Results 251 to 260 of about 83,307 (284)

Cross‐channel pollination

Design Management Journal (Former Series), 2003
Intriguingly, Connie Birdsall and Brendán Murphy have discovered that as communications go digital, the outcome has been greater similarity—rather than greater diversity—among media. Addressing this phenomenon, they discuss the evolution of this cross‐channel pollination and outline principles to guide the development of effective communications in ...
Connie Birdsall, Brendán Murphy
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FERTILITY OF ALFALFA VARIETIES IN SELF-POLLINATION AND CROSS-POLLINATION

Bulletin of the Korkyt Ata Kyzylorda University, 2022
The article presents the results of studying alfalfa in a collection nursery by fertility, self-fertility, number of seeds in one pod, percentage of fertility of seedbuds in the ovary, number of seedbuds in one flower and seed productivity. The goal of the research is to study self-pollination and cross-pollination, fertility of a collection of ...
A.T. Kenebayev   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cross‐Pollination Technique for Spontaneously Self‐Pollinated Sweetclover

Crop Science, 1991
There is increased interest in using a dwarf, spontaneously self‐pollinated accession (U389) of annual, white‐flowered sweetclover (Melilotus alba Desr.) for studying N2 fixation and for characterizing the photosynthetic apparatus. Genetic analysis of this accession may therefore be required.
J. E. Miller   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Cross pollination in corn

Trends in Plant Science, 2000
John Jemison (University of Maine’s Cooperative Extension Farm, USA) found that the highest incidence of cross pollination between Roundup Ready® corn and non-genetically modified corn was 1% in the first six rows of a field planted 30.5 m downwind. At a distance of 305 m (which is usually allowed to separate GM corn and non-GM corn), cross-pollination
openaire   +1 more source

NATURAL CROSS-POLLINATION IN LINSEED

Madras Agricultural Journal, 1938
Linseed is cultivated entirely as an oil-seed crop in India, unlike Europe and America, where it is grown mainly for fibre. Next to Argentine, India is the largest linseed producing and exporting country. The area under linseed in India is about 34,000,00 acres, most of it being in the Central Provinces and Berar (9,70,000), United Provinces (8,60,000)
KADAM B.S, KULKARNI R.K, PATEL S.M
openaire   +1 more source

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