Site
Search results
-
History Timeline
https://plantpath.osu.edu/history-mission/history-timeline
established to provide information to the agriculture community and address horticultural, soil and disease ...
-
4-H, Military Join Forces to Support Kids
https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/4-h-military-join-forces-support-kids
deployed," Kind said. "It reduces their stress level when they know what their parents go through." ...
-
Capstone Meeting (Soil Compaction)
https://fabe.osu.edu/node/3274
202 Repeats every week until Tue Apr 21 2015 except Tue Mar 17 2015. Tuesday, January 27, 2015- 5:30pm to 6:30pm Tuesday, February 3, 2015- 5:30pm to 6:30pm Tuesday, February 10, 2015- 5:30pm to 6:30pm Tuesday, February 17, 2015- 5:30pm to 6:30pm Tuesday, ...
-
Properly Manage Invasive Plant Species at Farm Science Review
that was originally introduced because of its ability to fix nitrogen in the soil and its berries for ...
-
Governor Strickland Proclaims Master Gardener Volunteer Week
planted are new to the market and are being tested for their performance in central Ohio gardens. The ...
-
International IPM Program a Success for Tomato Producers in Africa
production and security is considered a high priority. Candace Pollock Mark Erbaugh False True True False ...
-
Ohio State to Implement Sheep Tail Docking Program
prolapse. "The data from this study would suggest that there seems to be a relationship between short ...
-
Don't Panic. Soybean Rust is Manageable
https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/dont-panic-soybean-rust-manageable
presence of the disease in other countries, such as Brazil, has caused significant yield losses and high ...
-
2011 Seminars
https://plantpath.osu.edu/node/942
(hosted by the Plant Pathology Graduate Students). Part of a graduate student exchange between Cornell, ...
-
Innovative Approaches to Managing Drainage Ditches Can Save Growers Time, Money and Better Benefit Waterways, Ohio State Experts Say
ADA, Ohio – Innovative approaches to ditch management could save Ohio crop growers time and money while at the same time reducing the flow of phosphorus and nitrogen through ditches that eventually end up in stream water, rivers and ultimately in Lake Eri ...