Plant species

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stems and foliage

Listing 11 - 20 from 433 for stems and foliage

Purple cone flowers
... or short compact rhizomes. Stems and foliage usually stiffly hairy giving the plants a raspy sandpaper like feel when rubbed. In the wild many of the species and forms hybridize and this makes precise ... is showy and different. It looks good in a vase and growing in the border, were the flowering stalk rises above any foliage. Plants are found in dry prairies and dry rock outcroppings and ...
hardyplants.com

Specialty Perennial: Solomon seals
... form from Betberg, Germany, The new stems and foliage in the spring are heavily stained with red/purple, before fully expanding to form large stems that have a arching habit. The ... and Stretopus (Twisted-Stalks) The berries are mildly poisonous and maybe also the stems and leaves. Symptoms of poising include Vomiting and diarrhea. Edibility EDIBLE PARTS: Young shoots can be boiled for 10 minutes and ...
hardyplants.com
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Growing Clematis, HYG-1247-94
... movement around the plants. Soil should be rich and well-draining with a pH close to neutral (7.0). Though the plant's stems and foliage should be in sun, the roots like a ... young stems. Earwigs may feed on blooms and foliage or bore into unopened flower buds. Rabbits and mice may feed on or girdle stems. Birds may feed on overwintering buds. Selected Species and Cultivars Species and Small ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Disease Cycle
... sporangia and tubers come into contact, from early in the tuberization process until harvest. Infections most commonly occur when sporangia are washed from lesions on stems and foliage to the soil and then through the soil to tubers. Infections can occur on developing or mature tubers, but contact between tubers and sporangia is more ...
ppathw3.cals.cornell.edu

Infected Plants
Infected Plants Infected tomato plants with lesions on stems and foliage. (photo T.A. Zitter) Back to Disease Cycle Back to Fry Lab Home Page
ppathw3.cals.cornell.edu
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Verticillium Wilt of Landscape Trees and Shrubs, HYG-3053-96
... browning and scorch of leaves, abnormally large seed crops, small leaves, stunting, poor annual growth, and sparse foliage. Sometimes large areas of cambial tissue die from infections by the fungus and opportunistic ... are tissue damage and plugging of xylem, robbing stems and leaves of needed water and minerals. The fungus is returned to the soil as plant parts fall or die, and tiny resistant fungal ...
ohioline.osu.edu

Cucumis and Cucurbita species Disease Descriptions - Angular Leaf Spot
... Pseudomonas syringae pv. lacrymans): This disease appears on leaves, stems and fruit. Spots are small, angular, straw-colored and watersoaked. Leaf spots often dry and fall out giving the leaf a "shot-hole ... control. Cucurbits, however, are sensitive to copper when young, and repeated applications of copper may cause yellowing of foliage around the edges of the leaves. See fungicides. December 20, ...
plantpathology.tamu.edu

Cantalope Diseases, Cucumis and Cucurbita spp.
... First symptoms are spots on the foliage that begin as yellowish or watersoaked areas. Spots enlarge and turn brown to black in color. Diseased tissue dries and the center of the spots ... - Pseudomonas syringae pv. lacrymans): This disease appears on leaves, stems and fruit. Spots are small, angular, straw-colored and watersoaked. Leaf spots often dry and fall out giving the leaf a "shot-hole" ...
plantpathology.tamu.edu
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Sisyrinchium angustifolium and Sisyrinchium rosulatum
... Flora of North America. Most species are perennials with blue flowers; all have grass-like foliage. They are members of the Iridaceae (Iris Family). I just love this genus. They are ... crop for felines. Sisyrinchium angustifolium, on the left, has wide stems and has few branches. There are colonies of plants with blue flowers and colonies of plants with (inset) white flowers. Intermediate colors ...
sparkleberrysprings.com

Wild Roses in Alaska
... and shelter for many animals. Birds and small mammals eat the rose hips that hang on the bush throughout the winter. Moose and fur-bearing mammals such as bears, rabbits, and beaver eat hips, stems, and foliage of roses. The rose hips are high in vitamin A and are a winter source ...
www.alaskarosesociety.org




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