Books on the topic 'Subtropical production'

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1

Temperate and subtropical fruit production. Wellington, New Zealand: Butterworths Horticultural Books, 1986.

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2

1935-, Jackson David, Looney N. E. 1938-, and Morley-Bunker M, eds. Temperate and subtropical fruit production. 3rd ed. Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK: CABI, 2011.

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3

1935-, Jackson David, and Looney N. E. 1938-, eds. Temperate and subtropical fruit production. 2nd ed. Wallingford, Oxon, UK: CABI Pub., 1999.

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4

Jackson, D., N. Looney, and M. Morley-Bunker, eds. Temperate and subtropical fruit production. Wallingford: CABI, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781845935016.0000.

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5

W, Dalzell H., and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations., eds. Soil management: Compost production and use in tropical and subtropical environments. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1987.

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6

Razvi, Syed Inayat Ali. Potato germplasm screening for adoptation to subtropical production including salt tolerance: Final report (1st April 1981 to 30th June 1987). Mirpurkhas [Pakistan]: Sind Horticulture Research Institute, 1987.

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7

International Symposium on the Constraints and Possibilities of Ruminant Production in the Dry Subtropics (1988 Cairo, Egypt). Ruminant production in the dry subtropics: Constraints and potentials : proceedings of the international symposium on the constraints and possibilities of ruminant production in the dry subtropics (MOA of Egypt, ESAP, EAAP, FAO, ICAMAS, WAAP), Cairo, Egypt, 5-7 November 1988. Wageningen, Netherlands: Pudoc, 1989.

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8

1953-, Muchow Russell C., and Bellamy J. A, eds. Climatic risk in crop production: Models and management for the semiarid tropics and subtropics : proceedings of the International Symposium on Climatic Risk in Crop Production: Models and Management for the Semiarid Tropics and Subtropics held in Brisbane, Australia, 2-6 July, 1990. Wallingford, UK: CAB International, 1991.

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9

Conference on Fruit Production in the Tropics and Subtropics (2nd 1999 Bonn-Röttgen, Germany). Proceedings of the 2nd ISHS Conference on Fruit Production in the Tropics and Subtropics: Bonn-Röttgen, Germany, 24-26 June 1999. Leuven: ISHS, 2000.

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10

International Symposium on Climatic Risk in Crop Production (1990 Brisbane, Qld.). Climatic risk in crop production: Models and management for the semiarid tropics and subtropics : proceedings of the International Symposium on Climatic Risk in Crop Production held in Brisbane, Australia, 2-6 July, 1990. Wallingford, UK: CAB International, 1991.

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11

Jackson, David, and D. Jackson. Temperate & Subtropical Fruit Production. Butterworth-Heinemann, 1986.

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12

Forage Seed Production: Volume 2: Tropical and Subtropical Species (Tropical & Subtropical Species). CABI, 1999.

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13

(Editor), D. S. Loch, and J. E. Ferguson (Editor), eds. Forage Seed Production: Tropical and Subtropical Species. C a B Intl, 2000.

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14

Dalzell, H. E. Soil Management: Compost Production and Use in Tropical and Subtropical Environments (Fao Soils Bulletin). Bernan Press, 1987.

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15

Gatenby, Ruth M. Sheep Production in the Subtropics (Tropical Agriculture). Blackwell Science Ltd, 1995.

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16

Holliday, N. Penny, and Stephanie Henson. The Marine Environment. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199233267.003.0001.

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The growth, distribution, and variability of phytoplankton populations in the North Atlantic are primarily controlled by the physical environment. This chapter provides an overview of the regional circulation of the North Atlantic, and an introduction to the key physical features and processes that affect ecosystems, and especially plankton, via the availability of light and nutrients. There is a natural seasonal cycle in primary production driven by physical processes that determine the light and nutrient levels, but the pattern has strong regional variations. The variations are determined by persistent features on the basin scale (e.g. the main currents and mixed layer regimes of the subtropical and subpolar gyres), as well as transient mesoscale features such as eddies and meanders of fronts.
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17

Esler, Karen J., Anna L. Jacobsen, and R. Brandon Pratt. Evolution and Diversity. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198739135.003.0005.

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As mediterranean-type climate (MTC) regions emerged and expanded, species from the regional pool colonized and persisted in these new climate regions. In general, taxa were derived from a few types of historical ‘geoflora’ communities: temperate forest, subtropical and tropical, and semi-arid or arid. Some of the taxa within modern mediterranean-type vegetation represent relatively ancient relict taxa that pre-date the emergence of mediterranean-type drivers. Other lineages underwent subsequent speciation, resulting in the evolution of new MTC region-specific taxa, including the production of many new species through evolutionary radiations. Low extinction rates associated with historically stable climate and limited recent geological activity might explain the high diversity found in some MTC regions, while in regions with more topographical variation the ability of species to move across elevation gradients has been suggested also to have allowed species to be buffered from climatic changes that may otherwise have led to extinctions.
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18

Hogan, J., B. Bakrie, J. Liang, A. Tareque, and R. Upadhay. Ruminant Nutrition and Production in the Tropics and Subtropics (ACIAR Monographs). Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, 1996.

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19

Qld.) International Symposium on Climatic Risk in Crop Production: Models and Management for the Semiarid Tropics and Subtropics (1990 : Brisbane, Russell C. Muchow, and James A. Bellamy. Climatic Risk in Crop Production: Models and Management for the Semiarid Tropics and Subtropics. C a B Intl, 1990.

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20

Camelio Rodríguez, María Eugenia, and Verónica Francisca Loewe Muñoz. Grevillea. Grevillea robusta. Monografía. INFOR, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.52904/20.500.12220/3990.

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Grevillea robusta es una especie nativa de la zona subtropical del este de Australia, donde fue descubierta y descrita en 1827 por el explorador europeo Alan Cunninghan. El género Grevillea pertenece a la subdivisión de las angiospermas y está compuesto por 260 especies que pertenecen a la familia Proteaceae. Grevillea robusta es la más grande en su género, alcanzando alturas cercanas a los 40 m y diámetros de hasta 1,0 m, siendo relativamente uniforme en sus características morfológicas. La especie ha despertado gran interés, pues se trata de un árbol de fácil adaptación, rápido crecimiento y con objetivos múltiples. El éxito que ha tenido se debe entre otros factores a que crece rápidamente en un amplio rango de condiciones climáticas y edáficas; además presenta una gran variedad productiva, no quedando excluida de ningún producto y servicio. Principalmente en las áreas bajas y secas, los agricultores han encontrado que se reproduce y maneja fácilmente, presenta buenos rendimientos de leña y postes, y no compite notoriamente con los cultivos adyacentes.
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21

Varkulevicius, Jane. Pruning for Flowers and Fruit. CSIRO Publishing, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643100244.

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The best groomed and most productive garden is easy when you know what to prune when and how your plants work. Pruning for Flowers and Fruit covers plants in cool-temperate to subtropical climates and is suitable for the home gardener, avid enthusiast as well as the nursery trade and horticultural students. It includes annuals, ornamentals, vegetables, roses, perennials and hydrangeas, and fruiting plants that can be pruned to fit in your back garden. The author shows how to choose the best plant at the nursery, prune weather damaged plants, renovate ornamental or fruiting trees and shrubs, and maintain your secateurs like a professional. Create different landscape features such as pleached avenues, design elements like hedges and the more fanciful topiary. Show off your plant’s juvenile foliage or beautiful bark, or sustainably harvest wood for carpentry or craft by following the steps on how to coppice or pollard plants. Never get your wisteria in a twist again and learn to prune with confidence following techniques that range from the most basic through to those for the most advanced espaliers.
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22

Vegetable production in periurban areas in the tropics and subtropics: -food, income and quality of life : Proceedings of the International Workshop held from 14 to 17 November in Zschortau, Germany. Feldafing: Deutsche Stiftung für internationale Entwicklung, 1995.

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