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Common vetch

From an agricultural viewpoint. Piper and Pieters classify leguminous green manure crops as (1) summer annuals, chiefly soybeans, cowpeas, peanuts, beans, velvet beans, common vetch and field peas (2) winter annuals, including hairy vetch, common vetch, crimson clover, bur clover, field peas and red clover (in the south) and (3) biennials or perennials, comprising red clover, alsike clover, white clover, alfalfa and sweet clover. Each of these crops is adapted more or less definitely to a limited region. [Pg.447]

Venus s-looking-glass (A) Vetch - common (tares) (A) or (B) - kidney (P) Viper s-bugloss (B) Legousia hybrida Vida sativa Anthyllis vulneraria Echium vulgare... [Pg.538]

Futter-verbrauch, m. food (or feed) consumption. -wert, m. forage value, feed value, -wicke, /. common vetch (Vtcta sativa). -wurzel, /. forage root. [Pg.167]

Toxic amines are common in the Lathyrus genera (vetches and sweet peas), mistletoe berries (Phorandendron spp.), and Leucaena spp. The toxic amines in Lathyrus cause degeneration of motor tracts of the spinal cord, resulting in paralysis, and even death. The condition called lathyiism was common in... [Pg.55]

G-34161, prometryn Prometryn is the most versatile of the mcthylthio-y-triazincs. It has been used commercially, at least for limited periods, in the following crops cotton, sunflower, bean, pea, peanut, lentils, carrot, celery, leek, rice, and common vetch. In combinations with simazine and later with terbuthylazine, it also has been used in potato crops. Substantial use was attained in several crops in a large number of countries. Prometryn was the first effective herbicide for several crops, making it a true pioneer herbicide in the methylthiotriazine class of chemistry. [Pg.27]

Terbutryn soon found markets in various crops and occupied important niches. Mixtures of low rates of terbutryn with near normal rates of atrazine have been used. Further opportunities for terbutryn were found in pea, broad bean (Viciafaba L. var major (Harz.)), common vetch, potato (always in mixture with simazine, or later with terbuthylazine), and sunflower, as well as grain sorghum and sugarcane in special situations. Terbutryn was the last candidate to reach the market during the first 15 years of the herbicide project. [Pg.27]

In some orchards where repeated applications of triazine herbicides have been used, there are isolated instances of triazine-resistant weeds. These include common groundsel in the United Kingdom (Holliday and Putwain, 1977) and common lambsquarters and pigweeds in Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Bavaria. Some studies indicated an increased prevalence of some tolerant weeds in orchards when triazine herbicides were used in certain crop weed systems of common vetch (Heeney et al., 1981a), field bindweed (Meith and Connell, 1985), and quackgrass (Hertz and Wildung, 1978). [Pg.213]

Vicia angustifolia (common vetch) VAI Chymotrypsin (Y42-S43), Trypsin (R16-S17) [263]... [Pg.599]

Common bean (P. vulgaris) and vetch (V. sativa subsp. Nigra)... [Pg.548]

Vida angustfolia (common vetch) (Fabaceae) [seed] Viciafaba (broad bean, fava bean) (Fabaceae) [seed] Vigna unguicukita (cowpea) (Fabaceae) [seed]... [Pg.551]

Substitution is not limited to herbal medicines or dietary supplements. A pink seeded cultivar of common vetch (Vicia sativa) called blanche fleur has been sold in the United States as red lentils or masoor dahl (Lens culinaris) (Tate and Enneking,... [Pg.373]

Ressler, C. (1962) Isolation and identification from common vetch of the neurotoxin (3-cyano-L-alanine, a possible factor in neurolathyrism. J. Biol. Chem. 237, 733-735. [Pg.390]

Ressler, C., Nigam, S.N. and Giza, Y.H. (1969) Toxic principle in vetch. Isolation and identification of y-L-glutamyl-L-P-cyanoalanine from common vetch seeds. Distribution in some legumes. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 91, 2758-2764. [Pg.390]

Common Names Chickling Pea, Chickling Vetch, Grass Pea Poison Bakantin... [Pg.55]

Common Names Bone Vetch, Fodder Vetch, Hairy Vetch, Luddvicker, Winter Vetch... [Pg.61]

Because cyanide is actually quite common in the plant world. Cyanide discourages certain animals like slugs, weevils, and grasshoppers, and plants use cyanide compounds as weapons in their ongoing biochemical warfare to stay alive. The toxic plant species are well-known, but a surprising number of other species can contain low levels of cyanide, including forages like white clover and connnon vetch and even some human foods like cassava and Uma beans. [Pg.336]

Green manures such as mustard, vetches or rye are commonly grown after a summer-harvested crop and before a spring-planted crop. Green manures reduce... [Pg.248]

III 3-Cyano-L-alanine common vetch Vida saliva Fabaceae... [Pg.782]


See other pages where Common vetch is mentioned: [Pg.165]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.372]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.372]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.666]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.532]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.547]    [Pg.501]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.411]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.530]    [Pg.530]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.31]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.283 ]




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