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The Department of Plant Protection (DPP) (Urdu: سررشتہ تحفظِ نباتات ، پاکستان is a department of the Ministry of National Food Security and Research of the Government of Pakistan [1] [2] and a Federal Minister is the head of the ministry. Syed Fakhar Imam is the head of ministry since 6 April 2020. It works under the ...
Pakistan Journal of Botany: Pakistan Botanical Society: 1969–present English 6 issues per year PhytoKeys: Pensoft Publishers: 2010–present English Continuous, Online Phytotaxa: Magnolia Press: 2009–present: English: Continuous, Online Phytochemistry: Elsevier: 1961–present: English: 12 issues per year Plant Biology
The Ministry of National Food Security & Research or Ministry of Agricultulre (Urdu: وزارتِ برائے قومی تحقیق و حفظانِ تغذیہ ، پاکستان, wazarat-e- baraye qaumi tehqeeq o hfzanِ taghzia, Pakistan (abbreviated as MoA) is a Cabinet-level ministerial department of Government of Pakistan.
The IAPPS was founded in 1946 during the first International Plant Congress in Louvain, Belgium. The first president of the organisation was Olaf Freyberg of Malmö, Sweden, who made the following comment: The world needs a plant protection organization, and not only to plan future congresses, but much more provide a platform for the discussion of current research results amongst scientists.
Pakistan Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences This page was last edited on 6 December 2024, at 18:48 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The journal was established in 1969 and publishes peer-reviewed full length research articles. Currently its contents are available from 2003 to date. However, on the completion of Digitalization Project, started in 2003 by Muhammad Ashraf, all issues will be available back to 1969.
Headquartered in Lahore, the organisation was founded in December 1947 soon after the independence of Pakistan, and is among the oldest and premier science organisations in the country. [1] Its aim is the promotion and development of science in the country, as well as to provide a forum for scientific meetings, and facilitate the publication of ...
The largest saltwater wetland in Pakistan is the Indus River Delta. Unlike many other river deltas, it consists of clay soil and is very swampy. The Great Rann of Kutch below the Thar Desert is not as swampy and exhibits shrubland vegetation of rather dry thorny shrubs as well as marsh grasses of Apluda and Cenchrus .