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  1. Managing Corn in Response to Severe Storms and Short-Term Weather Stressors

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0151

    tolerant to cold-water uptake above 39 degrees Fahrenheit, but cold injury to mesocotyls and emerging ... early or later growth stages are shown in Table 1. 2. Excess Water (Waterlogged and/or Flooded) Injury ... develops. Waterlogging happens when only the root system experiences saturated water conditions due to ...

  2. Narrow Row Spacing in Corn: Management Considerations for Ohio

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0152

    disease issues, and response to foliar inputs of nitrogen (N) and fungicide. The trials were conducted ... days) but varying in foliar disease ratings, according to company literature, were used to assess ... differences in foliar disease and response to fungicide and foliar nitrogen (N) when grown in narrow (15-inch) ...

  3. Ripe Rot of Grape

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-fru-0052

    Professor, Department of Plant Pathology, The Ohio State University, Wooster Ripe rot is a late-season ... disease that primarily occurs in warm, moist, growing regions in the southeastern United States. However, ... during fruit maturation. The disease is caused by multiple species of the fungus Colletotrichum. Ripe rot ...

  4. Hobby Maple Syrup Production

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/f-36

    shorten this boil time. A reverse osmosis machine removes 75 percent of the sap’s water content before the ... only hot water and elbow grease. You may already have some of the items needed for this endeavor on ... If they are brown in color you have hit some dead wood. If this happens then you should wait to see ...

  5. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Bush Honeysuckle

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-68

    seeds, which are disseminated primarily by birds. While honeysuckle fruit is abundant and rich in ... carbohydrates it lacks the high-fat and nutrient-rich content that most of our native plants provide migrating ... underside (Morrow), or lacking hair on the underside (Tartarian). Stems —grayish-brown, with short hairs on ...

  6. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio's Forests: Autumn Olive and Russian Olive

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-69-11

    fragrant (Figure 3). Fruits  Autumn olive: ¼-inch silvery, juicy berries dotted with brown scales that ... Russian olive:  3/8- to ½-inch long, elliptical, dry, mealy yellow-brown berries with silvery scales that ... viable in the soil for approximately three years. Twigs Silvery or golden brown, scaly when young, often ...

  7. Predators of Poultry

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/vme-22

    Avian Disease Investigation Laboratory, Sara J. Spiegle, B.S., Avian Disease Investigation Laboratory, ... Teresa Y. Morishita, DVM, Ph.D., Dipl. ACPV, OSU Extension–Veterinary Medicine and Avian Disease ...

  8. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Ailanthus

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/f-65

    —stout, light chestnut brown, smooth to velvety with large tan bumps (lenticels) and a spongy pith, ... —winged fruit (samara), color ranges from yellow green to reddish brown, containing single seed, born in ... solution of 2% herbicide in water (vol/vol) when leaves are green; add a surfactant if not in herbicide. ...

  9. Western Ohio Cropland Values and Cash Rents 2015-16

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/aede-15-16

    Preble, Montgomery, Greene, Clinton, Fayette and Pickaway counties and parts of Butler, Warren, Brown ...

  10. Using Local Woodlot Lumber

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-9-03

    bending strength and excellent nail holding capacity. White oak is an excellent material for water tanks ... dry and is excellent for turning.   Table 2: Common Hardwoods Species Uses Wood Characteristics Drying ... heavy, strong, uniform texture, grain can be interlocked, attractive quarter-sawn, wears well under water ...

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