Search results for "Growth stage"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Effect of soil management on soil erosion on sloping farmland during crop growth stages under a large-scale rainfall simulation experiment

2018

Soil erosion on farmland is a critical environmental issue and the main source of sediment in the Yellow River, China. Thus, great efforts have been made to reduce runoff and soil loss by restoring vegetation on abandoned farmland. However, few studies have investigated runoff and soil loss from sloping farmland during crop growth season. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of soil management on runoff and soil loss on sloping farmland during crop growth season. We tested different soybean growth stages (i.e., seedling stage (R1), initial blossoming stage (R2), full flowering stage (R3), pod bearing stage (R4), and initial filling stage (R5)) and soil management pract…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSòls ErosióManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesRainwater harvestingSoil managementcrop growth stagessimulated rainfall0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and Technologysoil erosionbiologySowing04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationPE&RCTillageInfiltration (hydrology)Loess PlateauAgronomySeedling040103 agronomy & agriculturehoeing tillage0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSurface runoffSoil conservationJournal of Arid Land
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Phloem and xylem flow contributions to nectarine fruit development

2021

This study aimed at determining how source-sink balance and phloem/xylem flows affect nectarine fruit growth during development. Different levels of water and assimilate availability to growing fruits were induced in vivo by varying leaf:fruit ratio (L:F) of fruiting shoots and by interrupting the phloem stream (girdling) at the base of entire fruiting shoots. Two fruiting shoots in each of six ‘Big Top’ adult nectarine trees were selected, labeled and their L:F was adjusted by thinning fruits or removing leaves to two levels: high L:F and low L:F. Stem water potential, stomatal conductance, continuous fruit diameter and leaf turgor pressure were measured before and after girdling at stage …

Prunus persicaGrowth stageWater potentialFruit developmentXylemLeaf turgorHorticultureBiologySettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeHorticultureSource-sink balanceFlow (mathematics)Fruit gaugePhloem
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