Exact(1)
Life creed: W.R.E.A.M (Wheat Rules Everything Around Me).
Similar(59)
Catholic scholars concede the wheat-only rule comes from tradition -- just like many other rituals in Catholicism.
For example, if the simple survey data indicates that 150 kg N/ha is applied in a wheat crop, the management rule determines that this amount is applied in three splits, i.e. 30% in the first split at beginning of tillering, 40% in the second at ear initiation and 30% of the total in the last split at development of the last leaf.
All commercialization of wheat was subject to the rules set by the National Superintendency of Supply (SUNAB), and the transportation of domestic wheat received preferential treatment in all federal, state, and municipal companies.
Tested tactical and strategic changes under a baseline and climate change scenario (CCS) involved changes in the allocation of land between cropping and grazing enterprises, alternative allocations of limited irrigation water across cropping enterprises, and different management rules for planting wheat and sorghum in rainfed cropping.
QTL names were designated based on the rules of the wheat gene nomenclature (http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/ggpages/wgc/98/Intro.htm).
From oil to wheat and beef, the general rule has been that if you farmed it, caught it, or took it out of the ground you were probably going to make money selling it.
To meet the requirement of the energetic equivalence rule for spring wheat populations, we analyzed the relevant data for closed populations with sowing densities >1000 seeds m−2.
Our analysis is limited to gene-rich regions of the wheat genome and we cannot rule out that a different profile of perfectly matching sRNAs is present in gene-poor regions, which represent most of the wheat genome.
His moves into corn and winter wheat have already upset the unwritten rules of monopolized agricultural exchanges, a system that gave Minneapolis hard spring wheat, Kansas City hard winter wheat and Chicago corn with no competition between them.
Although cotton rules in the south and wheat in the north, corn (maize), watermelons, sorghum, alfalfa, vegetables, and livestock are common.
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