North Dakota State University
About NDSU
Academics
Admission
Athletics
Carrington Research Extension Center
Accessibility
NDSU
›
Carrington Research Extension Center
Info
Search results
Subscribe to an always-updated RSS feed.
246
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
Select All/None
Collection
Page
Event
File
Folder
Form Folder
Image
Link
News Item
Article
Collection (old)
New items since
Yesterday
Last week
Last month
Ever
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
2011 Timing of Weed Control in Soybean, Doyon
The results from a 2011 experiment by the Carrington Research Extension Center to test timing of weed control in soybean. This trial was held in Doyon.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
AgronomyRD
/
Docs2011
2011 Weed Control with Zidua Herbicide in Soybean
The results from a 2011 experiment at the Carrington Research Extension Center to test weed control with Zidua herbicide in soybean.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
AgronomyRD
/
Docs2011
2012 Commercial Soybean Inoculation Evaluation - Carrington
The results from a 2012 experiment at the Carrington Research Extension Center to test Soybean commercial inoculants.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
AgronomyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Corn and Soybean Movement through North Dakota
A quick overview of the relative change in acreage from select counties.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
AgronomyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Crop Production Costs, Yields, and Returns for South-Central North Dakota
The economics behind selected crops in the region.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
AgronomyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Field Evaluation of Contans for Management of Sclerotinia Stem Rot: Evaluation of Application Rate and Timing (summary)
Contans reduced both the viability and vigor of sclerotia, fall applications of Contans were more effective than spring applications, and Contans performed equivalently at 1 lb/ac and 2 lbs/ac. The results suggest that Contans may be a useful tool for degrading sclerotia of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and reducing Sclerotinia disease pressure.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
PlantPathologyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Field Evaluation of Contans for Management of Sclerotinia Stem Rot: Evaluation of Incorporation Methods (summary)
Under the conditions tested in this trial (sclerotia primarily on the soil surface at the time of Contans application and moist soils at the time of Contans application) manual incorporation of Contans (by harrowing to 1.5 inches), water incorporation (with 1 inch of water), and no incorporation performed similarly. Different results may be obtained when sclerotia are evenly distributed in the soil profile.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
PlantPathologyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Field Evaluation of Contans for Management of Sclerotinia Stem Rot: Spring Application Timing - Carrington (summary)
Contans applications made in the spring sharply reduced the number of apothecia produced per sclerotium but had only a modest impact on the viability of sclerotia. Contans performed similarlly irrespective of when it was applied in the spring; applications made 2 days prior to planting soybeans performed similarly to applications made 38 days prior to planting soybeans.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
PlantPathologyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Field Evaluation of Contans for Management of Sclerotinia Stem Rot: Evaluation of Application Rate and Timing (technical report)
Contans reduced both the viability and vigor of sclerotia, fall applications of Contans were more effective than spring applications, and Contans performed equivalently at 1 lb/ac and 2 lbs/ac. The results suggest that Contans may be a useful tool for degrading sclerotia of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and reducing Sclerotinia disease pressure.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
PlantPathologyRD
/
Docs2012
2012 Field Evaluation of Contans for Management of Sclerotinia Stem Rot: Evaluation of Incorporation Methods (technical report)
Under the conditions tested in this trial (sclerotia primarily on the soil surface at the time of Contans application and moist soils at the time of Contans application) manual incorporation of Contans (by harrowing to 1.5 inches), water incorporation (with 1 inch of water), and no incorporation performed similarly. Different results may be obtained when sclerotia are evenly distributed in the soil profile.
Located in
Archive
/
…
/
PlantPathologyRD
/
Docs2012
« Previous 10 items
Next 10 items »
1
...
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
...
25
Feel free to use and share this content, but please do so under the conditions of our
Creative Commons
license and our
Rules for Use
. Thanks.