Results 211 to 220 of about 36,951 (236)
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Two new bicoumarins from Trifolium repens L.

Journal of Asian natural products research, 2004
Two new bicoumarins, named repensin A (1) and B (2), have been isolated from Trifolium repens. On the basis of spectral data, the structures of 1 and 2 have been established as 7-methoxy-7',8'-dihydroxy-8,6'-bicoumarinyl and 7,5'-dihydroxy-3,6'-bicoumarinyl, respectively.
Qing-Feng, Zhan   +3 more
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Grasslands NuSiral white clover (Trifolium repens L.)

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 2002
Grasslands NuSiral is a medium–large-leaf white clover (Trifolium repens L.) cultivar with intermediate growth habit (midway between open and erect and dense and prostrate), early flowering maturity and high growing point density. G. NuSiral possesses the plant-type attributes known to be desirable for broad adaptation to dryland pasture conditions in ...
J. F. Ayres   +3 more
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Trifolium repens Linnaeus 1753

2007
Trifolium repens Linnaeus, Species Plantarum 2: 767. 1753. "Habitat in Europae pascuis." RCN: 5649. Lectotype (Fawcett & Rendle, Fl. Jamaica 4: 13. 1920): Herb. Linn. No. 930.16 (LINN). Current name: Trifolium repens L. (Fabaceae: Faboideae). Note: Although Fawcett & Rendle stated only "Type in Herb. Linn.", there is only one sheet associated with this
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K���������� ������������������������ ������ ������������������ ��������������-���� �������������� �������������������������� ���� �������������������� ������ Trifolium repens L.

2019
As the human population keeps growing with accelerated pace, the urban environment has become a predominant feature of terrestrial landscapes. Urban environment -compared to rural- has very different environmental conditions that impose selection pressures to species; many of these species adapt through phenotypic and genotypic changes.
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Transgenic White Clover (Trifolium repens)

2000
White clover (Trifolium repens L.) is a perennial legume species that is an important component of many temperate zone pastoral animal production systems. In New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Denmark, and to a lesser extent western and southern Europe, the USA, South America, and Australia, white clover is grown together with grasses, as a low ...
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Leaf Development in Trifolium repens

Botanical Gazette, 1966
Leaf development is described quantitatively, with particular reference to rates and durations of cell division and cell expansion in the various tissues of the lamina and to development of the vascular system. From these data the following three hypotheses are suggested and are discussed in relation to the diversity in leaf structure between species ...
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Trifolium repens var. pozzicola Briq.

2018
Published as part of Jeanmonod, Daniel, 2018, Typification des noms de taxons corses de l'herbier Burnat (G-BU), pp.
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Quality characteristics of backcross hybrids between Trifolium repens and Trifolium ambiguum

Euphytica, 2002
Two generations of novel backcross hybrids between white clover (Trifolium repens L.) and the related species Trifolium ambiguum,with white clover as the recurrent parent, were analysed for forage quality characteristics. Water soluble carbohydrate (WSC) levels, nitrogen concentrations (%N), and dry matter digestibility (DMD) were recorded for the ...
M.T. Abberton   +4 more
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Phosphate efflux rates from roots of Trifolium uniflorum, Trifolium repens and some T. repens × T. uniflorum interspecific hybrids

Acta Physiologiae Plantarum, 2016
Phosphate efflux rates from root systems were measured on hydroponically grown plants of Trifolium uniflorum, white clover (T. repens), and six interspecific T. repens × T. uniflorum hybrids that had been backcrossed to white clover. Efflux of phosphate was measurable for every clover type.
James Crush   +2 more
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Competition between cyanogenic and acyanogenic morphs of Trifolium repens

Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 1992
To investigate the cost of the dimorphic cyanogenic system in Trifolium repens L., genotypes of the cyanogenic (Tc) and acyanogenic (Ta) morphs were grown in mixtures over a range of ratios and in pure stands at two levels of total density (low in a first experiment, high in a second experiment). The principles of the competition analysis employed were
B, Noitsakis, P, Jacquard
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