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Amphicarpaea bracteata (hog-peanut or ground bean) is an annual to perennial vine in the legume family, native to woodland, thickets, and moist slopes in eastern North America. [ 2 ] Description
Macrosaccus morrisella (hog peanut moth) is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. [2] [3] In North America it is known from Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec, south and west to Texas and Colorado. [4] [5] The wingspan is 6–7 mm. The larvae feed on Amphicarpaea bracteata, Strophostyles leiosperma, and soybean (Glycine max).
Amphicarpaea, commonly known as hogpeanut, [2] is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae. It includes three species native to eastern North America and southern, southeastern, and eastern Asia. [1] It belongs to the subfamily Faboideae. Species include: [1] Amphicarpaea bracteata (L.) Fernald – eastern North America [3]
Best suited intercrops are sorghum, millet, maize, peanut, yams and cassava. [11] Bambara groundnut is mainly cultivated as intercrop, however the planting density varies between 6 and 29 plants per square meter. [25] For woodland savannas of Côte d'Ivoire, the highest yield is attainable with a plant density of 25 [23] plants per square meter.
—Bambara groundnut, Congo goober, hog-peanut, jugo bean, njugumawe (sometimes separated in Voandzeia) Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.—cowpea, crowder pea, Southern pea, Reeve's-pea, snake-bean Vigna unguiculata subsp. cylindrica—catjang; Vigna unguiculata subsp. dekindtiana—wild cowpea, African cowpea, Ethiopian cowpea
On Nature's Trail was a television show produced by the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting in 1978. The show featured Elmer and Jean Worthley observing and discussing plants growing at different locations in Baltimore County, Maryland.
Peanut, who boasts 535,000 followers on Instagram and 423,000 on Facebook, was seized by officers from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, according to a statement made by ...
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