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- eGRO - Electronic Grower Resources Online
Welcome to eGRO e-GRO (Electronic Grower Resources Online) is a collaborative effort of floriculture specialists to create a new clearing house for alerts about disease, insect, environmental, physiological and nutritional disorders being observed in commercial greenhouses
- eGRO Electronic Grower Resources Online - Alerts
Bringing together some of the leading specialists from universities around the USA, e-GRO is a free resource and learning tool for anybody involved in greenhouse plant production
- eGRO Electronic Grower Resources Online
In 2020, we wrote an eGRO Edibles Alert on growing Rubus species (blackberry and raspberry) in containers and soilless s
- Dipping URC biopesticides_HL Jan 31 - eGRO
Swish-Swish: Dipping Unrooted Vegetative Cuttings to Reduce Incoming Pest Populations Dipping unrooted vegetative cuttings in biopesticides has been shown to be effective at reducing whitefly, thrips, and spider mite populations
- Effects of Temperature on Greenhouse Crops - eGRO
Average daily temperature (ADT) is the primary environmental factor that controls how slow or fast a plant develops towards marketability
- Plant Growth Regulator Guide - e-gro. org
Collate 2L is a higher-concentration (21 7%) ethephon plant growth regulator that’s widely used in floriculture green- house production Ethephon products have been commercially available for agricultural use since being synthesized in 1965 and being registered in 1973 Ethephon helps avoid lodging in cereal crops, enhances boll opening in cotton, and is used for increasing yield in hybrid
- 13. 36 Zinnia Tip Burn. pptx - eGRO
Toadda pagenumbertoa newpage (slide)that wasinsertedfollowingthe direcGonsabove,select thetext box (number)at theboHomright cornerof a previousslide ThiswillposiGonthe pagenumberforconsistency Highlight thetext insidethetext boxandchange thenumberandsubsequent page numbers
- Petunia Purpling Problems - eGRO
Nutrient Deficiencies Nutrient deficiencies can often impact foliage color; phosphorus (P) is the most commonly attributed deficiency to result in lower leaf purpling (Fig 2) This is most commonly observed in combination with cold or wet growing conditions In the southeast with warmer climate conditions P deficiency will often manifest as overall pale green lower foliage and olive spotting
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