Results 251 to 260 of about 3,006,800 (311)
Planting date affects biochemical characteristics, assimilate remobilization, and yield of safflower under water stress. [PDF]
Bahadori F +4 more
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Water stress reduces cellulose deposition in the cell wall and increases wax content, resulting in decreased fiber quality. [PDF]
Han Y +8 more
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A hybrid method for water stress evaluation of rice with the radiative transfer model and multidimensional imaging. [PDF]
Zhang Y +5 more
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Panicle water relations during water stress
Plant Science Letters, 1984Abstract Although the importance of water stress-induced sterility during reproductive stages of cereal development is obvious, little is known about the tissue water relations of the panicle. The water potential and water content of rice panicles were found to be linearly related.
J.C. O'Toole, T.C. Hsiao, O.S. Namuco
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Asian Survey, 2019
The widening gap between water supply and demand is the biggest threat and challenge before Pakistan. Of the available water, much is polluted. Both scarcity and pollution threaten the agriculture sector, on which the country’s economy depends.
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The widening gap between water supply and demand is the biggest threat and challenge before Pakistan. Of the available water, much is polluted. Both scarcity and pollution threaten the agriculture sector, on which the country’s economy depends.
openaire +1 more source
Crop Water Stress Index and Yield of Water‐Deficit‐Stressed Alfalfa
Agronomy Journal, 1988AbstractThe yield relationship of water‐deficit‐stressed alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) with the Crop Water Stress Index (CWSI) may be dynamic over the alfalfa harvest period. This investigation was conducted to define the alfalfa yield‐CWSI relationship(s), to test possible advantages of using the CWSI over the canopy‐minus‐air temperature (Tc−Ta ...
Hattendorf, M. J. +3 more
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Cereal Research Communications, 2009
Water is a distinguished stress factor of soils and ecosystems. The description and analysis of positive or negative soil-water stresses are the preconditions of the efficient control of their mechanisms, reversible and/or irreversible consequences. The most significant soil-water stress is extreme moisture regime: water surplus (flood, water-logging ...
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Water is a distinguished stress factor of soils and ecosystems. The description and analysis of positive or negative soil-water stresses are the preconditions of the efficient control of their mechanisms, reversible and/or irreversible consequences. The most significant soil-water stress is extreme moisture regime: water surplus (flood, water-logging ...
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Journal of Plant Nutrition, 2010
The effects of arsenate and arsenite on growth and transpiration were investigated in cucumber plants grown in nutrient solution containing 2, 10, and 100 μM phosphate, respectively. Root and shoot growth decreased by 48–64% compared to the control in all treatments and there was no significant difference between the effects of arsenic As(V) and As(III)
Viktória Czech, Edit Cseh, Ferenc Fodor
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The effects of arsenate and arsenite on growth and transpiration were investigated in cucumber plants grown in nutrient solution containing 2, 10, and 100 μM phosphate, respectively. Root and shoot growth decreased by 48–64% compared to the control in all treatments and there was no significant difference between the effects of arsenic As(V) and As(III)
Viktória Czech, Edit Cseh, Ferenc Fodor
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Annals of Applied Biology, 1975
ABSTRACTLike some other growth regulators, internal ethylene levels in plants fluctuate as a consequence of water stress and this phenomenon may be responsible for some of the developmental responses which result. Current work seeks to determine how internal ethylene levels are controlled, i.e. by biosynthesis, translocation, diffusion out of the plant
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ABSTRACTLike some other growth regulators, internal ethylene levels in plants fluctuate as a consequence of water stress and this phenomenon may be responsible for some of the developmental responses which result. Current work seeks to determine how internal ethylene levels are controlled, i.e. by biosynthesis, translocation, diffusion out of the plant
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1994
Water stress in mesophytic (non drought tolerant), as opposed to xerophytic (drought tolerant) cultivated species is probably the most common type of plant stress and in many regions is the bottleneck of agricultural development. Based on data collected from various geobotanical regions, Hurvitz (1958) has categorized drought tolerance of cultivated ...
Bryan D. Mckersie, Ya’acov Y. Leshem
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Water stress in mesophytic (non drought tolerant), as opposed to xerophytic (drought tolerant) cultivated species is probably the most common type of plant stress and in many regions is the bottleneck of agricultural development. Based on data collected from various geobotanical regions, Hurvitz (1958) has categorized drought tolerance of cultivated ...
Bryan D. Mckersie, Ya’acov Y. Leshem
openaire +1 more source

