Joining mailing list will entitle you
to receive occasional emails informing you of news and
updates to the site and any special offers that may be
of interest to you.
GEB - The Protein synthesis spectrum during the induction phase of somatic embryogenesis in Carrot (Daucus carota L.) cultures ...
bstract In a field experiment with a susceptible population of annual wild carrot (Daucus carota) from Iran, artificial inoculations with the fungal pathogen A. dauci led to a strong and very significant increase of the diseased leaf area.
SUOMEKSI PÅ SVENSKA IN ENGLISH Homepage Food Foods In alphabetical order By ingredient class By food usage class Special diets Most popular Foodbasket Components In alphabetical order Most and least By food usage class Information FAQ Help Links References For companies National Public Health
A variant, WCHlO5, expressing CHr in the callus, as well as in regenerated plantlets, was isolated from a cell line derived from a wild carrot plant. The plantlets regenerated from WCHIO5 are green, but do not produce normal, dissected leaves.
Daucus carota, wild carrot. Wild carrot in the Wildlife Garden at the Natural History Museum, London. Photographed by Derek Adams, July 2004.. Picture, Image, Photo, Photograph, The Natural History Museum, London
However, it is not clear whether their hybrids are able to survive and reproduce outside managed elds, and if cultivar genes introgress into wild populations.
): the southern San Joaquin Valley and the Cuyama Valley (Kern and Santa Barbara Counties); the southern desert (Imperial and Riverside Counties); the high desert (Los Angeles County); and the central coast (Monterey County).
The intron/exon boundaries matched established consensus sequences. Within 240 base pairs (bp) upstream of the initiation codon three putative TATA boxes were found.
Identification: Flowers white, in a very flat-topped umbel. Center of umbel commonly (but not always) with a black to dark purple central floret appearing like a black dot. Old flower clusters usually curling upward to form a cuplike structure.
Plant density: about 100/m2 (for half-long cultivars). Yields 25-50 t/ha (half-long cultivars). Requires light or well-textured soils, rich in decomposed organic matter; does not tolerate acid, alkaline or saline soils. Adapts well to climatic conditions. Nutrient demand/uptake/removal