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Mustard plant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mustard seed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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How to grow Mustard plants for greens and seeds in home gardens. Mustard seeds. ... Mustard plants grow well in most good garden soils. They prefer full sun and cool weather. Planting successive small crops, separated about a week apart, results in a continuous supply of greens.
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Wild Mustard: Brassica kaber ... Weed Description: Most often a winter annual but sometimes a summer annual with characteristic yellow mustard flowers. This weed can be found throughout the United States primarily in nurseries and winter small grains.
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Mustard plants grow in loose, vertical masses of leaves, called "greens". © 2000 Rosie Lerner, Purdue University Prev Index Next...
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AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete information on mustard, Plants. Includes related research links. ... You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Plants > mustard; By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > M...
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Mustard (also known as mustard greens, spinach, ... The adult moths or butterflies lay their eggs on the leaves but otherwise do not damage the plants. The worms are not easy to see because they are fairly small and blend with the cabbage leaves. Cabbage worms are quite destructive and can ruin the crop if not controlled.
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A PLANTS profile of Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) from the USDA PLANTS database ... Alliaria petiolata (M. Bieb.) Cavara & Grande garlic mustard; ... Click on a thumbnail to view an image, or see all the Alliaria thumbnails at the PLANTS Gallery...
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Got crop pest problems? Spread some mustard on them- ... But there's still much to learn about how these biofumigant plants control pests, the conditions Brassicas prefer and their cumulative effects on the soil environment, according to Rick Boydston, an agronomist in ARS' Vegetable and Forage Research Unit at Prosser, Wash.
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Measurements of Se volatilization showed that trangenic plants volatilized more Se (up to 27% with GS plants) than the untransformed wild type plants. This is the first report showing that Indian mustard plants genetically engineered for Se phytoremediation can perform successfully under field conditions.
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