52 research outputs found

    Broussonetia papyrifera Vent.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20003/thumbnail.jp

    Lysimachia terrestris (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20875/thumbnail.jp

    Morus alba L.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20030/thumbnail.jp

    Broussonetia papyrifera Vent.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20003/thumbnail.jp

    Morus alba L.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20030/thumbnail.jp

    Lysimachia terrestris (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20875/thumbnail.jp

    Fraxinus americana L.

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/21185/thumbnail.jp

    Part Three: Restoring Urban Nature: Projects and Process

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    Part Three: Restoring Urban Nature: Projects and Process -- Restoring Urban Ecology: The New York–New Jersey Metropolitan Area Experience / Steven E. Clemants and Steven N. Handel -- Urban Watershed Management: The Milwaukee River Experience / Laurin N. Sievert -- Green Futures for Industrial Brownfields / Christopher A. De Sousa -- Ecological Citizenship: The Democratic Promise of Restoration / Andrew Light

    North American Wild Relatives of Grain Crops

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    The wild-growing relatives of the grain crops are useful for long-term worldwide crop improvement research. There are neglected examples that should be accessioned as living seeds in gene banks. Some of the grain crops, amaranth, barnyard millet, proso millet, quinoa, and foxtail millet, have understudied unique and potentially useful crop wild relatives in North America. Other grain crops, barley, buckwheat, and oats, have fewer relatives in North America that are mostly weeds from other continents with more diverse crop wild relatives. The expanding abilities of genomic science are a reason to accession the wild species since there are improved ways to study evolution within genera and make use of wide gene pools. Rare wild species, especially quinoa relatives in North American, should be acquired by gene banks in cooperation with biologists that already study and conserve at-risk plant populations. Many of the grain crop wild relatives are weeds that have evolved herbicide resistance that could be used in breeding new herbicide-resistant cultivars, so well-documented examples should be accessioned and also vouchered in gene banks
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