Essays about: "Coltsfoot"

Found 3 essays containing the word Coltsfoot.

  1. 1. Plant phenology and climate change : possible effect on the onset of various wild plant species first flowering day in the UK

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap

    Author : Nigel Fox; [2019]
    Keywords : geography; GIS; plants; phenology; climate change; global warming; FFD; IPCC; Bluebell; Garlic mustard; Coltsfoot; Cuckooflower; United Kingdom; Woodland Trust; UK; Earth and Environmental Sciences;

    Abstract : The IPCC states that the planet is significantly warming due to effects of climate change. This warming effect has consequences for phenological events. Many species cannot track rapid climate change, resulting in phenological mismatches. This study looks at an extreme weather event and the longer-term effects of climate change. READ MORE

  2. 2. Vilken effekt har lärkrutor på ogräsfloran vid ekologisk höstveteodling?

    University essay from SLU/Dept. of Crop Production Ecology

    Author : Linda Gustafsson; [2008]
    Keywords : Alauda arvensis; lärkrutor; höstveteodling; ogräs; ekologisk;

    Abstract : This study forms part of the R&D project "Improved survival of bird chicks in organic fields" managed by the Rural Economy & Agricultural society in Uppsala. The skylark (Alauda arvensis) is a species that has decreased drastically in Sweden as a consequence of more intensive cropping. READ MORE

  3. 3. Effekt av sönderdelningsgrad och planteringsdjup på uppkomsten från rhizom av Tussilago farfara

    University essay from SLU/Dept. of Crop Production Ecology

    Author : Tobias Alfredsson; [2008]
    Keywords : Rhizom; tussilago; planteringsdjup; sönderdelning; nod;

    Abstract : Tussilago farfara, coltsfoot, is a troublesome perennial weed with deep lying rhizome, which can vegetatively generate new plants. The mechanical control of coltsfoot that is used today, "starvation", which consists of several cultivations of the soil, which fragmentises the rhizome. READ MORE