations were made in reference to: parts of plants eaten, non-plant material eaten, daily and seasonal activities in relation to foraging, feeding procedures, and the relationship between plant cover and Uinta ground squirrel activity.
The Comparative Mineral Requirements Of Pioneer And Climax Range Grasses, Paul L. Steele
The Comparative Mineral Requirements Of Pioneer And Climax Range Grasses, Paul L. Steele
Theses and Dissertations
A study was made to determine the effects of variable levels of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium upon several species of pioneer and climax range grasses, and to determine if these grasses differ in their ability to grow when supplied with low levels of these nutrients. Five grasses were used. The climax grasses were Agropyron spicatum and Agropryon smithii, and the pioneer grasses were Aristida longiseta, Sporobous cryptandrus, and Oryzopsis hymenoides.
Genetic Variation In Bluebunch Wheatgrass, Max P. Dunford
Genetic Variation In Bluebunch Wheatgrass, Max P. Dunford
Theses and Dissertations
Agropyron spicatum (Pursh) Scribn, and Smith, an important forage grass distributed primarily throughout western United States and northward into Canada, exhibits considerable ecological, cytological, and genetic variation. Twenty-five populations of 100 plants each were scored to obtain data on morphological and ecological variation. Statistical analysis of the data from fourteen of the populations showed that correlations between awn divergence and length, rhizomes with number of culms, adn diameter with number of culms were inconsistent or not significant. However, the correltion between rhizomes and diameter was significant in all populations.
Forest Litter And Humus Types Of East Tennessee, John Thurlow Mcginnis
Forest Litter And Humus Types Of East Tennessee, John Thurlow Mcginnis
Masters Theses
Forest litter and humus types in East Tennessee, including the Great Smoky Mountains, have been the object of this study. The east Tennessee area is bordered on the east by the State Line Ridge in the Smoky Mountains and on the west by the Cumberland Mountains. The east Tennessee area is in the Ridge and Valley and Blue Ridge provinces as defined by Fenneman (1938). The Great Smoky Mountains, in the Blue Ridge province, are part of the Unaka Chain (King and Stupka 1950) and have relief of over a mile. The Ridge and Valley province is an intermountain belt, …
Viola Adunca Var. Bellidifolia (Greene) Harrington, K. Damann, K. Winkler
Viola Adunca Var. Bellidifolia (Greene) Harrington, K. Damann, K. Winkler
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Claytonia L., K. Damann, K. Winkler
Corallorhiza Mertensiana Bong., Don V. Hemphill
Corallorhiza Mertensiana Bong., Don V. Hemphill
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Acer Glabrum Subsp. Douglasii (Hook.) Wesmael, Don Hemphill
Acer Glabrum Subsp. Douglasii (Hook.) Wesmael, Don Hemphill
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
South Dakota Horticulture, July/August 1958, State Horticultural Society
South Dakota Horticulture, July/August 1958, State Horticultural Society
North and South Dakota Horticulture
Volume 31, Number 4
Robertson Award Goes to Claude Barr
Grazing Ruins Shelterbelts
Reviewing 75th Horticulture Convention
How to Collect and Store Plants for Winter Use
Horticulture Society Elects Officers
Annual Report of Secretary of SDHS
Parks Use Ahead at Gavins Point
SDHS Officers to Attend Regional Meeting
Aphids Attack Many Plants
Nat'l Council of Garden Clubs Honors Mrs. G.R. McArthur
Garden Clubs Vote to Raise State Dues
Flower Growers Date Book
President's Notebook
State Convention Highlights
Dells Rapids Club Wins Six Awards
Garden Club Awards Listed for 1958
Litterbug Essay Awards Announced
David Kruger Wins Second Scholarship Award
300 …
Classification Of Root Systems Of Forbs Of Grassland And A Consideration Of Their Significance, J. E. Weaver
Classification Of Root Systems Of Forbs Of Grassland And A Consideration Of Their Significance, J. E. Weaver
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications
Plants other than grasses constitute an important part of the native grasslands of North America. Most of these are forbs, a few are shrubs and half-shrubs. Probably 85 to 90 percent of the forbs are perennial and most are as deeply rooted and many far more deeply rooted than the grasses. Their number varies considerably from place to place. In the prairie of the central part of the North American Lowland and on the hard lands and sandy soils of the Great Plains they compose, perhaps, between 5 and 15 percent of the vegetation. They are least abundant in the …
Lantana L., J. Morello, A. R. Cuezzo
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., B. Kieckhefer, O. Lindfors, B. Thompson
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., B. Kieckhefer, O. Lindfors, B. Thompson
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Revised Grain Standards...Their Effect On Nebraska Wheat In 1957, J. A. Goodding, C. J. Miller
Revised Grain Standards...Their Effect On Nebraska Wheat In 1957, J. A. Goodding, C. J. Miller
Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station: Historical Circulars
Although Federal grain standards for Hard Red Winter Wheat were revised in 1957, a Nebraska Experiment Station study shows that the new regulations had very little effect on grades received by wheat marketed at country points by Nebraska farmers in 1957. Results of the study are described in this circular.
A Study Of Physoderma On Three Species Of Portulacaceae, David L. Mumford
A Study Of Physoderma On Three Species Of Portulacaceae, David L. Mumford
Theses and Dissertations
Three species of the Portulacaceae each infected by a Physoderma parasite were collected at several locations in Utah. The hosts have been identified as Claytonia lanceolata Pursh., Oreobroma pygmaeum (A. Gray) Howell, and Erocallis triphylla (S. Wats.) Rydb. Since our present knowledge of Physoderma on members of the Portulacaceae is meager, it seemed desirable to learn as much as possible about the parasite, its hosts, and the relationship between parasite and host. Plants of all three hosts activated from perennating organs were grown for extended periods of time under uniform conditions. Cold treatments were most successful in activating host perennating …
The Vegetation And Floristics Of Five Gorges Of The Cumberland Plateau, Harry L. Sherman
The Vegetation And Floristics Of Five Gorges Of The Cumberland Plateau, Harry L. Sherman
Masters Theses
The unglaciated Appalachian Plateaus, as part of the more extensive Appalachian highlands, represent some of the oldest land area in North America with respect to continuous land masses suitable for occupancy by terrestrial plants. These plateaus, along with the Blue Ridge Province and the Ozark and Ouachita highlands, had long been above marine waters when the Coastal Plain emerged, probably during the Miocene Epoch (Fenneman 1938). With the formation and southward advance of the great ice sheets of the Pleistocene, the existing plant life of the glaciated region was destroyed, thereby drastically reducing the botanical age of the otherwise ancient …
A Distributional And Taxonomic Study Of Ratibida Columnifera Var. Columnifera, Ratiba Columnifera Var. Pucherrima, And Their Hybrids In New Mexico, Walter W. Marshall
A Distributional And Taxonomic Study Of Ratibida Columnifera Var. Columnifera, Ratiba Columnifera Var. Pucherrima, And Their Hybrids In New Mexico, Walter W. Marshall
Biology ETDs
The classification and distribution of Ratibida columnifera var. columnifera Woot. and Standl. and R. columnifera var. pulcherrima (DC.) Woot. and Standl. are complex. Some floras list R. columnifera var. pulcherrima as a purple colored form or variety of the species while other authors refer to this taxon as a separate species of Ratibida. The purpose of this study is to clarify the taxonomic status of the two forms by determining and differences in morphology, distribution, taxonomy, and ecology.
An attempt has been made to determine the route by which R. columnifera columnifera and R. columnifera pulcherrima were distributed. After this …
Viola Pratincola Greene, B. Kieckhefer, O. Lindfors, B. Thompson
Viola Pratincola Greene, B. Kieckhefer, O. Lindfors, B. Thompson
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Use Of The Antibiotics, Streptomycin And Terramycin, As Growth Stimulants For Orchid Seedlings., Margaret W. O'Neill
Use Of The Antibiotics, Streptomycin And Terramycin, As Growth Stimulants For Orchid Seedlings., Margaret W. O'Neill
Biology ETDs
Antibiotics first came to the public's attention in 1945, when penicillin and streptomycin were released by the United States government to fight human diseases. Later, other antibiotics were released and experimental work was done on control of plant and animal diseases. By 1948 plant pathologists found that certain plant diseases such as walnut blight, tomato and pepper bacterial spot, soft rot, cucumber, downy mildew, chrysanthemum bacterial wilt, and lilac bacterial blight could be controlled by antibiotics.