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Carrots beets

Carrot Beet root Coffee drink Broccoli Eggplant Asparagus Cranberries Orange juices Citrus ... [Pg.76]

Many annual vegetables, such as lettuce, radish, mustard, and dill, which normally flower only when days are long, can be made to flower early by treatment with gibberellins. Many biennial vegetables, such as carrots, beets, and cabbage, which require low temperatures to flower, also do so after treatment with gibberellins. [Pg.265]

Some crops, including onions, lettuce, and squash, seem to benefit any planting that follows them. In general, most crops grow poorly when planted after carrots, beets, and members of the cabbage family. [Pg.418]

The application of ceramic membranes in the production of fruit juices is a well established technique [3,6,12,14,44-50]. A very wide range of fruit juices is designated (apple, pear, peach, orange, grapefruit, pineapple, kiwi fruit, strawberry, cranberry, carrot, beet) the clarification of apple juice seems to be the main application [6,14,44r-49]. [Pg.627]

Mars passes through the zodiac every two years and this sign was formerly used for biennials. The plants possess thorns, spines or prickles, grow in dry harsh areas and have acrid, pungent or stimulating odours for example. Raspberry or Red Pepper. They have a comical root (tap root) for example. Carrot, Beet. [Pg.18]

Direct Chemical Action of Trichothecenes. Over a quarter of a century ago, Brian et al. (8) described the action of diacetoxyscirpenol on plants when 2.73 X 10" solutions of the metabolite inhibited stem growth and scorched leaves in two pea varities, lettuce, winter tares and other economic crops when applied exogenously. But carrot, beet root, mustard and wheat were not affected at the same application rate signalling genus and species specificity for the, metabolite. However, at rates that ranged from 1.37 x 10"... [Pg.57]

Parsley, carrot, beet, celery, potato, onion. [Pg.77]

In 1965, Lichtenstein etal. [147] described the presence of aldrin and dieldrin pesticides in cucumber. In the same year, Thruston [148] reported chlordane in squash tissues. In 1991, Pylypiw etal. [149, 150] reported DDE, chlordane and heptachlor epoxide in squash and cantaloupe tissues. Furthermore, the same group [151] reported the presence of chlordane in summer and winter squash and sweet potato from different Connecticut, USA, farms. The authors also examined the market basket data from 1990 to 1997, and suggested that certain crops - cucumber, squash and pumpkin - contain some chiral agrochemicals in their edible portions. Recently, Martina eta/. [152] have detected chlordane residues in the edible tissues of carrot, beet, potato, spinach, lettuce, dandelion, zucchini, bush bean and eggplant. [Pg.67]

Conqxiimd bpinach red green Carrots beet Celery Lettuce barb salted smoked in oil belt burger... [Pg.495]

Rube, /. (rote) beet, beetroot (gelbe) carrot (weisse) turnip rape. [Pg.372]

Riiben-harzsaure, /. resin acid of beets, -melasse,/. beet molasses, beetroot molasses, -pottasche, /. potash from beet molasses, -pulpe, /. beet pulp, -rohzucker, m. raw beet sugar. -saft, m. beet(root) juice, -samen, m. turnip, rape-, beet, or carrot seed, -schlempe, /. beet vinasse. -schnitzel, m. beet chip, beet slice, -sirup, m. beet sirup, beetroot sirup, -spiritus, m. beet spirit (from beet molasses), -stecher, m. beet sampler. [Pg.372]

Sucrose Cane and beet sugar. Sorghum. Pineapple. Carrot roots. In sucrase deficiency, malabsorption leads to diarrhea and flatulence. [Pg.107]

Immunogold localization of the pectic epitope has been performed on different types of cells cell suspensions, roots, shoots, meristems, coleoptiles, pollen grains, protoplasts from different species carrot, sugar beet, tobacco, oat... The pattern of labeling was always the same polygalacturonic acid was essentially located on the material expanded at three-way junctions between cells or lining intercellular space, but was not found in primary walls. No epitope could be located close to the plasma membrane (Fig. lO.a). Middle lamellae far from junction zones and walls of meristematic cells were never labeled. [Pg.142]

Root or stem plants Japanese radish (root), carrot, ginger, potato, sweet potato, taro, sugar beet... [Pg.41]

Carrots, sugar beet, fodder beet, beetroot, chicory roots, horseradish, Jerusalem artichoke, parsley roots, swedes... [Pg.171]

Citrus, cotton, melon, watermelon, banana, tomato, eggplant, onion, cabbage, carrot, chicory, leek, maize, hazelnut, potato, rice (straw, grain), air, sweet corn, soybean, French bean, sugar beet, flowers and ornamentals, sunflower, tobacco, soil and water... [Pg.1263]

Soybean root exudates were inhibiting to okra, radish and tomato germination but not to carrot or beet germination. Although radish and tomato germination was significantly slowed, soybean root exudate activity in the tomato and radish... [Pg.227]

Carrot family beet family Grow carrots, parsnips, celery, beets, spinach, and chard on this plot On poorer ground, add compost to the soil, except where carrots and parsnips are to be sown. Sow winter rye or buckwheat as a green manure over winter. [Pg.231]

Details of preparation and storage conditions for crops that last well through the winter are given here (seepanel, left). Some other crops can also be stored for shorter periods for example, carrots, parsnips, beets, rutabagas, and celeriac keep well if packed in moist sand or fine leaf mold in shallow trays or boxes. [Pg.271]

Susceptible plants Young vegetable plants, especially lettuce and brassicas also carrot, celery, beet, potato, strawberry, and many ornamentals. [Pg.327]

Susceptible plants Potato, strawberry, brassicas, beans, beets, carrot, lettuce, onion, and tomato also ornamentals including anemone, carnation, dahlia, gladioli, and primula... [Pg.341]


See other pages where Carrots beets is mentioned: [Pg.509]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.620]    [Pg.635]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.620]    [Pg.635]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.585]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.258]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.97 , Pg.98 ]




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