Results 161 to 170 of about 1,237 (192)
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A viability study of Fallopia japonica stem tissue

Weed Research, 2001
Vegetative regeneration of intact and split nodes of Fallopia japonica (Houtt.) Ronse Decraene was the focus of this greenhouse experiment. Stem material, collected in May, July and September 1997, was cut into 40‐mm‐long sections and incubated on the surface of moist compost in a greenhouse. All samples showed some regrowth of buds and new shoots from
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Dyeing of plasma treated cotton and bamboo rayon with Fallopia japonica extract

Cellulose, 2016
To achieve colourful and antibacterial textiles using ecologically friendly processes, cotton and bamboo rayon knitted fabrics were treated using radio-frequency low-pressure water vapour plasma and dyed with the extract of Fallopia japonica (Japanese knotweed) rhizome.
Marija Gorjanc   +6 more
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Extraction of Resveratrol from Fallopia Japonica Roots

2023
In this study, the effectiveness of resveratrol extraction was evaluated using six types of NADES derived from a single group of HBDs (citric acid and malic acid) in combination with one type of HBA, choline chloride (ChCl).
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Fallopia japonica (Japanese Knotweed) in Japan: Why Is It Not a Pest for Japanese People?

2016
Fallopia japonica is native to Japan, Taiwan and Korea. It is now widely naturalized in Europe and North America, and is regarded as one of the worst invasive alien species. For Japanese people, F. japonica has been one of the most familiar and useful wild plants for centuries. It is rare to regard the plant as a harmful weed in Japan.
Michiko Shimoda, Norifumi Yamasaki
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Fallopia japonica (Japanese knotweed)

PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank, 2022
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Fallopia Japonica (Houtt.) Ronse Decraene

The Journal of Ecology, 1994
David J. Beerling   +2 more
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Knotted Histories: Re-Narrating Invasive Weeds with Fallopia japonica

Biodiversity debates reveal the tensions that arise when ecological processes intersect with social, economic, and political assumptions and expectations. This is especially captured in the category of ‘weeds’, to which plants are not attributed for any inherent properties, but because of their disturbance of human projects, land-use regimes, or ...
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