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  2. 6 Essential Steps for Cleaning Out Your Tomato Plants ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/6-essential-steps-cleaning-tomato...

    To avoid frost damage, all tomatoes, even the green ones, should be harvested before the first frost. Tomato plants can be left in the garden a little longer until they turn brown with frost and ...

  3. Ask the Master Gardener: Tips for growing tomatoes and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/ask-master-gardener-tips-growing...

    Indeterminate varieties will continue to grow until frost, continuing to blossom and set fruit, thus a much longer growing season. Tomatoes and potatoes are very close relatives, so it should be ...

  4. Ready for a Bumper Crop? Here’s How to Maximize Your Tomato ...

    www.aol.com/ready-bumper-crop-maximize-tomato...

    Pruning helps tomato plants focus energy on fruit production and reduces overcrowding. Remove suckers (small shoots between the main stem and branches) to direct nutrients to the main stems.

  5. Paclobutrazol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paclobutrazol

    Paclobutrazol (PBZ) is the ISO common name for an organic compound that is used as a plant growth retardant and triazole fungicide. [2] [3] It is a known antagonist of the plant hormone gibberellin, acting by inhibiting gibberellin biosynthesis, reducing internodal growth to give stouter stems, increasing root growth, causing early fruitset and increasing seedset in plants such as tomato and ...

  6. Tomato grafting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_grafting

    In tomatoes, increases in fruit yield are typically the results of increased fruit size. [8] Research has shown that possible mechanisms for increased yield are likely due to increased water and nutrient uptake among vigorous rootstock genotypes. Conductance through the stoma was improved in tomato plants when grafted onto vigorous rootstock. [7]

  7. Tomato leaf mold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_leaf_mold

    Cladosporium fulvum is an Ascomycete called Passalora fulva, a non-obligate pathogen that causes the disease on tomatoes known as the tomato leaf mold. [1] P. fulva only attacks tomato plants, especially the foliage, and it is a common disease in greenhouses, but can also occur in the field. [2] The pathogen is likely to grow in humid and cool ...

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