Results 151 to 160 of about 1,600 (169)
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The morphology and development of Lotus uliginosus and Trifolium subterraneum under Pinus radiata canopy in southern Chile

Agroforestry Systems, 1997
A split-plot experiment was conducted in southern Chile to study the effects of tree cover and level of fertilizer application at establishment on the morphology and development of the legumes Lotus uliginosus and Trifolium subterraneum, when sown in conjunction with Festuca arundinacea as the companion grass.
O. A. Balocchi, C. J. C. Phillips
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Le Lotier des Marais en Dombes (Lotus uliginosus Schkuhr)

Journal d'agriculture tropicale et de botanique appliquée, 1975
La Dombes des étangs (Ain) est, depuis les années 20, le théâtre d'une culture assez spécifique, et pour le moins étrange. En fait, parler de culture est beaucoup dire : il s'agit là plutôt d'une « cueillette », car le Lotus uliginosus (Schk.), croît spontanément dans cette région, et toute tentative de « domestication » est ici vouée à l'échec ...
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Effects of cycocel on growth and seed yield ofLotus uliginosusSchk. cv. Grasslands Maku

New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1992
Abstract Field experiments were conducted in two successive seasons to investigate the effects of the plant growth retardant cycocel applied at 1.25 and 2.50 kg a.i./ha at different plant growth stages on the vegetative and reproductive growth, yield components, and seed yield of Lotus uliginosus Schk. cv. Grasslands Maku.
R. S. Tabora, J. G. Hampton
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Influence de l'environnement sur la production de tanins condensés chezLotus uliginosusSchkuhr (Fabaceae)

Acta Botanica Gallica, 1997
Summary Three natural populations of Lotus uliginosus growing on more or less oligrotrophic hydromorphic soils were compared with an experimental population submitted to three controled factors (soil water availability and fertility and simulated herbivory) for foliar “condensed” tannins and for leaf area.
Guilhem Mansion   +3 more
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The response of Lotus uliginosus L. grown on hill soils to inoculation with Rhizobium

Grass and Forage Science, 1980
AbstractThe response of marsh birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus uliginosus) to inoculation with appropriate Rhizobium spp. was compared over 2 years. Inoculated and uninoculated seed was sown at 5 kg ha‐1 on three soil types, brown earth, peaty podsol and deep peat. Perennial ryegrass cv. Perma was sown at 20 kg ha‐1 as a companion species.
D. C. GWYNNE, ROSEMARY E. BECKETT
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Grazing and fertilizer management for establishment of Lotus uliginosus and Trifolium subterraneum under Pinus radiata in southern Chile

Agroforestry Systems, 1997
An experiment was conducted in southern Chile to study the effect of tree cover (0 or 200 stems of 13-year-old Pinus radiate/ha), grazing severity (8 or 12 cm height at commencement of grazing by sheep) and fertilizer application rate (low or high) on the establishment and growth of Lotus uliginosus and Trifolium subterraneum, when sown in conjunction ...
O. A. Balocchi, C. J. C. Phillips
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Effect of high temperature on condensed tannin accumulation in leaf tissues of big trefoil (Lotus uliginosus Schkuhr)

Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1994
AbstractPlants from three clones of big trefoil (Lotus uliginosus Schkuhr) having low, medium and high concentrations of tannin in their leaves were subjected to growing conditions with normal (20°C) and high (30°C) temperature regimes. Plants were tested every 3 weeks for foliar condensed tannin content using the vanillin‐HCl and the butanol‐HCl ...
Garry L Lees   +2 more
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Germplasm Sources for Improvement of Forage Quality in Lotus corniculatus L. and L. uliginosus Schkuhr (Fabaceae)

Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 2006
Extensive germplasm resources are present in collections of Lotus corniculatus and L. uliginosus, two forage species that are valuable in situations where other legumes are not persistent. Naturalised populations in many regions are the primary gene pool for genetic improvement of these species and interspecific hybrids are an important source of ...
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Development of N2‐fixing nodules on the wetland legume Lotus uliginosus exposed to conditions of flooding

New Phytologist, 1999
Seeds of the wetland legume, Lotus uliginosus, were germinated and grown in vermiculite which was either continuously flooded or well‐drained. Plants from both treatments were infected by Mesorhizobium loti strain DUS341 via a ‘classical’ root hair pathway, although some flooded plants appeared to be infected via enlarged epidermal cells. Subsequent to
EUAN K. JAMES, JANET I. SPRENT
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Nutrient efficiency and cellular contents of phosphorus and nitrogen in Trifolium repens and a diploid and tetraploid Lotus uliginosus

Grass and Forage Science, 1992
AbstractTwo cultivars of white clover (Ladino and Kent Wild White) and two cultivars of lotus (Grasslands Maku and G4703) were grown in pots of soil at low to moderate levels of phosphorus (P) supply. Nitrogen supply was by fixation. Cell size and nitrogen, phosphorus and chlorophyll content per cell were estimated from samples of leaf tissue.
A. L. HART, W. A. COLLIER
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