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fungicides

A Wisdom Archive on fungicides

fungicides

A selection of articles related to fungicides

fungicides, Fungicide, List of fungicides

ARTICLES RELATED TO fungicides

fungicides: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S00-T14 - Injury

ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S00-S09 head. (S00) Superficial injury of head (S01) Open wound of head (S02) Fracture of skull and facial bones (S03) Dislocation, sprain and strain of joints and ligaments of head (S04) Injury of cranial nerves (S05) Injury of eye and orbit (S06) Intracranial injury (S07) Crushing ...

See also:

ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S00-T14 - Injury, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S00-S09 head, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S10-S19 neck, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S20-S29 thorax, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S30-S39 abdomen lower back lumbar spine and pelvis, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S40-S49 shoulder and upper arm, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S50-S59 elbow and forearm, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S60-S69 wrist and hand, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S70-S79 hip and thigh, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S80-S89 knee and lower leg, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S90-S99 ankle and foot, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T00-T07 involving multiple body regions, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T08-T14 unspecified parts of trunk limb or body region, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T15-T98 - Poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T15-T19 Effects of foreign body entering through natural orifice, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T20-T32 Burns and corrosions, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T33-T35 Frostbite, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T36-T50 Poisoning by drugs medicaments and biological substances, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T51-T65 Toxic effects of substances chiefly nonmedicinal as to source, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T66-T78 Other and unspecified effects of external causes, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T79 Certain early complications of trauma, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T80-T88 Complications of surgical and medical care not elsewhere classified, ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - T90-T98 Sequelae of injuries of poisoning and of other consequences of external causes

Read more here: » ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes: Encyclopedia II - ICD-10 Chapters S and T: Injury poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes - S00-T14 - Injury

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Magnaporthe grisea - Biology and pathology

M. grisea is an ascomycete fungus. It is an extremely effective plant pathogen as it can reproduce both sexually and asexually to produce specialized infectious structures known as appressoria that infect aerial tissues and hyphae that can infect root tissues. The asexual life cycle begins with the hyphae of the fungus undergo sporulation to produce fruiting structures called conidia which contain many spores. When these spores land on leaves and other aerial tissues of susceptible plants they germinate, developing the appresso ...

See also:

Magnaporthe grisea, Magnaporthe grisea - Biology and pathology, Magnaporthe grisea - Distribution, Magnaporthe grisea - Control, Magnaporthe grisea - Biological weapon

Read more here: » Magnaporthe grisea: Encyclopedia II - Magnaporthe grisea - Biology and pathology

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Cell wall - Plant cell walls

Plant cell walls have a number of functions: they provide rigidity to the cell for structural and mechanical support, maintaining cell shape, the direction of cell growth and ultimately the architecture of the plant. The cell wall also prevents expansion when water enters the cell. The term turgor is used to describe this pressure that is induced by excess water inside the plant cell. Cell walls protect against pathogens and the environment and are a store of carbohydrates for the plant. The cell wall is constructed primarily ...

See also:

Cell wall, Cell wall - Plant cell walls, Cell wall - Composition of plant cell walls, Cell wall - Algal cell walls, Cell wall - Diatom cell walls, Cell wall - Prokaryotic cell walls, Cell wall - Fungal cell walls, Cell wall - Pictures

Read more here: » Cell wall: Encyclopedia II - Cell wall - Plant cell walls

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Banana - Properties

Bananas come in a variety of sizes and colours; most cultivars are yellow when ripe but some are red. The ripe fruit is easily peeled and eaten raw or cooked. Depending upon cultivar and ripeness, the flesh can be starchy to sweet, and firm to mushy. Unripe or 'green' plantains and bananas are used in cooking and are the staple starch of some tropical populations. While the original bananas contained rather large seeds, seedless and triploid cultivars have been selected for human consumption. These are propagated asexually from offsho ...

See also:

Banana, Banana - History, Banana - Properties, Banana - Banana trade, Banana - Cultivation, Banana - Banana pests and diseases, Banana - Effects of banana diseases in East Africa, Banana - Attitudes toward bananas, Banana - Urban legends, Banana - Reference

Read more here: » Banana: Encyclopedia II - Banana - Properties

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Dandruff - Causes

As skin grows, epidermal cells are pushed outward where they eventually die and flake off the body. In most people, these flakes of skin are too small to be visible. However, certain conditions cause cell turnover to be unusually rapid, especially common in the scalp. In people with dandruff, skin cells may die and be replaced about once every two weeks, as opposed to around once a month in healthy people. The result is that dead skin cells are shed in large clumps, which appear as small, unsightly whi ...

See also:

Dandruff, Dandruff - Causes, Dandruff - Nutrition, Dandruff - Treatment

Read more here: » Dandruff: Encyclopedia II - Dandruff - Causes

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - The Ingredients

Shampoo - Detergents. Surfactants, also known as wetting agents, lower the surface tension of a liquid, allowing easier spreading, and the interfacial tension between two liquids. The term surfactant is a contraction of "Surface active agent". The major types of surfactants are used in shampoos include: Anionic (an-eye-ON-ick) Cationic (kat-eye-ON-ick) Nonionic (non-eye-ON-ick)< ...

See also:

Shampoo, Shampoo - History, Shampoo - Description, Shampoo - The Ingredients, Shampoo - Detergents, Shampoo - Dimethicone, Shampoo - Additives Useless and Otherwise, Shampoo - Specialized shampoos

Read more here: » Shampoo: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - The Ingredients

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

Agriculture sometimes refers to subsistence agriculture, the production of enough food to meet just the needs of the farmer/agriculturalist and his/her family. It may also refer to industrial agriculture, (often referred to as factory farming) long prevalent in developed nations and increasingly so elsewhere, which consists of obtaining financial income from the cultivation of land to yield produce, the commercial raising of animals (animal husbandry), or both. Agriculture is also short for the study of the practice of agriculture—more formally known as agricultural science. Agricultural students are k ...

See also:

Agriculture, Agriculture - Overview, Agriculture - History, Agriculture - Crops, Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004, Agriculture - Crop improvement, Agriculture - Environmental problems, Agriculture - Policy, Agriculture - Agricultural Revolutions, Agriculture - Methods

Read more here: » Agriculture: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

Agriculture can refer to subsistence agriculture, the production of enough food to meet just the needs of the farmer/agriculturalist and his/her family. It may also refer to industrial agriculture, (often referred to as factory farming) long prevalent in developed nations and increasingly so elsewhere, which consists of obtaining financial income from the cultivation of land to yield produce, the commercial raising of animals (animal husbandry), or both. Agriculture is also short for the study of the practice of agriculture—more formally known as agricultural science. Agricultural students are k ...

See also:

Agriculture, Agriculture - Overview, Agriculture - History, Agriculture - Crops, Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004, Agriculture - Crop improvement, Agriculture - Environmental problems, Agriculture - Policy, Agriculture - Agricultural Revolutions, Agriculture - Methods

Read more here: » Agriculture: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Norman Borlaug - Expansion to South Asia: The Green Revolution

Main article: Green Revolution In 1961 to 1962, Borlaug's dwarf spring wheat strains were sent for multilocation testing in the International Wheat Rust Nursery, organized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In March 1962, a few of these strains were grown in the fields of the Indian Agricultural Research Institute in Pusa, New Delhi, India. In May 1962, M. S. Swaminathan, a member of IARI's wheat program, wrote to Dr. B.P. Pal, who was then Director of IARI, requesting to arrange for the visit of Borlaug to India and to obt ...

See also:

Norman Borlaug, Norman Borlaug - Early life education and family, Norman Borlaug - Career, Norman Borlaug - Wheat research in Mexico, Norman Borlaug - Double wheat season, Norman Borlaug - Increasing disease resistance through multiline varieties, Norman Borlaug - Dwarfing, Norman Borlaug - Expansion to South Asia: The Green Revolution, Norman Borlaug - Nobel Peace Prize, Norman Borlaug - The Borlaug hypothesis, Norman Borlaug - Criticisms and his view of critics, Norman Borlaug - Current roles, Norman Borlaug - Production in Africa, Norman Borlaug - World Food Prize, Norman Borlaug - Online education, Norman Borlaug - The future of global farming and food supply, Norman Borlaug - Honors and recognition, Norman Borlaug - Books and lectures, Norman Borlaug - Notes

Read more here: » Norman Borlaug: Encyclopedia II - Norman Borlaug - Expansion to South Asia: The Green Revolution

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Phosphorus - Precautions

This is a particularly poisonous element with 50 mg being the average fatal dose (white phosphorus is generally considered to be the lethal form of phosphorus while phosphate and orthophosphate are essential nutrients). The allotrope white phosphorus should be kept under water at all times as it presents a significant fire hazard due to its extreme reactivity to atmospheric oxygen, and it should only be manipulated with forceps since contact with skin can cause severe burns. Chronic white phosphorus poisoning of unprotected workers leads to ...

See also:

Phosphorus, Phosphorus - Notable characteristics, Phosphorus - Forms, Phosphorus - Applications, Phosphorus - Biological role, Phosphorus - Occurrence, Phosphorus - Precautions, Phosphorus - Isotopes, Phosphorus - Spelling, Phosphorus - Compounds

Read more here: » Phosphorus: Encyclopedia II - Phosphorus - Precautions

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Soy protein - History

Soy protein {90%protein (N x 6.25) on a moisture-free basis} has been available since 1935 for its functional properties. In 1935, African-American chemist, Percy Julian, designed and supervised construction, at the Soy Products Division, Glidden Paint Company, Chicago,Illinois, of the world's first plant for the "isolation" of industrial-grade soy protein. The largest use of industrial grade protein was and still is for paper coatings,in which it serves as a pigment binder. However, Dr. Julian's plant must have also been the source, of the ...

See also:

Soy protein, Soy protein - History, Soy protein - Food uses, Soy protein - Functional uses, Soy protein - Production methods, Soy protein - Product types, Soy protein - Isolates, Soy protein - Concentrates, Soy protein - Flours, Soy protein - Health, Soy protein - Uses, Soy protein - Textured Soy Protein

Read more here: » Soy protein: Encyclopedia II - Soy protein - History

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Apple scab - Life cycle

The infection cycle begins in the springtime, when suitable temperatures and moisture promote the release of V. inaequalis ascospores from leaf litter around the base of previously infected trees. These spores rise into the air and land on the surface of a susceptible tree, where they germinate and form a germ tube that can directly penetrate the plant's waxy cuticle. A fungal mycelium forms between the cuticle and underlying epidermal tissue, starting as a yellow spot that grows and ruptures to reveal a black lesion bearing the asexu ...

See also:

Apple scab, Apple scab - Life cycle, Apple scab - Control

Read more here: » Apple scab: Encyclopedia II - Apple scab - Life cycle

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - Ingredients

Shampoo - Detergents. Surfactants, also known as wetting agents, lower the surface tension of a liquid, allowing easier spreading, and the interfacial tension between two liquids. The term surfactant is a contraction of "Surface active agent". The major types of surfactants are used in shampoos include: Anionic (an-eye-ON-ick) Cationic (kat-eye-ON-ick) Nonionic (non-eye-ON-ick) ...

See also:

Shampoo, Shampoo - History, Shampoo - Description, Shampoo - Ingredients, Shampoo - Detergents, Shampoo - Dimethicone, Shampoo - Additives Useless and Otherwise, Shampoo - Specialized shampoos

Read more here: » Shampoo: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - Ingredients

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Lime sulfur - Use

Lime sulfur is sold as a spray for deciduous trees to control fungi, bacteria and insects living or dormant on the surface of the bark. Lime sulfur burns leaves so it is not as useful for evergreen plants. Bonsai enthusiasts use undiluted lime sulfur to bleach and sterilise portions of trees to give an aged look known as Jin. ...

See also:

Lime sulfur, Lime sulfur - Use, Lime sulfur - Safety, Lime sulfur - History

Read more here: » Lime sulfur: Encyclopedia II - Lime sulfur - Use

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Phosphorus - Notable characteristics

Common phosphorus forms a waxy white solid that has a characteristic disagreeable smell similar to that of garlic. Pure forms of the element are colorless and transparent. This nonmetal is not soluble in water, but it is soluble in carbon disulfide. Pure phosphorus ignites spontaneously in air and burns to phosphorus pentoxide. Phosphorus - Forms. Phosphorus exists in three allotropic forms: white , red, and black . Other allotropic forms may exist. The most common are red and white phosphorus, both of whi ...

See also:

Phosphorus, Phosphorus - Notable characteristics, Phosphorus - Forms, Phosphorus - Applications, Phosphorus - Biological role, Phosphorus - History, Phosphorus - Occurrence, Phosphorus - Precautions, Phosphorus - Isotopes, Phosphorus - Spelling, Phosphorus - Compounds

Read more here: » Phosphorus: Encyclopedia II - Phosphorus - Notable characteristics

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Origins

History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Other Aerial Applications. The first known aerial application of agricultural materials was by John Chaytor, who in 1906 spread seed over a swamped valley floor in Wairoa, New Zealand, using a hot air balloon with mobile tethers. The first known use of a heavier than air machine occured on 3 August 1921 when as the result of advocacy by Dr Coad, a USAAC Curtiss JN4 Jenny piloted by John MacReady was used to spread lead arsenate to kill catalpha sphinx caterpil ...

See also:

History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Origins, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Other Aerial Applications, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Early Suggestions, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Alan Pritchard, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Doug Campbell, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - The Royal New Zealand Air Force trials, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Reaserch in Other Nations, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Australia, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Great Britian, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - The Supermen - private operators, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - AirworkNZ, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Fieldair, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Wanganui Aero Work, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - James Aviation, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - The Aircraft, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - War Surplus, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Existing designs, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Developing Specialist machines, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Pacific Aerospace, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - The Mature Industry, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Environmental Impact, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Print media, History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Web sites

Read more here: » History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand: Encyclopedia II - History of aerial topdressing in New Zealand - Origins

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

Agriculture can refer to subsistence agriculture, the production of enough food to meet just the needs of the farmer/agriculturalist and his/her family. It may also refer to industrial agriculture, (often referred to as factory farming) long prevalent in "developed" nations and increasingly so elsewhere, which consists of obtaining financial income from the cultivation of land to yield produce, the commercial raising of animals (animal husbandry), or both. Agriculture is also short for the study of the practice of agriculture—more formally known as agricultural science. Agricultural students are k ...

See also:

Agriculture, Agriculture - Overview, Agriculture - History, Agriculture - Crops, Agriculture - Seed Testing, Agriculture - World production of major crops in 2004, Agriculture - Crop improvement, Agriculture - Environmental problems, Agriculture - Policy, Agriculture - Agricultural Revolutions, Agriculture - Methods

Read more here: » Agriculture: Encyclopedia II - Agriculture - Overview

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Sulfur - Notable characteristics

At room temperature, sulfur is a soft bright yellow solid. Although sulfur is infamous for its smell - frequently compared to rotten eggs - the odor is actually characteristic of hydrogen sulfide (H2S); elemental sulfur is odorless. It burns with a blue flame that emits sulfur dioxide, notable for its peculiar suffocating odor. Sulfur is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide and other nonpolar solvents. Common oxidation states of sulfur include −2, +2, +4 and +6. Sulfur forms stable c ...

See also:

Sulfur, Sulfur - Notable characteristics, Sulfur - Applications, Sulfur - Biological role, Sulfur - Environmental Impact, Sulfur - History, Sulfur - Occurrence, Sulfur - Compounds, Sulfur - Isotopes, Sulfur - Precautions, Sulfur - Spelling

Read more here: » Sulfur: Encyclopedia II - Sulfur - Notable characteristics

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Banana - History

The domestication of bananas took place in southeastern Asia. Many species of wild bananas still occur in New Guinea, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Recent archaeological and palaeoenvironmental evidence at Kuk Swamp in the Western Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea suggests that banana cultivation there goes back to at least 5000 BC, and possibly goes back to 8000 BC. This would make the New Guinean highlands the place where bananas were first domesticated. It is likely that other species of wild bananas were later also domesticat ...

See also:

Banana, Banana - History, Banana - Properties, Banana - Banana trade, Banana - Cultivation, Banana - Banana pests and diseases, Banana - Effects of banana diseases in East Africa, Banana - Attitudes toward bananas, Banana - Urban legends, Banana - Reference

Read more here: » Banana: Encyclopedia II - Banana - History

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Sulfur - Applications

Sulfur has many industrial uses. Through its major derivative, sulfuric acid (H2SO4), sulfur ranks as one of the more important elements used as an industrial raw material. It is of prime importance to every sector of the world's economies. Sulfuric acid production is the major end use for sulfur, and consumption of sulfuric acid has been regarded as one of the best indices of a nation's industrial development. More sulfuric acid is produced in the United States every y ...

See also:

Sulfur, Sulfur - Notable characteristics, Sulfur - Applications, Sulfur - Biological role, Sulfur - Environmental Impact, Sulfur - History, Sulfur - Occurrence, Sulfur - Compounds, Sulfur - Isotopes, Sulfur - Precautions, Sulfur - Spelling

Read more here: » Sulfur: Encyclopedia II - Sulfur - Applications

fungicides: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - History

The word shampoo in English usage dates back to 1762, with the meaning "to massage". The word was a loan from Anglo-Indian shampoo, in turn from Hindi champo, imperative of champna, "to press, knead the muscles, massage". During the early stages of shampoo, English hairdressers boiled soap in soda water and added herbs to give the hair health and fragrance. Originally soap and shampoo were very similar products; both were often made from surfactants, a type of detergent. Shampoo became the logical ev ...

See also:

Shampoo, Shampoo - History, Shampoo - Description, Shampoo - Ingredients, Shampoo - Detergents, Shampoo - Dimethicone, Shampoo - Additives Useless and Otherwise, Shampoo - Specialized shampoos

Read more here: » Shampoo: Encyclopedia II - Shampoo - History




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