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Safflower growing in soils low in phosphorus need to be fertilized. Up to 39 kg/ha (35 lb/acre) of phosphate can be drill-applied safely. A weed control program is essential when growing safflower as it is a poor competitor with weeds during the rosette stage. [14] Cultivation on fields with heavy infestation of perennial weeds is not recommended.
Alternaria carthami is a necrotrophic plant pathogen of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.).The fungus is in the order Pleosporales and family Pleosporaceae.It was first isolated in India, has spread globally and can have devastating effects on safflower yield, and resultant oilseed production. [1]
Carthamus lanatus is a species of thistle known as woolly distaff thistle, [1] downy safflower [2] or saffron thistle. It is closely related to safflower ( Carthamus tinctorius ). This annual plant is a native of the Mediterranean Basin , but it is familiar in other places where it was introduced and has become a noxious weed , such as in parts ...
The genus Carthamus, the distaff thistles, includes plants in the family Asteraceae. [4] The group is native to Europe, North Africa, and parts of Asia. [3] [5] The flower has been used since ancient times in the Philippines, which it has been called kasubha by the Tagalog people.
Agronomic studies often focus on the above-ground part of plant biomass, and consider crop growth rates rather than individual plant growth rates. Nonetheless there is a strong corollary between the two approaches. More specifically, the ULR as discussed above shows up in crop growth analysis as well, as: = . = .
A fast-spreading wildfire that erupted this week about 45 miles northwest of Los Angeles roared from nothing to nearly 10,000 acres − in a matter of hours.
Popular choices for plant biofuels include: oil palm, soybean, castor oil, sunflower oil, safflower oil, corn ethanol, and sugar cane ethanol. A 2008 Hawaiian oil palm plantation projection stated: "algae could yield from 5,000-10,000 gallons of oil per acre yearly, compared to 250-350 gallons for jatropha and 600-800 gallons for palm oil".
Data source: YCharts. Palantir isn't even close to reaching any of these figures, even with a ridiculous sustained 50% revenue growth rate, something that not even management is projecting.