The major damage they cause in grapes, with a drastic reduction in wine quality, is the spread of bunch rots. |
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The rubbish rots and gives off gases like methane which is potentially explosive as well as adding to global warming. |
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Ideally you want manure from horses bedded on straw, since the straw soaks up urine and rots down with the manure to produce a great conditioner. |
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A bruised pumpkin rots quickly and might not make it through the Halloween season. |
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The major soybean diseases can be classified as root rots, stem rots, leaf blights, and seed diseases. |
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It is very important to dry rugs and carpets as soon as possible to prevent mildew, a spreading gray-white mold that stains and rots fabrics. |
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So what excuse does the council have for not allowing food waste in the green bins, it all rots down? |
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Perhaps more insidiously, insects such as fruit fly can carry spores associated with bunch rots, and mealy bug can transmit leaf roll virus. |
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And summer gives way to the harvest and the winds of autumn, and the leaves lie dead on the ground and the fruit ripens and rots. |
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Do you open that muckle gate, or do I stand here until the rain rots it away? |
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As cellulose nitrate rots, it shrinks and becomes brittle, leaking toxic fumes corrosive enough to turn a reel of film into smelly gelatin ooze. |
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Fruit infections and cankers also occur but are hard to distinguish from other fruit rots and bark cankers. |
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Provided the sweet peppers are free of any rots, damage or deterioration that will affect their keeping quality. |
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But wooden tools do not turn up at archaeological sites because the wood rots over time. |
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Only very rarely do we see wooden structures from the past, because wood rots and decays with exposure to the elements. |
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Crown and root rots are the most significant diseases of birdsfoot trefoil. |
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After the wet start, and now an increasingly wet end to the season, blackleg is being found more widely, and as soils approach field capacity more rots will appear. |
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The peppers must be free of any disease, rots or deterioration which appreciably affects their appearance, edibility or keeping quality. |
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Wood regrows, it rots and finds its way back into the natural cycle from which it came. |
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Samples should be examined for rots, general fruit condition and shelf life at least every month. |
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Fungicide seed treatments are effective against many seed-borne and soil-borne seedling blights and seed rots. |
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These include soil borne diseases such as root rots in cereals and white mold in canola and pulse crops. |
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Before shipping, the inspector checks again the lot, not in the same way as at grading, to detect for example the development of rots. |
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Natural matter rots but chemists have developed materials that postpone decay. |
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For other crops such as anemone and celery, crown rots and leaf curl may be the principal symptoms. |
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A large part of it rots in compost plants without its energy being used or is burnt in waste incineration at double the cost. |
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It will stop rain leaching nutrients from the soil over the winter, and as it rots down it will improve the soil's texture and fertility quite naturally. |
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When a pumpkin is sent to the landfill, it rots, emitting methane, an alarmingly potent greenhouse gas. |
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The rosette rots if water stagnates, so moderate watering is ideal. |
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Measures should be taken to control pests and diseases which directly cause fruit rots or allow entry sites for patulin-producing moulds. |
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Among the diseases which can develop during this period are dry rot, gangrene, bacterial rots, late blight, silver scurf and skin spot. |
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Find it before it rots or is taped over, rip it to DVD or VCD, and upload it before it's gone, because the internet is all about anamnesis, if it's about anything. |
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Outbreaks of red stele and other root rots have occurred after long periods if irrigation for frost protection. |
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Sufficient moisture must be present to penetrate the testa or seed coat, but not so much that the seed rots or that the oxygen level in the soil is reduced. |
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Peat moss that is light and fibrous has the potential to reduce root rots with suppressive effect up to 6 months. |
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Some disease symptoms that may be caused by fungi include cankers, dieback, galls, leaf spots, rots, rusts and wilts. |
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Normally, living tissue such as skin rots from a carcass as it biodegrades, or decays. |
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More importantly, they keep acquiring stuff that cannot be consumed and never rots or rusts: plastic toys, metal garden furniture, porcelain knick-knacks. |
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The grass that plugs drainage ditches and impedes drainage is no different from the mechanism that occurs when that grass dies and rots, because it then robs the oxygen from the water and degrades a critical habitat. |
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One of the main reasons is that environmental conditions have a tremendous influence on the extent of damage root rots can inflict on soybeans in any given year. |
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There has been a saying in Uganda that the fish rots from the head. |
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Let me assure you, nothing freezes before it rots in that thing. |
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Some blights, galls and rots are caused by bacteria. |
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Although I hold some of the Commissioners in high esteem, I recall the old mafioso Neapolitan saying: A fish rots from the head downwards' and I therefore have to express my negative opinion of the Prodi Presidency. |
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As it rots, the sand flies it abounds in provide rich feeding for flocks of starlings and other passerines, wintering waders, gulls and others. |
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Raoul Moat rots in his grave and will soon be forgotten even by the pea-brains that wanted to big him up on Facebook. |
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And that was when the blighted times we live in first began, the dying rivers and the blackened vine, the rain that rots the seed in its furrow, the spavin, the sheep scab, the empty hive. |
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As new peat replaces the old peat, the older material underneath rots and releases humic acid, also known as bog acid. |
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Other pest and diseases can gain entry through the physical damage caused by gall formation, leading to rots. |
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The brown rots of pomaceous and drupaceous fruits are due to fungi, at least one of which was first described by Persoon in 1796 as Torula fructigena. |
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Other pathogens include anthracnose, bacterial soft rot, blight caused by Sclerotium rolfsii, bulb nematodes, other rots including blue molds, black molds and mushy rot. |
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Crop rotation prevents a build up of pests and diseases in the soil, such as clubroot in brassicas, eelworms in potatoes and tomatoes and root rots in peas and beans. |
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Crop rotation prevents a build-up of pests and diseases in the soil, such as clubroot in brassicas, eelworms in potatoes and tomatoes and root rots in peas and beans. |
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The use of nematicides has been found to result in lower numbers of galls per feeder root compared to a control, coupled with a lower number of rots in the storage roots. |
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Some plants may have succumbed to root rots or stem blights. |
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