01096nam a2200265 i 4500991001856409707536080714s2007 enka b 001 0 eng d9781847350558b14081696-39ule_instDip.to Ingegneria dell'Innovazioneeng363.19222Crompton, Thomas Roy477643Additive migration from plastics into foods :a guide for analytical chemists /T.R. Crompton.Shawbury, U.K. :Smithers Rapra Technology Ltd.,c2007viii, 326 p. :ill. ;26 cmIncludes bibliographical references and indexFood contaminationPlastics in packagingFoodAnalysis.b1408169628-01-1416-10-12991001856409707536LE026 363.192 CRO 01.01 200712026000061993le026Prof. Greco / BibliotecapE118.96-l- 40000.i1544819816-10-12Additive migration from plastics into foods241071UNISALENTOle02614-07-08ma -engenk0003495nam 2201021z- 450 991055771700332120210501(CKB)5400000000046155(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/69255(oapen)doab69255(EXLCZ)99540000000004615520202105d2020 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierInnovation in Propagation of Fruit, Vegetable and Ornamental PlantsBasel, SwitzerlandMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20201 online resource (110 p.)3-03943-410-1 3-03943-411-X In horticulture, plant propagation plays an important role, as the number of plants can be rapidly multiplied, retaining the desirable characteristics of the mother plants, and shortening the bearing age of plants. There are two primary forms of plant propagation: sexual and asexual. In nature, the propagation of plants most often involves sexual reproduction, and this form is still used in several species. Over the years, horticulturists have developed asexual propagation methods that use vegetative plant parts. Innovation in plant propagation has supported breeding programs and allowed the production of high quality nursery plants with the same genetic characteristics of the mother plant, free of diseases or pests.Biology, life sciencesbicsscResearch & information: generalbicssc2iPacclimatizationauxinauxinsbacterial wiltBAPbiotechnologybuddingCarya illinoinensisCCCcell wall degrading enzymesclone agingcorrelationcuttingcuttingscytokininsdomesticDracaena dracoemergence rateepigeneticEricaceaeexopolysaccharidesforcingfoundation-stockgenetic-disordergraftinggrowth retardantsin vitroin vitro culturekinetinlight-emitting diodemaltosemicropropagationnon-infectiousnursery plantsoleanderorchardspepperplant multiplicationpropagationprotocorm-like bodiesrhizobacteriarootingseedlings productionseedsshadingSolanum melongenasusceptibletolerancetrehaloseVaccinium spp.Vaccinium virgatumwildWPMzeatinBiology, life sciencesResearch & information: generalRoberto Sergio Ruffoedt1311354Roberto Sergio RuffoothBOOK9910557717003321Innovation in Propagation of Fruit, Vegetable and Ornamental Plants3030281UNINA