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Paul Hadley

Researcher at University of Reading

Publications -  152
Citations -  5172

Paul Hadley is an academic researcher from University of Reading. The author has contributed to research in topics: Germplasm & Theobroma. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 150 publications receiving 4614 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Hadley include University of Adelaide.

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Delayed chilling appears to counteract flowering advances of apricot in southern UK

TL;DR: The increase in temperature during the chilling period appeared to delay the onset of chill accumulation and the completion of the average chill accumulation necessary to start heat accumulation, which may explain why apricot flowering time remained relatively unchanged despite significant temperature increases.
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The impact of elevated CO2 and water deficit stress on growth and photosynthesis of juvenile cacao (Theobroma cacao L.).

TL;DR: A positive effect of elevated CO2 on juvenile cacao is shown which may help to alleviate some of the negative impacts of water deficit stress and may be a reflection of the environment in which cacao evolved.
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Changes in growth and radiation use by lettuce crops in relation to temperature and ontogeny

TL;DR: In this article, a crop of lettuce was grown within two polyethylene-covered tunnels along each of which a temperature gradient was imposed, and the mean temperature differed by up to 5.5°C along the tunnels.
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An Analysis of the Effects of Temperature and Light Integral on the Vegetative Growth of Pansy cv. Universal Violet (Viola × wittrockiana Gams.)

TL;DR: Independent validation using data from four further crops grown in glasshouse compartments at four different set point temperatures showed that the model could also be used to predict plant dry weight accurately and was also linearly related to both light integral and temperature.
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Effects of supplemental nitrate and thermal regime on the nitrogen nutrition of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). II: Symbiotic development and nitrogen assimilation

TL;DR: Nodulated chickpea plants were grown in pots in a glasshouse programmed to simulate either hot or warm thermal regimes characteristic of those experienced by crops grown in different seasons or locations in the semi-arid tropics and the effects of nitrate on acetylene reduction activities plant−1 were mediated primarily through changes in the respective rates of nodule establishment, growth and senescence.