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Myo-inositol Biosynthesis and Galactose Utilization by Wild Carrot (Daucus carota L. var. carota) Suspension Cultures -- VERMA ...
Unlike all plant inward-rectifying potassium channels, the carrot channel KDC1 has two histidine pairs (H161,H162) in the S3 S4 and (H224,H225) in the S5 S6 linkers.
Origin of the name (etimology) : Well known by our forefathers who used to give it heating properties : "daucus" comes from daukos, name given by the Greeks to some members of the the Umbelliferae family and it seems to derive from "daîo" : I overheat .
Carrot red leaf associated RNA (CtRLVaRNA) was originally described in Californian carrots (Daucus carota L.) (Watson et al., 1998). It has also been reported from parsley (Petroselenium crispum) in Belgium (Vercruysse et al., 2000).
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Leaf Blight (fungus - Alternaria dauci) Infection occurs mostly on older leaves, but younger leaves may also become infected. Leaf blight first appears as indefinite brown to black areas with pale yellow centers. Infected leaves shrivel when infection is heavy [Photo #1].
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
car.rot \'kar-*t\ n [MF carotte, fr. LL carota, fr. Gk karo-ton] 1: a biennial herb (Daucus carota of the family Umbelliferae, the car rot family) with a usu.
Carrot allergy is generally associated with allergy to birch pollen or with the celery-carrot-mugwort-spice syndrome. Allergy to carrot seems rather less common than the related allergy to celery.
Carrot is a cool-season, biennial relative of celery, parsnip, parsley and dill. It is native to Eurasia. They are a popular home garden item because they grow quickly. Carrot roots develop best under cool temperatures and in fine-textured (sandy), well-watered soils.