Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 1,809 items for :

  • plant introduction x
Clear All

have arisen in the interior western states to support the selection, production, evaluation, and marketing of native plants. Materials and methods Utah model . The Sego Supreme plant breeding and introduction program was initiated by Utah State

Full access
Author:

89 WORKSHOP 4 (Abstr. 166–169) Strategies of Selection, Introduction, and Release of Asexually Propagated Ornamental Plants

Free access

epicuticular-wax profiles and potentially reduce losses by onion thrips. Materials and Methods Plant materials. Plant introductions (PIs) 124525, 164807, 165498, 168962, 168966, 171475, 171477, 172701, 172702, 172703, 172704, 174018, 248754

Open Access
Author:

An Introduction to Plant Breeding . Jack Brown and Peter Caligari. 2008. Blackwell Publishing, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK. 209 p. $69.00, paperback. ISBN: 978-1-4051-3344-9. I really wanted to like this book. Well-written books

Free access

plates and grown for an additional 24 h for use in the described assays. Table 1. Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli isolates used for study. Plant material. Seeds of PIs were obtained from the USDA, ARS, North Central Regional Plant Introduction

Free access

of plant introductions (PI) of bottle gourd ( Lagenaria siceraria ) for resistance to powdery mildew caused by Podosphaera xanthii z . Fig. 1. Frequency of distribution of the original screening of 234 bottle gourd ( Lagenaria

Free access

in plant introduction 140471 to be near immunity. On the contrary, McGrath et al. (1993) contends no sufficient resistance to GSB is available in melon. Furthermore, resistance in plant introduction 140471 has recently been described as variable

Free access

resistance that might be incorporated into improved cultivars of these species. Materials and Methods Plant materials. B. juncea and B. rapa accessions (Plant Introductions) were obtained from the USDA, ARS, North Central Regional Plant

Free access
Author:

Due to the large area and the complex topography and climate. a great deal of wild ornamental plants are still hidden in the depth of forests and on the highland plateaus--places difficult to approach by man. In the Three N Regions only, there are 51 species of Rhododendron, 27 of Lilium, 83 of Rosa, 30 of Iris, 40 of Clematis, etc., yet to be explored and utilized. Aiming at this, we made extensive introduction of plants in general and intensive introduction of certain families and genera in particular, with good results. At present we have in our living collection 12 species of Clematis, 24 of Rosa, 13 of Lilium, 10 of Iris, 8 of Tulip, 6 of Aquilegia, 10 of Thalictrum, 20 of Gentiana, 80 of ferns, 40 of Begonia, 50 of the Araceae. Seed germination tests, micropropagation, breeding for new varieties and other experiments and researches have been carried out on many of these plant groups.

Free access
Author:

Abstract

Plant introduction as a service to mankind is as old as mankind itself. It began when the most primitive form of agriculture took place - when man first learned that he could collect seed of his food plants from the wild and grow them near his home. Thus, he could be assured of a food supply, could grow it more abundantly, and above all, reduce his exposure to danger which was always present when he had to search for food in the wild.

Open Access