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Nursery

A new source of safrole that Strike has just stumbled upon is in Strike s back yard. Momma comes home from the local nursery with two plants that have these enormous leaves. They are succulents and grow like crazy. Strike What ya got there Momma Momma Don t think I haven t noticed those filthy drug books you write, you sick little monkey Strike Aw c mon. Mom. Let s not get into this again. Strike doesn t... Momma Well I needed some new ground cover plants, and...sigh...I know you re into this twisted licorice thing...so I bought these weeds that are called Licorice Plants. ... [Pg.32]

Dimethipin. 2,3-Dihydro-5,6-dimethyl-l,4-dithiin-l,l,4,4-tetraoxide [55290-64-7] (dimethipin, oxidimetbiin, UBI-N252, Harvard) (25) is used as a cotton defoHant and has been used as an experimental desiccant in potato vines. In addition, it defoHates nursery stock, grapes, dry beans, and natural mbber and is used as a desiccant for seed of canola, flax (l lnum usitatlssimum), rice, and sunflower (He/lanthus annuus) (10). The product has been available since the mid-1970s and the experimental work was first reported in 1974 (44). [Pg.424]

Crop Protection, insects and weeds in fields, gardens, greenhouses, nurseries Disinfection, bacteria in homes, hospitals, on medical and dental equipment... [Pg.142]

The primary use for methyl bromide is in the extermination of insect and rodent pests. Methyl bromide is used in space and stmctural fumigation except in California. The material is suitable for the fumigation of food commodities such as dried fmits, grain, flour, and nuts, and the faciHties in which these foods are processed or stored, as weU as for tobacco and many kinds of nursery stock. The usual dosage is 2—4 kg/28 m for 12—24 h. In soil fumigation methyl bromide controls weed seeds, nematodes, wireworms, and soil fungi. The usual dosage is 0.5—1 kg/9 m for 24 h at 16°C and above (82). [Pg.294]

High product costs limit distribution to high value crop markets. This includes commercial ornamental production such as nurseries and greenhouses, citms production, and strawberry production. Limited amounts are sold to the consumer lawn and garden market. [Pg.136]

Urea and ammonium sulfate [7783-20-2] are coated by Chisso Co. under the trade names LP Cote and Meister. AH U.S. consumption of these products is sourced from Japan. Chisso-Asahi products are marketed through very specific distribution channels (Table 5). Coated N—P—K products are marketed primarily to commercial nurseries and greenhouses. Coated urea products are marketed in blends to commercial nurseries, as weU as to professional turf and strawberry growers. [Pg.136]

Exxon Chemical Canada is currently test marketing this developmental technology on a number of appHcations including high value vegetable crop, turf, and ornamental nurseries. [Pg.137]

POLYON-coated products are marketed for turf and commercial nursery appHcations and specialty, medium to high cost, agricultural crop appHcations. [Pg.137]

Alice and the Queen of Hearts, illustrated by John Tenniel, The Nursery Aliee. (Mary Evan.s Picture Library, London)... [Pg.426]

KInder-balsam, m. soothing sirup, -emah-rung, /. infant feeding child nutrition, -iahmung, / infantile paralysis, -mehl, n. (powdered) infant food, -nahrmittei, n. infant food, -pech, n. meconium, -pulver, n. (Pharm.) compound powder of rhubarb, -schleim, m., -schmiere, /. vernix caseosa. -seife, /. nursery soap. [Pg.244]

Residues in many foods should decrease because EPA has canceled many of the food crop uses of methyl parathion, including fruits and vegetables commonly eaten by children, some other vegetable uses, some feed uses, and all nonfood uses such as ornamental plants and nursery stock uses. Tolerances for methyl parathion on these foods and feed also have been canceled. This action was taken because of a concern for risks to children and workers. Some food and feed uses and tolerances are to be maintained. [Pg.32]

Fig. 1. A general, simplified and self-explanatory layout of the wheat breeding programme at the Volcani Center, Israel. The selection for drought resistance is affected at about the F4 and later generations, by using infra-red thermometry, chemical desiccation and yield under stress. A summer (off-season) nursery is incorporated as means for selection for heat tolerance. Fig. 1. A general, simplified and self-explanatory layout of the wheat breeding programme at the Volcani Center, Israel. The selection for drought resistance is affected at about the F4 and later generations, by using infra-red thermometry, chemical desiccation and yield under stress. A summer (off-season) nursery is incorporated as means for selection for heat tolerance.
Timonen S, KS Jorgensen, K Haahtela, R Sen (1998) Bacterial community structure at defined locations of Pinus sylvestris-Suillus bovinus and Pinus sylvestris-Paxillus involutus mycorrhizospheres in dry pine forest humus and nursery peat. Can J Microbiol 44 499-513. [Pg.618]

These DNA markers have been successfully employed to track specific strain-associated loci in endo- and ectomycorrhizal populations from agricultural land, forest nurseries, plantations, and natural ecosystems. The simplest strategy (digesting PCR-amplified ITS with selected endonucleases) has identified their symbionts in various ecosystems (18,36-38). Species discrimination by ITS-RFLP matching can be improved by comparing data for the targeted DNA with those on sequence databases (37). [Pg.266]

B. Henrion. C. Di Battista, D. Bouchard, D. Vairelles, B. D. Thompson, F. Le Tacon, and F. Martin, Monitoring the persistence of Laccaria bicolor as an endomycorrhizal. symbiont of nursery-grown Douglas fir by PCR of the rDNA intergenic spacer. Mol. Ecol. 3 571 (1994). [Pg.289]

If evidence of intracranial bleeding is observed, consider transfer to a level III nursery. [Pg.998]

Hence it is the fibres which are valuable. It is of greatest importance to maximize the yield and minimize the water consumption. The process waters become quite dirty, an excellent nursery for bacteria. [Pg.25]


See other pages where Nursery is mentioned: [Pg.440]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.485]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.572]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.895]    [Pg.128]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.977 ]




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Bifenthrin nursery

Culture nurseries

Larval rearing and nursery production

Natural Open-Pollinated Crosses Using Polycross Nurseries

Nursery production

Nursery rearing of mussel spat up to seed

Nursery stage

Propagation of planting stock in the organic nursery

Stellar nursery

Tree nurseries, grafting

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