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Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Agronomy and Crop Sciences
Blueberry Progress Reports, James F. Dill, H Y. Forsythe Jr, Kathy Flanders, Frank L. Caruso, Michael G. Zuck, Gwen Wilcox, John M. Smagula, Edward J. Mclaughlin, Mike Goltz, Jeff Risser, Delmont Emerson, John Harker, Judy Gates, Sharon Roberts, Amr A. Ismail, David E. Yarborough, Delmont C. Emerson, Tom Cs Yang
Blueberry Progress Reports, James F. Dill, H Y. Forsythe Jr, Kathy Flanders, Frank L. Caruso, Michael G. Zuck, Gwen Wilcox, John M. Smagula, Edward J. Mclaughlin, Mike Goltz, Jeff Risser, Delmont Emerson, John Harker, Judy Gates, Sharon Roberts, Amr A. Ismail, David E. Yarborough, Delmont C. Emerson, Tom Cs Yang
Wild Blueberry Research Reports
The 1983 edition of the Blueberry Progress Reports was prepared for the Maine Blueberry Commission and the University of Maine Blueberry Advisory Committee by researchers with the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station and Maine Cooperative Extension Service at the University of Maine, Orono. Projects in this report include:
1. Introduction
2. Forest Tent Caterpillar in Blueberries
3. Control, Biology, and Ecology of Insects Affecting Lowbush Blueberries
4. Blueberry Diseases: Incidence and Control
5. Physiology and Culture of the Lowbush Blueberry
6. Weed Control in Lowbush Blueberry Fields
7. Product Development of Lowbush Blueberries
Soil Acidity And Legume Nodulation, J G. Howieson, M. A. Ewing
Soil Acidity And Legume Nodulation, J G. Howieson, M. A. Ewing
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Nitrogen is a basic constituent of protien and is essential to all forms of life. Many agricultural plants are legumes - a group of plants which, in co-operation with specialised soil bacteria, fix their own nitrogen from the air. When the legume dies, the organic matter breaks down anf the nitrogen becomes available to the following crops.
Soil acidity is a major factor limitimg the successful association between legumes and their beneficial soil bacteria in Western Australia.
Notes: Differences Among Nematode Populations In Tall Fescue Pastures In North, Central, And South Alabama, Jeffrey F. Pedersen, R. Rodriguez-Kabana
Notes: Differences Among Nematode Populations In Tall Fescue Pastures In North, Central, And South Alabama, Jeffrey F. Pedersen, R. Rodriguez-Kabana
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications
Surveys of nematode populations in tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.) pastures in north, central, and south Alabama in 1982 and 1983 showed significant differences in frequency of occurrence of many nematode species by geographical region. Although nematode damage has been implicated in the poor adaptation of tall fescue to the sandy soils of the extreme Southeast, many plant parasitic nematode species occurred in low frequency in south Alabama pastures. There were significant differences in the frequency of occurrence of Paratrichodorus christiei (Allen) Siddiqi by region. This nematode occurred with relatively high frequency in south Alabama in both years. There were …