نتایج جستجو برای: prunus amygdalus l

تعداد نتایج: 621833  

Journal: :International Journal of Horticultural Science 2002

Journal: :Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences 2000

2013
R. Socias

Almond (Prunus amygdalus Batsch) kernel composition is a basic aspect for almond quality evaluation, but, with the exception of kernel taste, only nut and kernel physical traits have been considered so far in almond evaluation. Kernel bitterness, due to the presence of amygdalin, has been thoroughly studied from the physiological and genetic points of view, but not the other chemical traits, wh...

2013
Jonathan Frye Wolfgang Grosse

Tree seedling flooding tolerance for 22 species was assessed under controlled field condi­ tions. Initial heights under control (freely draining soil, n = 20 per species) and flooded (stand­ ing water, depth = 10 cm, n = 20 per species) conditions were measured in March 1990. Sur­ vival, height and diameter growth were determined after 120 days. Recovery from flooding effects was assessed in th...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2014
Amir Hossein Eghbalian Mohammad Khanjani Mohammad Hassan Safaralizadeh Edward A Ueckermann

This paper reports two new species of Bdellidae, Cyta leliae sp. nov. and Cyta kurdistanicus sp. nov., collected from soil and litter under oak trees, Quercus brantii Lindl. (Fagaceae), wild almond, Amygdalus lycioides Spach (Rosaceae) and grass, Kurdistan Province, Iran. A key is provided to adult female Cyta of the world. 

Journal: :Journal of Drug Delivery and Therapeutics 2012

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2008
T E Cottrell J Fuest D L Horton

An examination of oviposition choices by the lesser peachtree borer, Synanthedon pictipes (Grote and Robinson) (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae), showed that wounded peach, Prunus persica (L.) Batsch, bark was attractive to females for oviposition. Females responded to bark that was injured mechanically (e.g., hammer blows, knife cuts, pruning wounds), infested by lesser peachtree borer larvae or injured...

نجفی, حمید,

Apricot (Prunus armenica L.), a fruit species of the family Rosaceae, genus Prunus L., is widely distributed in the Mediterranean region and the Middle East, especially in Iran. Suitable climatic conditions for apricot production and its economic importance were the main reasons for its vast area under cultivation and diversity. We studied genetic diversity of eighty three apricot genotypes and...

2017
Ryan R. Lenz Wenhao Dai

Phytoplasmas such as "Candidatus Phytoplasma pruni," the causal agent of X-disease of stone fruits, lack detailed biological analysis. This has limited the understanding of plant resistance mechanisms. Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana L.) is a promising model to be used for the plant-phytoplasma interaction due to its documented ability to resist X-disease infection. A consensus chokecherry genet...

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