The perforating foramen has disappeared, and the calcaneal tuber projects to the rear. |
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Spain's contemporary version of the ancient refreshments barley-water or almond-water is made from the tuber chufa and is called horchata. |
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They are located in the region between the mamillary bodies and the tuber cinereum of the hypothalamus. |
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The tuber cinereum, lying in front of the mammilary bodies and behind the pituitary stalk, is enlarged. |
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The tuber cinereum is an elevated mound of gray substance between the optic chiasma and the mamillary bodies. |
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Curcuma is a tall reed-like tuber from Burma with luscious, lilac-pink tubular flowers that make a spectacular show. |
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They were observed 6-7 layers below the suberized periderm and in the tuber portion far from the buds. |
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Potato tuber native periderm and immature wound periderm were very similar in basic organization. |
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By repeatedly removing the leaves on cattail plants, the food supply in the underground tuber will be depleted and the plant will eventually die. |
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There are only marginal changes in phosphorylated intermediates in the diurnal time-frame or during tuber development. |
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In the midline, the tuber, pyramis, uvula, and nodulus are seen on the inferior aspect of the vermis. |
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To produce a new plant, each tuber must have an eye which appears at the point where the tuber connects to the main stalk. |
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A device called a reflectometer is used to measure the degree of whiteness in processed tuber samples destined to become chips. |
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Some ethnobotanists and anthropologists are convinced that root and tuber crops were among the first plants to be domesticated. |
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To allow the tuber to reset for the next growing season you need to let them die back naturally. |
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The plant's shiny, fleshy leaves, stems and underground tuber store water, so it's able to go weeks without water. |
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The attributes of waxiness or flouriness are also influenced by the growing conditions, and by the age of the tuber. |
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After flowering, the stalks curl into a coil, drawing the seed capsule down on top of the tuber. |
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Not only was the total amount of tuber starch reduced, but its composition was also affected. |
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Even the accompanying potato and turnip gratin play off tuber and root, the warmth of one, the tang of the other. |
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In 1971, ARS researchers determined that a viroid was the cause of potato spindle tuber disease, which previously had been identified as a virus. |
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Generally, one formula includes 40 to 50 types of herbal medicine, such as ginseng, tuckahoe, honey, medlar and tuber of multiflower knotweed. |
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By planting parts of the tuber of a potato, one can create new organisms with the same genetic makeup. |
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If a very strict tolerance were applied, i.e. one affected tuber in a sample, growers might challenge the diagnosis. |
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For the most part I use an autogenous bone graft from the retromolar or the tuber region. |
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To investigate tuber tissue structure, samples were taken from a core of tissue in the medial longitudinal plane, from beneath the primary bud to the base of the tuber. |
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Better known for its seed pods, green and dried seeds, and edible flowers, the winged bean also has an edible, nitrogen-fixing tuber which can be prepared like a potato. |
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The tuber from the wing-stalked yam is a valuable source of diosgenin. |
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The neurohypophysis proper comprises the median eminence of the tuber cinereum, the infundibulum, the pituitary stalk, and the posterior or neural lobe of the pituitary gland. |
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This is best done by counting the number of sprouts on a representative selection of tuber samples taken from the seed lot. |
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In the case of ring rot the tuber has to be squeezed in order to press out a mass of yellowish dissolved vascular tissue and bacterial slime. |
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Glassiness is when the potato tissue of a re-sprouted tuber, or the top end of a long tuber, looks watery-translucent when cut. |
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Frequently, the fungus is confined to mild to severe netting or scurf, and often, even in extreme cases, only a portion of the tuber is affected. |
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The tunnels may result in deep cracks, rough and pimply skin and sometimes distortion of the tuber. |
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With a little digging in the earth, the roundish globose tuber can be found as final proof. |
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Tubers are small, elongated, cylindrical, spindle or dumb-bell-shaped, with prominent eyes evenly distributed over the tuber. |
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Yam is a tuber crop that is very much appreciated by consumers in its fresh state. |
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And sure, the tuber is cheap to grow, but is it sustainable Its widespread cultivation is not good for the food security of many countries. |
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Contact with the buds on the tuber is essential for results to be effective. |
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Application before wounds have healed will prevent suberization and will leave the tuber open to infection by disease. |
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For instance, is the seed or tuber of an agricultural crop, a genetic resource or a biological resource? |
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Locally, the tuber is often chopped and added to salads, but also consumed boiled or baked. |
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Some consider that an isolate is NTN if infection produces tuber necrosis on a susceptible variety in the field. |
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Late blight destroys the foliage of the potato plant and can also affect the tuber. |
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They conclude that it is difficult to predict the effects of climate change on tuber crops. |
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In addition to plant development and tuber yields, the research also looked at the effects of the living mulches on soil moisture. |
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With this system, the potatoes are arranged in a continuous line on the planting belts to guarantee proper tuber spacing in the row. |
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The term is also used to designate the tuber itself which is used as a vegetable. |
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A small whole tuber or piece of a larger tuber is planted in the field to produce the crop. |
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The delegation of Jamaica volunteered to provide data on pesticides used on tuber crops in the Caribbean. |
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The Chinese artichoke is a small, finely shaped and annulated tuber. |
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This project will focus on the dissemination of high-yield cassava varieties, and on the development and promotion of the tuber in selected regional markets where it could effectively compete with cereals. |
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The tuber looks something like a knobby potato. |
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Peruvian cuisine naturally contains the potato as a primary ingredient in many dishes, as around 3,000 varieties of this tuber are grown there. |
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Before explorers brought potato to Europe in the 16th century, Finnish farmers among others grew the bulbous chervil as a root vegetable because of its tuber which contains a lot of starch. |
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Earliest infections can be observed, when the tuber is cut across the heel end, as narrow glassy to cream-yellow zones along the vascular tissue near the stolon end. |
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Rhizoctonia or black scurf on the tuber is identified by the presence of hard, black or dark brown bodies called sclerotia resting on the surface of the tubers. |
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Exposure to light, physical damage, and age increase glycoalkaloid content within the tuber. |
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The print PCR was shown to be suitable for testing large samples of potato plants, whereas dot PCR was recommended for in vitro plantlets and tuber tissue. |
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Potato spindle tuber disease is viroid-induced. |
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The light and filtering soils heat up very quickly and also evacuate the excess humidity which is harmful to the root development of the potato and to the development of the tuber. |
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High petiole nitrate concentration late in the growing season often means the crop is at risk for low tuber specific gravity, and that there is an increased risk of nitrogen loss to the environment. |
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Hou WC, Lee MH, Chen HJ, Liang WL, Han CH, Liu YW, Lin YH Antioxidant activities of dioscorin, the storage protein of yam tuber. |
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Corvids demolish wire-worms in grain crops, and in root and tuber crops are happy to dine on snails and grubs, caterpillars and insects. |
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Grasmick ME and SA Slack Detection of potato spindle tuber viroid in true potato seed by bioassay on Rutgers tomato. |
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That improvement in laboratory performance has resulted in the detection of the adventitious presence of bone spicules, particularly in tuber and root crops. |
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When a tuber is senile it is no longer suitable for use as seed. |
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All observations on the tuber should be made at harvest maturity. |
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Seriously injured tuber numbers went from 38 per cent to 17 per cent. |
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Interacting transcription factors from the three-amino acid loop extension superclass regulate tuber formation. |
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The tuber likes warm days and cool nights. |
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Each spring, as moisture permits, the tuber produces leaves, a root, and a strobilus, and a geotropic new tuber. |
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Its tuber morphology is uncharacteristic of edible Malagasy yams exhibiting several digitate lobes, instead of just one. |
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What seems to be happening is that bands of cells within each potato tuber are having their starch converted into sugar, and that the sugar caramelises when the tuber is cooked. |
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A translucent, gelatinous cake made from the starch of a yamlike tuber known as devil's tongue. |
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It continues until the entire tuber is oxidized and blackened within two to three days after harvest, rendering it unpalatable and useless. |
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No continent depends as much on root and tuber crops in feeding its population as does Africa. |
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Aluminium oxide abrasive coat and disc can be replaced through rubber-coated cylinder and disc thus changing the abrasive peeling machine into a root tuber washing machine. |
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Subsistence farming, widely practiced from the northeastern jungles to the southwestern grasslands, consists largely of corn, bean, and tuber plots. |
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She thrust her yamstick into the hard ground to reach the prized tuber. |
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Chufa is a plant that produces an underground tuber wild turkeys relish. |
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The meristem that gives rise to each new geotropic tuber is exogenous, formed from surface tissue where the leaves and strobili join the old tuber. |
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The dried and ground tuber gives a fine white powder, called salep. |
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If you find elephant ear foliage attractive, plant a taro tuber. |
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Another USDA scientist found the first viroid ever identified by scientists when studying potato spindle tuber disease, which is transmitted in tubers and seed. |
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This nutrient-rich water is drawn into the tuber by the stolon roots. |
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Grasping the proximal surface, the hominid brought the distal surface down hard on an object he wished to detach or shatter, such as a bone or tuber. |
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It is an opportunity for exiles to return home and see for themselves what Tuber now looks like. |
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Truffle fungus is the fruiting body of a subterranean Ascomycete fungus, predominantly one of the many species of the genus Tuber. |
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It worked with the Central Tuber Crop Research Institute to identify varieties of tapioca that yield the desired thin slice and yet assure crunchiness. |
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