Results 91 to 100 of about 5,007 (164)

Utilization of Texas Serpentine [PDF]

open access: yes, 1950
University of Texas at Austin
core   +1 more source

Malus x zumi 'Calocarpa': Redbud Crabapple

open access: yesEDIS, 2014
A hybrid of Malus baccata and Malus seiboldii, Redbud Crabapple grows at a moderate rate to 25 feet tall and 15 feet wide (can grow 30 feet wide), creating a dense, pyramidal form with weeping branch tips.
Edward Gilman, Dennis Watson
doaj  

Malus x 'Snowdrift': 'Snowdrift' Crabapple

open access: yesEDIS, 2014
`Snow Drift' Crabapple is a splendid tree and little pruning is required to develop a well-formed, rounded canopy. Unfortunately, it is moderately or severely affected by fireblight disease.
Edward Gilman, Dennis Watson
doaj  

Malus spp.: Crabapple

open access: yesEDIS, 2014
Crabapples are best grown in a sunny location with good air circulation and have no particular soil preferences, except soil should be well-drained. Root pruned trees transplant most easily. Tree size, flower color, fruit color, and growth and branching
Edward Gilman, Dennis Watson
doaj  

Ecological and evolutionary drivers of phenotypic and genetic variation in the European crabapple [Malus sylvestris (L.) Mill.], a wild relative of the cultivated apple. [PDF]

open access: yesAnn Bot, 2023
Chen X   +21 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Malus sargentii: Sargent Crabapple

open access: yesEDIS, 2014
Sargent Crabapple is a dwarf, deciduous tree, forming a dense, wide-spreading, irregularly-rounded silhouette, six to eight feet high by 8 to 10 feet wide.
Edward Gilman, Dennis Watson
doaj  

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