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The Water-Culture Method of Growing Plants without Soil.
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The article was published on 1950-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 5010 citations till now.read more
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Conversion of biomass into methane gas.
Aziz Shiralipour,Paul H. Smith +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a bioassay for an ultimate methane yield was performed in 250 ml serum bottles, incubated at 35°C and the results showed that high methane yields were obtained from several aquatic plants, some crop residues, and some root and tuber plants.
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Evaluation of Ferulic Acid Uptake as a Measurement of Allelochemical Dose: Effective Concentration
Mary E. Lehman,Udo Blum +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the root contact, not uptake, is responsible for the inhibitory activity of phenolic acids in cucumber seedlings treated for 5 hours with ferulic acid in whole-root and split-root nutrient culture systems.
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Effects of Drought Stress on Pollen Sterility, Grain Yield, Abscisic Acid and Protective Enzymes in Two Winter Wheat Cultivars.
Baodi Dong,Xin Zheng,Haipei Liu,Jason A. Able,Yang Hong,Zhao Huan,Zhang Mingming,Yunzhou Qiao,Wang Yakai,Mengyu Liu +9 more
TL;DR: The drought tolerant cultivar Jinmai47 exhibited superior physiological performance in terms of leaf photosynthetic rate, ear carbohydrate accumulation, pollen sink strength, pollen development and fertility under stress, compared with the drought sensitive cultivar Shiluan02-1.
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Glyphosate-Resistant Hairy Fleabane (Conyza bonariensis) Is Reported in Greece
TL;DR: Sensitivity of a resistant hairy fleabane accession to glyphosate was strongly dependent on growth stage, with plants at the seedling stage being most sensitive to the herbicide.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reduction of nematode damage by root colonization with arbuscular mycorrhiza (Glomus spp.) in tomato-Meloidogyne incognita (Tylenchida:Meloidogynidae) and carrot-Pratylenchus penetrans (Tylenchida:Pratylenchidae) pathosystems
TL;DR: Pot studies on the effects of mycorrhizal root colonization on plant growth and nematode reproduction in tomato-Meloidogyne incognita and carrot-Pratylenchus penetrans pathosystems were carried out, finding that tomato plants inoculated with the pathogen Glomus mosseae did not protect them from infection.