Results 191 to 200 of about 120,791 (211)
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Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 1996
AC Rifle, a cultivar of winter rye (Secale cereale L.), was developed at the Semiarid Prairie Agricultural Research Centre, Research Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Swift Current, Saskatchewan. It is the first semi-dwarf cultivar registered for production in the Prairie Provinces of Western Canada.
J. G. McLeod, J. F. Payne
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AC Rifle, a cultivar of winter rye (Secale cereale L.), was developed at the Semiarid Prairie Agricultural Research Centre, Research Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Swift Current, Saskatchewan. It is the first semi-dwarf cultivar registered for production in the Prairie Provinces of Western Canada.
J. G. McLeod, J. F. Payne
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Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 2000
AC Remington, a cultivar of winter rye (Secale cereale L.), was developed at the Semiarid Prairie Agricultural Research Centre, Research Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Swift Current, Saskatchewan. AC Remington is a semidwarf with 20 to 25% shorter straw and improved lodging resistance compared with tall cultivars.
J. G. McLeod, Y. T. Gan, J. F. Payne
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AC Remington, a cultivar of winter rye (Secale cereale L.), was developed at the Semiarid Prairie Agricultural Research Centre, Research Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Swift Current, Saskatchewan. AC Remington is a semidwarf with 20 to 25% shorter straw and improved lodging resistance compared with tall cultivars.
J. G. McLeod, Y. T. Gan, J. F. Payne
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Antifreeze proteins in winter rye
Physiologia Plantarum, 1997Six antifreeze proteins, which have the unique ability to adsorb onto the surface of ice and inhibit its growth, have been isolated from the apoplast of winter rye leaves where ice forms at subzero temperatures. The rye antifreeze proteins accumulate during cold acclimation and are similar to plant pathogenesis‐related proteins, including two ...
Marilyn Griffith +6 more
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TECHNOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF GROWING WINTER RYE
2023The research involved studying the influence of the fertilization system on the growth and development of winter rye plants. The soil is gray forest, has a neutral reaction (pH 6.6) and is characterized by a low content of humus and a high supply of nutrients. The repeatability of the experiment is threefold.
Kravchuk M. +4 more
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Dynamic phenological model for winter rye and winter barley
European Journal of Agronomy, 2005Abstract A detailed dynamic crop stand phenological model is presented for winter barley and winter rye. The modelled phenological stages are described in different scale units (FEEKES [1–20], BBCH [1–100] and DC [1–100]) and a differentiation in mathematical approaches and in parameterisation is made between the germination, the vegetative and the ...
Wilfried Mirschel +4 more
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VERNALIZATION OF WINTER RYE BY ULTRASONICS
Annals of Applied Biology, 1950Petkus winter rye seed was subjected to ultrasonic vibrations of i Mcyc./sec. frequency in order to test the possibility of their having a vernalizing action. Seed which had not been soaked, fully imbibed seed, germinating seed (radicle showing) and seedlings with about 2 mm.
W. W. SCHWABE, M. J. THORNLEY
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Freezing behavior of free protoplasts of winter rye
Cryobiology, 1978Abstract Free protoplasts prepared from the epicotyls of nonhardened rye seedlings were subjected to fast and slow freezing on a microscope-adapted thermoelectric stage. During rapid freezing to −12 °C, ice formation occurred inside the protoplasts causing lethal disruption of cell and membrane organization.
D. Siminovitch +2 more
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THE RYE GENOME IN WINTER HEXAPLOID TRITICALES
Canadian Journal of Genetics and Cytology, 1981In eight winter triticales (× Triticosecale Wittmack) chosen from the Cambridge crossing program all seven rye (Secale cereale L.) chromosomes were present. However, a number of rye chromosomes showed an obvious reduction in the size of C-bands at one or more telomeres, compared with normal rye.
A. G. Seal, M. D. Bennett
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Creation of a new winter rye morphotype
Russian Agricultural Sciences, 2009On the basis of original morphotypes characterized by individual traits and attributes valuable for breeding, a new winter rye morphotype capable of producing a high yield under drought conditions has been created as a result of their free cross-pollination and selection.
A. A. Torop +5 more
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PUMA, A NEW CULTIVAR OF WINTER RYE
Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 1973not available
L. H. SHEBESKI +3 more
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