These observations confirm the importance of ethylene in initiating fruit ripening. |
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Wheat fields are ripening with the kernels in the soft to hard dough stages. |
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By contrast, drought hastens ripening and seed maturation for tomato and reduces fruit abscission for lychee trees. |
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It sounds as if your mother plant has produced suckers while the fruit has been developing and ripening. |
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If your original plant is healthy and has produced suckers while the fruit has been developing and ripening, a sucker may produce a second fruit. |
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In soft fruit such as tomato this process occurs early in ripening whereas in crisp fruits such as apple it is a late-ripening process. |
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Red Bartletts or Williams are very similar to the traditional Williams, aside from ripening to a reddish color rather than a yellow color. |
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Never refrigerate tomatoes that are not fully ripe because cold temperatures stop the ripening process. |
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Remove late flowers on peppers and eggplant to send more energy into the ripening fruit. |
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Avoid pruning leaves or stems while the fruit is ripening, and consider shading the fruit. |
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As the days grow shorter and cooler, plants take on new personas, ripening into warm gold, russet, and sepia tones. |
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The observations also suggest that ethylene in ripening is regulated entirely in an autocatalytic manner. |
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The procedure should make artificial chemical ripening less necessary for apples, bananas and most stone fruits now treated with ethylene. |
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It is left to mature in the cellar and the final ripening stage takes place in a spruce wood box, where the cheese is kept for at least 3 weeks. |
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This bud of love, by summer's ripening breath, may prove a beauteous flow'r when next we meet. |
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A varied composition provides continuity of food supply for birds and small mammals, with seeds, fruits and berries ripening at different times. |
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Magnesium deficiency may be associated with the disorder of shanking, in which the bunch stems and berries shrivel before ripening. |
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There is a never-ending journey of going deeper into it and one's musical maturity keeps ripening. |
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The combination of an early spring and warm sunny weather brought on ripening, and harvesting at the end of February. |
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With summer ripening the odour in the area, the neighbours drew up a roster system to empty the night cart pan, dubbing it Dunny Duty. |
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At the beginning of its ripening, Camembert is crumbly and soft and gets creamier over time. |
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The taste of fruit ripened using Ethyril gas in a ripening chamber is said to be much better than the fruit ripened with carbide. |
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Bend over the leaves of spring-sown onions just above the neck of each bulb, to help the ripening process. |
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The apricot gets its name from the Latin word praecox, meaning precocious, for its habit of ripening early compared with other stone fruits. |
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Irrigation during the dry season and once during ripening will increase the size of Jamaican sweetsop. |
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Ethylene plays a major role in initiating ripening in climacteric fruits such as tomato and apple. |
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Conflicting results have been reported during the ripening of climacteric fruits after harvest. |
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As a senescing hormone, it promotes leaf-yellowing, climacteric fruit ripening, flower and leaf abscission. |
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Millions of orange cloudberries are ripening in Norway, and experts say it may be the best cloudberry season in decades. |
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The enzyme indeed increases during ripening, and is concentrated in the skin and outer pericarp of the fruit. |
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In that eggplant does not experience a marked ripening stage like tomato and pepper, immature and mature fruit were compared. |
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Labor is induced in up to 20 percent of pregnancies, and cervical ripening is required in about one half of inductions. |
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The pods that encase the edible portion of the fruits are hard and turn from brown to pink as they start ripening. |
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Thus basal primates might have used ethanol plumes to locate ripening fruits as well as associated fauna. |
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Flowers appear on stargrass and pokeweed by the end of spring, but remain through October, with the berries of pokeweed ripening in autumn. |
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The perfect corn snow was ripening in the sun, and a velvet 45 degree pitch dropped below us like a frozen plume of whitewater. |
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Some people keep their bulbs in the refrigerator crisper drawer, taking care to avoid storing them with ripening fruit. |
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This stops ripening, improves preservation and gives Freekeh its characteristic toasted flavor. |
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In the prairie pothole region of the United States, blackbirds damage ripening sunflower crops. |
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He remarked that facilities like pre-cooling, grading, packing and ripening chambers will be provided at the private markets. |
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It is also a very busy month as strawberries, blackcurrants, raspberries, gooseberries are ripening. |
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Once outside the camera, in the light, the pictures took about a minute to develop fully, ripening from an initial turquoise haze into a creamy colorful lucidity. |
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A conspicuous anatomical feature associated with pepper fruit ripening was the development of a plate of sclerenchymatous tissue in the separation zone. |
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Young trees are generally trained to an open centre or vase shape as this allows even ripening of fruit and good air circulation, which helps prevent disease. |
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In plants, ethanol is produced in seeds with an oxygen-impermeable testa, root tips, and the deep tissues of ripening fruit where there is a high demand for oxygen. |
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Here I show that softening texture also characterizes the fruit ripening process, and that color is of ambiguous importance to primates possessing trichromatic vision. |
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Pull the baby runners back into the rows so they are not trodden on later, lifting the ripening berries up and carefully coddling each plant in a nest of straw. |
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A ripening banana put in a lidded box with green tomatoes turns them red. |
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A ripening paddy crop had covered the fields in a mantle of old gold. |
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As with other small fruits, Botrytis primarily affects ripening fruit, although under certain circumstances the fungus can cause stem blight as well. |
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Ethylene is involved in many biological processes, like fruit ripening, flower and leaf abscission, senescence, many stress acclimations, and growth. |
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All around the greedy jackjaws, blackbirds, thrushes and magpies eye the ripening fruit and at the exact moment that the fruit ripens they pounce leaving nothing but pips. |
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Placing unripe tomatoes in with ripe tomatoes, apples or bananas also speeds ripening because ripe fruit gives off a greater amount of ethylene gas than unripe fruit. |
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On the wall outside, a pear tree bore luscious, ripening Jargonelles. |
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As ripening progresses, fruit colour changes from green to red as chloroplasts are transformed into chromoplasts, chlorophyll is degraded and carotenoids accumulate. |
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How often you have to give your peas a once-over depends on the weather, with warmer weather hastening ripening and thus calling for more frequent picking. |
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In ripening fruit, chloroplasts develop into chromoplasts and there are large changes in stromule number and morphology, particularly in the inner mesocarp cells. |
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In the ripening stage of strawberry fruit development the vascular tissue comprises long fibres composed of cellulose, protein, pectin, and lignin. |
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In plants with fleshy fruits, a major focus has been the dissection of biochemical and genetic regulatory cascades controlling ripening, using tomato as a model species. |
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In climacteric fruits such as peaches and tomato, ripening is associated with a characteristic burst of respiration which correlates with an increase in ethylene production. |
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Whether you are fortunate enough to have a garden bursting with ripening soft fruits, berries and currants, or whether you buy them at the shops, this is the time to indulge. |
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It is a very heavy cropper, ripening in August and September. |
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A few studies are available on the use of misoprostol for ripening the cervix prior to gynecological procedures on women. |
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Initial observations have revealed diversity in several characteristics, including thorniness, ripening time, and picking ease. |
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Characterization of lactobacilli involved in the ripening of soppressata molisana, a typical southern Italy fermented sausage. |
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Fyffes has seven distribution and ripening bases throughout the UK and imports its bananas from South Africa, the Caribbean and Spain. |
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Her hypothesis concerned the role of an enzyme called sucrose synthase in the ripening process. |
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The manufacturing and ripening process takes approximately nine to twelve weeks. |
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It is used for food after being processed while green for pickled walnuts or after full ripening for its nutmeat. |
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This prevents ethylene concentrations from rising to higher amounts and preventing ripening from occurring too quickly. |
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Prior to general introduction of this trait, most tomatoes produced more sugar during ripening, and were sweeter and more flavorful. |
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Although not a disease as such, irregular supplies of water can cause growing or ripening fruit to split. |
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Photographs of ripening grain, which changes colour rapidly at maturation, have revealed buried structures with great precision. |
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Grain growth is the process of grain boundary motion and Ostwald ripening to increase the average grain size. |
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The grounds were surrounded by high walls which served to keep out thieves and to aid the ripening of tender fruit. |
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Evidently, during the ripening process, the solanines are metabolised to neutral saponins without the occurrence of glycoside hydrolysis. |
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Effect of temperature during storage and ripening on firmness, extractable juice and woolliness in nectarines. |
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Abu-Sarra AF and AA Abu-Goukh Changes in pectinesterase, polygalactouronase and cellulase activity during mango fruit ripening. |
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The berries of climbing nightshade are currently ripening and those of pokeweed will be soon. |
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Regardless of the concentration of fungal rennet and pH of renneting, the pH of the curd was decreasing during ripening period. |
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I know it sounds crazy, but the banana gives off ethylene gas, a natural fruit ripener, and so speeds up the tomato ripening. |
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Study of pectin esterase and changes in pectin methylation during normal and abnormal pleach ripening. |
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Pomelos or shaddocks have a light green skin that turns bright yellow while ripening. |
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During the ripening process, the husk will become brittle and the shell hard. |
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After ripening, they blow off like dust particles or spores. |
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Scientists have discovered that ripening bananas actually luminesce, or glow, blue when exposed to the invisible energy waves of ultraviolet light, also called black light. |
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Most of the year the droppings are of solid consistency but, with the ripening of blueberries, these dominate the diet and the faeces become formless and bluish black. |
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Unfortunately the ripening and fermenting happens just about the time the adolescent cedar waxwings have left the nest and are really getting into flight school. |
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Without a functional SlGLK2 gene, the ripening tomato forms fewer and punier chloroplasts that don't deliver, Powell and her colleagues have found. |
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Tomatoes that are not yet ripe can be kept in a paper bag till ripening. |
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The moisture content of SMS was influenced by ripening duration, and the potential for water leakage increased as autolysis advanced during the ripening process. |
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A way-going crop is a crop of grain to which tenants for years are sometimes entitled by custom, despite not ripening until after the termination of the lease. |
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The Japanese name for autumn olive is aki-gumi, meaning ''autumn silverberry,'' and it refers to the ripening period and the silvery flecking found also on the fruits. |
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The most favoured varieties are the quick ripening Germanic grapes as Madeline Angevine, Seyval Blanc, Reichensteiner and Siegerrebe, with a little red as well. |
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