Sustainable sweet cherry cultivation: a case study for designing optimized orchard production systems Kerry GreavesSweet cherries are an inherently challenging crop to produce sustainably, subject to crop loss from climatic events, birds, insects, and diseases, and requiring extensive manual labor due to large tree canopies and small delicate fruits. Nevertheless, cherry production has increased dramatically worldwide for the past two decades, driven by strong consumer demand and innovations in (a) plant materials (self compatible cultivars and precocious, vigor
literature and fashion to enrich our understanding of this intriguing cinematic figure
James Baldwin Review (JBR) is an annual journal that brings together a wide array of peer-reviewed critical and creative work on the life
have routinely dismissed this period and this genre of French cinema
Systems for farming small ruminants such as sheep must meet the global need for food security while being economically
this chapter dispels certain assumptions related to NTFP sustainability and the links between NTFP extraction systems and conservation
Due to the increased academic focus on Chinese cinema
Alfred Schutz’s phenomenology
noting the move from focusing exclusively on production traits to an emphasis on other traits such as those related to health
We discuss materials coming from residues of manufacturing processes
especially regarding the wider adoption of agroforestry and its up- and out-scaling
Anthem’s ‘Modern World School Atlas’ is the essential reference resource for the contemporary world
and thus enable the breeder to consider the behavior of new genetic and trait combinations in environments that plants have not been exposed or tested before