Results 211 to 220 of about 7,704 (238)
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Frost hardening and resistance in three Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Mill.) provenances
Israel Journal of Plant Sciences, 2001The paper investigates frost hardening and resistance in two-year-old seedlings of three Aleppo pine provenances (Litorale tarantino, Eubea, Kassandra). Starting in early autumn, field-raised seedlings were sampled fortnightly and subjected to temperatures of +4, -6, -12, and -17 degreesC.
Calamassi R, Paoletti E, Strati S
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Chlorophylls content and photosynthetic performance in Aleppo pine needles
2018Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis L.) is widely spread Mediterranean woody species. Its natural and cultivated populations can be frequently found in the coastal area of the Adriatic Sea. Usually, needles fall down after the second year, what can be the reason for substantial crown defoliation under extreme environmental stress.
Trstenjak, Tomo +4 more
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Tunisian Aleppo pine wood: properties, potentialities and outlets
2019This chapter is a synthesis of the works carried out by different authors, on Tunisian Aleppo pine wood .It focuses on the technological properties of wood, its various uses and provides key elements on its real potentialities and the possibilities of its valorization at the local level.
Elaieb, Mohamed Tahar +5 more
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Pinus halepensis (Aleppo pine) nuts induced anaphylaxis: a case series
Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 2023Gabrielle Doré‐Brabant +3 more
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Significance of bedrock as a site factor for Aleppo pine
Forest Ecology and Management, 1982Abstract A survey of plantations over 30 years old in the Judean mountains and in the Shephela region was conducted to determine quantitative effects of the bedrock on the growth of Aleppo pine. Site quality was found to be strongly affected by both the lithological and moisture-retaining characters (rather than by the geological age).
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In Vitro Clonal Propagation of Aleppo Pine (Pinus Halepensis Mill.)
1999For more than fifty years Pinus halepensis has been the major planted forest tree throughout Israel, and it occupies an important place, together with P. brutia, in other Mediterranean regions. Its high tolerance to dry climate and its ability to grow on poor marginal soils (Weinstein 1989) has made it a preferable species for reforestation in Israel ...
T. Tzfira +4 more
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Program Aleppo pine: studying stand regeneration, third report 2007
2007Ce travail vise à étudier l'impact de différents types de travaux de la végétation et du sol ainsi que le rôle des rémanents sur la régénération du pin d'Alep en climat méso méditerranéen. Dans une pinède âgée après coupe de régénération, les travaux suivants ont été testés : broyage mécanique de la végétation, broyage suivi d'un crochetage simple ou ...
Prévosto, Bernard +4 more
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