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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as harvestable" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing the potential for something to be collected or utilized, particularly in agriculture or resource management.
Example: "The new crop varieties are being tested to determine if they are as harvestable as traditional strains."
Alternatives: "as collectible" or "as gatherable".
Exact(2)
Their mud colouring and relatively small size (carapaces up to 28 cm [11 inches]) make them inconspicuous and more likely to be overlooked in cultures that view all turtles as harvestable for food or medicine.
Imported trees such as the Douglas Fir were established as harvestable plantations, including the first Redwoods in 1929.
Similar(58)
This review of literature looks at how above-ground plant biomass contributes to soil properties and processes, water conservation and quality, on-farm forage availability, and as a harvestable biofuel component.
Grain yield was recorded as machine harvestable grain yield adjusted to 13% moisture.
This reduction is mainly caused by market adaptations to growing timber prices but by a reduction of harvestable stands as well.
(Later court decisions interpreted "fair share" as half the harvestable fish that pass through traditional fishing grounds).
Throughout this document, the focus so far has been on the improvement of water use efficiency, defined as output of harvestable biomass per input of water and little mention has been made so far of the many drought-related terms used in the scientific literature.
For intertidal oyster reefs, the goal of restoring ecological function often is as important as the production of harvestable oysters, especially since oysters are the habitat.
Not all pine species produce significant amounts of resin to justify harvesting; the main harvestable species occur in Mediterranean countries, the United States, China, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
Another sign of this growing historical awareness was the recognition that some formerly important fishes no longer occurred in harvestable numbers, as Goode and Collins had demonstrated in the 1880s for Atlantic halibut in New England waters [26].
This is an important possibility for which there is insufficient data to model the relationship given the presence of other complicating factors, such as limited recruitment of harvestable shellfish (see Discussion).
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