Results 131 to 140 of about 7,033 (181)

Coconut palm (Cocos nucifera L.)

open access: yes, 1986
Pannetier, C., Buffard-Morel, Jacqueline
openaire   +1 more source
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Cocos nucifera coconut.

2020
This chapter focuses on the origin, geographical distribution, morphological, physiological and phenological characteristics, cultivation history, breeding, vegetative propagation methods and molecular genetics and genomics of coconuts (Cocos nucifera).
Adkins, S. W.   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Coconut (Cocos nucifera)

2020
This chapter is about the history, components, their health attributes, and food applications of coconut. The exact origin of coconut is not known, but it was believed to be more than 80 million years old. Asia, especially south India is leading the coconut production in the world.
Pankaj T. Parmar   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cocos nucifera (coconut)

Trends in Genetics, 2022
Shouchuang Wang   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Anther Culture in Coconut (Cocos nucifera L.)

2021
Doubled haploids have a high impact on the improvement of heterozygous crops through hybridization. Anther culture is a doubled haploid technique for producing homozygous lines. In coconut, a tree species reported to be recalcitrant for tissue culture, a successful doubled haploid protocol was established through anther culture.
P I Prasanthi, Perera   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Plate 355. Cocos nucifera

Curtis's Botanical Magazine, 1999
A brief account of the relationships, origin, uses and cultivation of the coconut, Cocos nucifera L. (Arecaceae) are provided together with a detailed description and illustration.
John Dransfield, David Cooke
openaire   +1 more source

Somatic Embryogenesis in Coconut (Cocos nucifera L.)

1995
The coconut palm, (Cocos nucifera L.), also given the name “tree of life” or the “tree of a hundred uses”, plays an important socioeconomic role. It is a heliophilous plant widely distributed throughout the humid intertropical zone, where it is grown on more than 10 million ha in 80 countries (Pannetier and Buffard-Morel 1986).
Verdeil, Jean-Luc   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Development of the Syncytial Endosperm of Cocos nucifera

Nature, 1954
DUTT1 has recently summarized her investigations on nuclear behaviour in the developing endosperm of Cocos nucifera. Several of her observations are at variance with statements we have previously made2,3 and with some of our more recent findings4.
VICTOR M. CUTTER, BESSIE FREEMAN
openaire   +1 more source

Twinning and Haploidy in Cocos nucifera Linn.

Nature, 1962
IN the coconut, Cocos nucifera Linn., the ovary is tricarpellary and each carpel contains an ovule. Usually only one ovule develops and two abort, and although there are three depressions or ‘eyes’ in the endocarp wall of the mature fruit only one of these is a functional germ pore. From this eye normally a single shoot emerges.
R. A. WHITEHEAD, G. P. CHAPMAN
openaire   +1 more source

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