Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 3,475 items for :

Clear All

, canary yellow, salmon yellow, orange, and white flesh; red flesh has recently been reclassified into two distinct flesh colors, coral red and scarlet red ( Gusmini and Wehner, 2006 ). Several researchers have previously reported flesh color inheritance

Free access
Author:

are located in Tennessee ( USDA, 2014 ). There has been interest in breeding for deciduous yellow-flowering magnolias since the 1950s. Most of the yellow-flowering magnolias have been bred from a U.S. native magnolia, cucumber magnolia ( Magnolia

Full access
Author:

Summer squash is widely grown in spring and fall seasons in southwestern Georgia. Georgia is a significant supplier of yellow (crookneck and straightneck) and zucchini squash for the United States and is typically ranked in the top three nationally

Full access
Author:

Abstract

The genus Penstemon is native to North America with the exception of one species (1). The species in this genus include most colors, with variation in height from a few centimeters to over 2 m, and may be annual, biennial, or perennial (1). ‘Schooley’s Yellow’ is a yellow-flowered selection of Penstemon barbatus (Cav.) Roth selected at the Univ. of Nebraska. This selection is being released for its ornamental value, yellow flowering characteristic, and for use as germplasm in other penstemon breeding and selection programs.

Open Access

viruses affecting watermelon in the United States are Zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV), Papaya ringspot virus -watermelon strain (PRSV-W), and Watermelon mosaic virus (WMV). All three viruses are nonpersistently transmitted by several species of

Free access

‘Yellow Dream’ is the fifth nectarine [ Prunus persica (Batsch) L.] released from the National Institute of Horticultural and Herbal Science (NIHHS), Rural Development Administration (RDA). The NIHHS RDA has released 10 peach and 7 nectarine

Free access

the evaluation of the performance of imperfect storages. We studied parameters of senescence (leaf abscission, leaf yellowing, and chlorophyll loss) as they related to an estimate of the total metabolic activity experienced by amaranth stems for four

Open Access

Iris yellow spot virus (family Bunyaviridae , genus Tospovirus ) was first reported as Tomato spotted wilt virus in southern Brazil in 1981 affecting onion scapes (de Avila et al., 1981 cited in Gent et al., 2006 ) but later confirmed as a new

Free access

degree of single centers ( Cramer, 2006 ; Gamie et al., 1995 ; Wall et al., 1996 ;). Iris yellow spot virus (IYSV) causes seed stalk and leaf tissue necrosis and has recently been recognized as a serious disease of onion ( Gent et al., 2006 ). IYSV was

Full access

, which can be harmful to plants, including cranberry ( Bailey and Grossman, 2008 ; Kramer, 2010 ; Takahashi and Murata, 2008 ; Vener, 2007 ). Cranberry growers have observed yellow vine syndrome in the cranberry bog under normal light conditions, which

Free access