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Browntop millet can represent up to 10–25% of the diet of terrestrial and water birds. [15] Also 50% of ingested seed found in mourning dove's crops was browntop millet. [16] Urochloa ramosa is also used to suppress root-knot nematode populations in tomato and pepper crops in south-eastern states of America. [17]
browntop millet: Brachiaria ramosa: Late Proto-Dravidian *conna-l: sorghum: bristly foxtail: Setaria verticillata: Late Proto-Dravidian *kot-V: Setaria italica: sawa millet: Echinochloa cf. colona: yellow foxtail: Setaria pumila: little millet: Panicum sumatrense: kodo millet: Paspalum scrobiculatum: Proto-South Dravidian *(v)ār/ar-Vk: pearl ...
Panicum miliaceum: Proso millet (common millet, broomcorn millet, hog millet, or white millet, also known as baragu in Kannada, panivaragu in Tamil) Panicum sumatrense: Little millet; Panicum hirticaule: Sonoran millet, cultivated in the American Southwest; Cenchrus americanus: Pearl millet; Pearl millet (Cenchrus americanus)
Browntop is a common name for several grasses and may refer to: Agrostis capillaris, or browntop bent; Brachiaria ramosa, or browntop millet; Microstegium
This page was last edited on 7 October 2023, at 08:59 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
Agrostis capillaris, the common bent, colonial bent, or browntop, is a rhizomatous and stoloniferous perennial in the grass family . It is native to Eurasia and has been widely introduced in many parts of the world. [ 3 ]
The most notable of these are Japanese millet (E. esculenta) in East Asia, Indian barnyard millet (E. frumentacea) in South Asia, and burgu millet (E. stagnina) in West Africa. Collectively, the members of this genus are called barnyard grasses (though this may also refer to E. crus-galli specifically), and are also known as barnyard millets or ...
Pearl millet is a summer annual crop well-suited for double cropping and rotations. The grain and forage are valuable as food and feed resources in Africa, Russia, India and China. Today, pearl millet is grown on over 260,000 square kilometres (100,000 sq mi) of land worldwide. It accounts for about 50% of the total world production of millets. [7]