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NCNH District 2015 Roses in Review Comments Variety Class Like
NCNH District 2015 Roses in Review Comments Variety Class Like

... Like color and clusters of flowers. Gets mildew; quickly fading flowers; short bloom season. S Good blooming Drift rose; always seems to be in bloom; a keeper. S Outstanding sprays; striking color blend; very quick repeat; very prolific. MinFl Both a great garden variety as well as exhibition variet ...
Grow an Indoor Salad Garden - National Agriculture in the Classroom
Grow an Indoor Salad Garden - National Agriculture in the Classroom

... A math activity is available for use during the growing period. Students will create a list of their top ten favorite salad toppings. They will then be directed to ask at least five other people to pick their five favorites from that list. They will tally and chart the poll results. A sample is prov ...
WETLAND PLANTS - Lower Burdekin Landcare Association
WETLAND PLANTS - Lower Burdekin Landcare Association

... sustainable management, wise use and protection of wetlands in Queensland. The tools developed by the Program help wetlands landholders, managers and decision makers in government and industry. The Queensland Wetlands Program is currently funded by the Queensland Government. ...
FRIENDS OF U.C. RIVERSIDE BOTANIC GARDENS FALL PLANT
FRIENDS OF U.C. RIVERSIDE BOTANIC GARDENS FALL PLANT

... mounding shrub w/ leaves dark green above, light below & 3-inch, poppylike flowers, the petals red-purple each w/ a red spot; needs good drainage. [20] (B*W*) Cnidoscolus aconitifolius, "CHAYA", "TREE SPINACH" - Curious Mex. shrub w/ thick branches, & long-stalked, lobed leaves that have long been e ...
Plant Name Plant Description Price Acacia baileyana `Purpurea
Plant Name Plant Description Price Acacia baileyana `Purpurea

... of coral and a bold white pattern and carmine speckles.Short, sturdy growth habit, does not run. Long flowering. 18ins to 2ft. Abundant racemes of large white flowers are produced in spring amongst bronze-tinted new foliage. Brilliant red autumn colour. A large upright growing shrub or may be traine ...
Shri RVSAVADI B.Sc, M.Pharm.
Shri RVSAVADI B.Sc, M.Pharm.

... defect this leads to formation of ulcer in the gastric mucosa & upper part of duodenum15. The treatment of peptic ulcer is till unsatisfactory due to lack of complete information about etiology & pathophysiology of the disease. Drug used in the treatment of peptic ulcer decrease the morbidity & mort ...
Desert biome
Desert biome

... The desert (from the Latin deserere, to abandon) is a habitat with poor rainfalls. In many deserts, the annual rainfall is below 50 mm, but it can even be zero. In this ecosystem, the shortage of water is the main ecological factor affecting vegetal and animal life. As well as the shortage of rains, ...
Induced Mutagenesis and Natural Genetic Variation in - Esalq
Induced Mutagenesis and Natural Genetic Variation in - Esalq

... Our results are in accordance to the fact that many important monogenic mutations known in the cultivated tomato actually are allelic variation from wild Lycopersicon species. Examples are beta-carotene (B) and delta (Del), which are present in some Lycopersicon species (e.g. L. hisurtum) and are n ...
Butternut (Juglans cinerea) - A Tree in Trouble
Butternut (Juglans cinerea) - A Tree in Trouble

... Butternuts are slow growing members of the Walnut family that are native to northeastern North America. Forest stands rarely contain more than the occasional Butternut as they grow individually or in small groups. It is short-lived - 100 years is an old Butternut, compared to 200 years for Maple and ...
Fall 1981 - Florida Aquatic Plant Management Society
Fall 1981 - Florida Aquatic Plant Management Society

... or pond-nut. Sacred bean is derived from the common name of Nclnmbo oncifero Gaerntn. or the sacred lotus of India. This Old World species has been worshipped since early times by the Hindu and Buddhist for its religious, medicinal, and aesthetic values. The common names rattle box and watering can ...
NOVELTIES IN GRINDELIA (ASTERACEAE: ASTEREAE) FROM
NOVELTIES IN GRINDELIA (ASTERACEAE: ASTEREAE) FROM

... awns. This species was described by Candolle (1836) from Rio Grande do Sul state. Baker (1882) illustrated and cited additional collections from Uruguay. Cabrera (1931) and Bartoli & Tortosa (1999) recognized G. buphthalmoides from Argentina, but both works only cite the collection type «Gaudichaud ...
seed sense - Idaho Botanical Garden
seed sense - Idaho Botanical Garden

... Most plants produce an abundance of seeds, but only a few grow into adult plants. Even fewer seeds would mature if they weren't dispersed away from the parent plant. Here's an activity that will show you how some of the plants in your area disperse their seeds. You'll need a clean, old sock (the fu ...
Document
Document

... quadruply transgenic plants. Not only all floral organs but also cauline leaves are transformed into stamens or staminoid organs. Arrowheads show branched trichomes. j–o, Cryo-SEM of staminoid cauline leaves of quadruply transgenic plants (j, l, n). For comparison, an anther (k), filament (m) and ba ...
lupinus albus termis x lupinus mutabilis mut. 628
lupinus albus termis x lupinus mutabilis mut. 628

... regeneration (Fig. 4) clearly revealed similarity in the course of this process as compared with the maternal form L. termis on medium B5, where flowers and branch stems were produced. Like in the paternal form L. mutabilis MUT.628, appearance of the callus tissue was observed (Figs 5, 6, 7). These ...
Cicer milkvetch
Cicer milkvetch

... It is also popular in reclamation mixes because it is a nitrogen fixer, its prolific root system stabilizes soil, and can be used at high elevations - cicer milkvetch requires only 30 days of frost free growth per season.1 Under favourable conditions plants can spread 1.2 m in diameter over a season ...
The grazier`s guide to pastures
The grazier`s guide to pastures

... Grasses and Legumes Botanists differentiate grasses from legumes by the number of seed leaves that are first produced when the seed germinates. Grasses are monocots having only one cotyledon or seed leaf compared to legumes which are dicots, having two cotyledons or seed leaves. There are other majo ...
Morningglory Management in Soybean
Morningglory Management in Soybean

... soybean fields. Not only are they hard to control, but one tall morningglory plant growing per foot of row can reduce soybean yield by 50 percent if left to compete all season. Morningglory Distribution and Biology • Morningglories favor warmer climates and are typically found in the southern and c ...
Cereal Grains - Northern Illinois University
Cereal Grains - Northern Illinois University

... Fancy colors in corn, mostly seen as decorations, are the result of several different genes affecting pigments in different layers of the kernel. These layers are colorless in most corn, because we like our food that way. ...
1 - UPOV
1 - UPOV

... 5.1 The selection of varieties of common knowledge to be grown in the trial with the candidate varieties and the way in which these varieties are divided into groups to facilitate the assessment of distinctness is aided by the use of grouping characteristics. ...
2012 Michigan Heirlooms LETTUCE CATALOG
2012 Michigan Heirlooms LETTUCE CATALOG

... Lettuce is a cool-season crop, thriving in rich organic soil with warm days and cool nights. They succeed in most welldrained, evenly moist, humus-rich soils but dislike acid conditions (adding lime will correct this). Plants strongly dislike dry conditions, and will prematurely run to seed (bolt) i ...
Incredibles - Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Incredibles - Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

... and pounded to a powder, for making porridge or a cocoa-like beverage. In some areas small tubers and young stems are also roasted and eaten, having a pleasant flavour. The composition and nutritional value of the seed competes with that of common cultivated leguminous plants (for example, pigeon pe ...
Vine Crops - Great Lakes Fruit, Vegetable and Farm Market EXPO
Vine Crops - Great Lakes Fruit, Vegetable and Farm Market EXPO

... Cucumber and cantaloupes are often affected, but squash, pumpkins and less often, watermelon, are also attacked. This disease is caused by Erwinia tracheiphila and is moved from plant to plant by striped (Fig. 3B) and 12-spotted cucumber beetles. In the spring, the beetles emerge from the ground and ...
video slide
video slide

... to Africa and Asia. Their leaves look similar to those of flowering plants, and their seeds look somewhat like fruits. ...
Identification and Salient Characteristics of Tung Oil Trees in Myanmar
Identification and Salient Characteristics of Tung Oil Trees in Myanmar

... cushion-shaped, with vaulted apex, petiole as long as leaf; Inflorescence on apices of stems, appearing before the young leaves; flowers in clusters, whitish, rosethroated (white petals with red bottom), produced in early summer from terminal buds of shoots of the previous season; monoecious, male a ...
Wild, Edible, and Poisonous Plants of Alaska, Dr. Christine A. Heller
Wild, Edible, and Poisonous Plants of Alaska, Dr. Christine A. Heller

... clusters or scattered in the upper leaf axil; small, inconspicuous with 5 greenish-white petals. This plant forms large low sprawly mats. HAB, Sandy beaches along the coast from Southeastern Alaska, the Gulf of Alaska, Alaska Peninsula, the Aleutian chain, the Bering Sea to the Arctic. PREP. This pl ...
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Perovskia atriplicifolia



Perovskia atriplicifolia (/pəˈrɒvskiə ætrɪplɪsɪˈfoʊliə/), commonly called Russian sage, is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant and subshrub. Although not a member of Salvia, the genus of other plants commonly called sage, it is closely related to them. It has an upright habit, typically reaching 0.5–1.2 m (1 ft 8 in–3 ft 11 in) tall, with square stems and gray-green leaves that yield a distinctive odor when crushed, but it is best known for its flowers. Its flowering season extends from mid-summer to as late as October, with blue to violet blossoms arranged into showy, branched panicles.Native to the steppes and hills of southwestern and central Asia, it was introduced to cultivation by Vasily Perovsky in the 19th century. Successful over a wide range of climate and soil conditions, it has since become popular and widely planted. Several cultivars have been developed, differing primarily in leaf shape and overall height; 'Blue Spire' is the most common. This variation has been widely used in gardens and landscaping. P. atriplicifolia was the Perennial Plant Association's 1995 Plant of the Year, and the 'Blue Spire' cultivar received the Award of Garden Merit from the Royal Horticultural Society.The species has a long history of use in traditional medicine in its native range, where it is employed as a treatment for a variety of ailments. This has led to the investigation of its phytochemistry. Its flowers can be eaten in salads or crushed for dyemaking, and the plant has been considered for potential use in the phytoremediation of contaminated soil.
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