Vine

Clematis (2)
Gourd (4)
Grape (17)
Liana (26)
Morning glory (1)
Vine (168)

Synopsis: Plants: Vines: Vine:


BBC 00454.txt

Each building could be made from dense layers of ivy-like filters and multiple overlapping layers of openings.


BBC 00888.txt

often requiring a machete to clear a path through the dense vines and creepers that blocked their way.


impactlab_2010 00323.txt

There is an easy-to-grow Potato vine along the fences and back wall. The planting within the cracks is somewhat random,


impactlab_2010 01061.txt

#Bras Used To Help Support Massive Melons Vine breaking galia melons now supported with bra power Fruity farmer Rowie Meers has found the perfect way to support her giant melons using old bras.

Rowie Meers, 45, came up with the idea after her crop of galia melons grew so big they threatened to break the vines they grow on.


impactlab_2010 02460.txt

when the Vikings raised livestock in Greenland and grape vines were cultivated in Scotland, it was in fact warmer than it is today.


impactlab_2010 03160.txt

100 for an area of 25 hectares. oein just one hectare in Yasunã, there are more tree, shrub and liana (woody vines) species than anywhere else in the world,


impactlab_2011 00416.txt

and homeowners have looked for a way to get rid of kudzu. The invasive plant native to Japan grows at such an astounding rate that people in the southern U s. joke about closing their windows at night to keep it out of the house.

Megacopta cribraria, an insect that hitched a ride to Atlanta on a plane from Asia in 2009, eats kudzu.

The kudzu bug could eat away a third of the kudzu covering several states within a decade#I m all for it#

Kudzu is a nuisance and almost impossible to get rid of.##The vine is virtually impervious to herbicides, chain saws and even fire.

Its roots can weigh 300 pounds and run 12 feet deep. But the bug is also chewing up soybean stalks,

according to entomologists at the University of Georgia. Disappearing kudzu is a cultural problem, #says John Shelton Reed, a sociologist and essayist on Southern life.

#Researchers are looking for ways to protect soybean crops from Megacopta cribrariawhile still searching for a species that will kill kudzu and leave crops alone.


impactlab_2011 02168.txt

and vines of tomato plants contain alkaloid poisons such as atropine that cause dizziness, headaches and upset tummies.


impactlab_2011 02533.txt

simply pick them off by hand. 2. Peas There is nothing like peas grown right in your own garden#the tender sweetness of a snap pea just plucked from the vine is unlike anything you can buy in at a store.

Harvest dry beans when the pods have dried completely on the vine. The pods should be light brown,


impactlab_2012 00579.txt

Another example of a plant using smell is how a parasitic plant called dodder finds its food.

A dodder can detect minute amounts of chemicals released in the air by neighboring plants, and will actually pick the one that it finds tastiest!

In one classic experiment scientists showed that dodder prefers tomato to wheat because it prefers the smell. 3b.


impactlab_2013 00063.txt

Szostalo Twigs, branches, vines and other natural materials Poznan, Poland, 2008 Equilibri by Michael Grab Balanced stones Cattolica, Italy, 2012 Rivulet at Parker


impactlab_2013 00814.txt

Each building could be made from dense layers of ivy-like filters and multiple overlapping layers of openings.


impactlab_2014 00197.txt

and catch up on the latest insta-snap-vine-whatsapp-videos. Don t take away from the beautiful, seemingly insignificant,


Livescience_2013 00056.txt

of ivy-eating goats from the Gateway national recreation area in Sandy Hook N. J. was sent back home to a farm in Rhinebeck N y. The goats were there to help eradicate masses of poison ivy that threatened the historic Fort Hancock situated in the park their owner told news media


Livescience_2013 00065.txt

</p><p></p><p>Last Friday in anticipation of a nearing government shutdown a herd of ivy-eating goats from the Gateway national recreation area in Sandy Hook N. J. was sent back home to a farm in Rhinebeck


Livescience_2013 00876.txt

when you reach in to pluck that beefsteak off the vine yourself you engage the plant's primary defense mechanism:


Livescience_2013 02355.txt

The team also found thousands of examples of wild barley wild wheat lentil and grass pea remains throughout the site some of the earliest evidence of agriculture in the world.


Livescience_2013 02560.txt

The King amendment is a sort of legislative kudzu so invasive and dangerous it could crowd out hundreds of state and local laws setting appropriate standards for agriculture.

This article was adapted from King Delivers Legislative Kudzu in Farm bill which first appeared as on the HSUS blog A Humane Nation.


Livescience_2013 04039.txt

#Kudzu-Eating Stinkbug May Attack US Soybeans Pesky vines of kudzu native to Asia have crept throughout the southeastern United states in recent decades

Worse new research shows that the kudzu bugs'taste for soybeans threatens crops outside of the South.

Kudzu (Pueraria montana) was introduced first to the United states as an ornamental plant in the 19th century

Kudzu bugs (Megacopta cribraria) meanwhile which are also native to Asia were detected only for the first time in the United states in Georgia in 2009.

Because of their diet and life cycle the pungent-smelling insects were thought to be limited largely to areas where they could find the invading vine their favorite meal.

Based on observations in the wild researchers believed the eggs of kudzu bugs that hatched during the spring were part of a first generation Generation A

which would eat only kudzu during their immature phase before graduating to soybeans during adulthood.

The Peskiest Alien Mammals But in a greenhouse laboratory researchers at North carolina State university found that baby Generation A kudzu bugs did not have restricted a kudzu diet.

and the field observations indicate that kudzu bugs are potentially capable of spreading into any part of the United states where soybeans are grown.

It also means that both annual generations of kudzu bugs could attack soybean crops in areas where the bug is established already


Livescience_2013 05432.txt

But hunters in the Amazon also extracted the chemical from the plant's woody vines to make paralyzing blow darts.


Livescience_2013 05745.txt

It takes just the right combination of weather events to take the grape from the vine to the bottle.

To concentrate the flavor the vine is grown in nutrient-poor soil so that the plant becomes stressed.


Livescience_2013 07547.txt

but nothing compares to buying a tomato picked ripe from the vine. When you buy produce from a grocery store it may have spent as much as a week in transit.


Livescience_2013 08081.txt

and bites can provoke fatal allergic reactions in sensitive individuals as well as the proliferation of such vines as poison ivy.


Livescience_2013 08137.txt

or be able to eat your produce freshly picked from the vine then eating fresh produce is probably a better option than frozen or canned.


Livescience_2014 01021.txt

At a farmer's market you're more likely to find produce that is picked fresh from the vine possibly even that morning.


Livescience_2014 01465.txt

potatoes are swollen actually the part of the stem of the perennial Solanum tuberosum. This part of the plant is called a tuber


Livescience_2014 02120.txt

and sleep together in protected tangles of vines or tree holes during the day and then climb into the forest canopy to find their favorite tree fruits at night.


Livescience_2014 02313.txt

While Feeding Like an herbivorous Count Dracula a snakelike vine coils around its leafy victim punctures its stem

The parasitic plant Cuscuta pentagona commonly known as strangleweed or dodder preys on many common crop plants.


Livescience_2014 02426.txt

The beginning of the year (and the starting of the calendar) signaled that farmers should trellis vines prune trees and sow spring wheat.


Livescience_2014 02466.txt

Recent research shows that the impact of the invasive species in question kudzu is more troublesome than had been thought previously.

Kudzu is one of the most impressive invasive species in the world. Introduced to the US as a handful of plants in 1876 this invader now occupies over 3m hectares of land in the US largely in the southeast of the country.

If anything could be said to grow like a weed it is kudzu. It grows at an impressive rate of up to a metre every three days.

and grows in a vine-like manner laying down roots whenever it comes into contact with the ground.

In addition to the damage it inflicts by overwhelming other plants kudzu has indirect effects as well. Most notably it carries the kudzu bug#.

#This foul-smelling insect is also an invasive species. Unfortunately the kudzu bugs'taste extends beyond its namesake plant

and includes other legumes such as beans grown for human consumption. This means kudzu s impact is not only native ecosystems but agricultural productivity as well.

Kudzu s direct and indirect cost to the US economy is estimated to be in excess of US$500M annually.

That cost may be set to increase. Rising temperatures and lengthened growing seasons in the northernmost front of the kudzu s range are creating a welcoming environment for further invasion.

Where it was restricted once to southeastern states Kudzu is now found in more northerly states including New jersey and Ohio.

New research suggests that kudzu s negative impact may extend beyond that already documented. Its invasion may also be contributing to the rise in global greenhouse gases by altering soil composition.

Soil holds a phenomenal amount of carbon. In fact there is more carbon stored in soil than in the atmosphere and in terrestrial plants combined.

The problem with kudzu is that it changes the rate at which carbon remains locked away in the soil.

and graduate student Mioko Tamura of Clemson University show that kudzu invasion results in an increase of carbon released from the soil organic matter into the atmosphere.

Tharayil and Tamura investigated the impact of a kudzu invasion in native pine forests. They found that the invasion actually increased the amount of leaf material contributed to the soil

Tharayil and Tamura attribute the release of carbon from kudzu-invaded forests to the fact that kudzu adds material to the soil that is susceptible to degradation relative to that produced by pine.

Simply put kudzu leaves and stems are easy for microbes to degrade pine needles and stems are not.

whereas it gets released by kudzu. When kudzu invades its leaves stems and roots become the major plant contributors to the soil organic matter replacing pines'contribution.

This has a threefold effect. First over time the hard-to-degrade pine matter decreases in abundance.

Second the easy-to-degrade kudzu matter actually encourages the degradation of the pine matter.

That is kudzu material primes#the soil microbes to be more effective at degrading the plant material in the soil including that previously contributed by pines.

Finally after invasion the kudzu matter is simply more rapidly degraded itself. The net result of these three effects is that plant material is degraded more rapidly it doesn t persist like it did in the pine forests.

The impact of kudzu invasions on the release of former pine forests could be substantial.

Tharayil has estimated that kudzu invasion might cause the release of 4. 8 tonnes of carbon per year.

This could create a snowball effect as elevated temperature would enable kudzu to extend its range to more northern latitudes.

This is not to say that allowing knotweed to run rampant is the solution to kudzu s carbon-releasing menace.


Livescience_2014 03751.txt

For example in areas where the invasive vine kudzu grows prolifically it has been shown to boost ozone levels.


Livescience_2014 04458.txt

Hops are small green conelike fruits from a vine plant that provide flavor. When yeast is added to the mix it eats up all the sugar in the wort and spits out carbon dioxide and alcohol as waste products.


Nature 00466.txt

Some plants, such as grape vines, can be propagated asexually using cuttings but not crops such as corn or wheat.


Nature 02545.txt

The not-so-humble potato (Solanum tuberosum) is the world's fourth most important food crop


Nature 03101.txt

vines and three species of an enigmatic group called Noeggerathiales small spore-bearing trees that scientists think are close relatives of the earliest ferns."


Nature 03322.txt

including a poisonous herb called Ephedra and the woody vine Aristolochia. Sometimes known as birthwort, Aristolochia  contains aristolochic acid,

which can cause kidney and liver damage and bladder cancer. Medicinal use of the herb probably explains high rates of bladder cancer in Taiwan,


Nature 04619.txt

but when did the country begin its love affair with the vine? A chemical analysis of archaeological artefacts finds evidence that wine was being produced in the south of France by the fifth century bc."


Nature 04870.txt

while a crew with chainsaws and electric weed-cutters cleared blackberry bushes, ivy vines and small eucalyptus trees near roads and buildings in


popsci_2013 01165.txt

How is this different from the disease that went around the world killing grape vines?

and then old healthy vines were grafted onto the new. The orange juice industry has some dirty secrets anyways.


Popsci_2014 00283.txt

the perpetual moisture warmth and rich soil lead to extravagant growth of hundreds of varieties of tropical grasses plants flowers vines and trees furnishing favorable harbor for the insects;


Popsci_2014 00790.txt

#'Chameleon'Vine Looks like Whatever Tree It Climbschameleons aren t the only species that excel at mimicry as biology professor Ernesto Gianoli discovered in Chile s temperate rainforests.

The woody vine Boquila trifoliolata Boquila for short is a climbing plant and has the abilities to mimic the leaves of its supporting trees as detailed by Gianoli and his student Fernando Carrasco-Urra in their paper.

Gianoli first came across the Boquila vine when he abandoned his usual rigorous schedule of fieldwork that day

while the thinner stem was actually a Boquila vine in disguise its leaves were the same as its neighbor National geographic reported.

Further research shed light on just how good a mimic the vines are. They can match the nearest leaves in terms of size shape color

And a single strand of Boquila vine can copy several different leaves as it climbs from plant to plant.

How does the vine mimic their host trees without any contact? Carrasco-Urra and Gianoli have several hypotheses.

The vine might be sensing airborne chemicals released by the trees to help it choose what disguise to adopt.

Or the vine might be borrowing and using genes from its host trees hich would explain why it mimics the nearest leaf

even if the leaf is not from the tree the vine is climbing on. Gianoli s team is investigating the mysterious Boquila further.


ScienceDaily_2013 03648.txt

Kudzu vines grow madly covering power lines. Zebra mussels muscle-out native mussels in Lake Champlain. Burmese pythons devastate local wildlife in the Everglades.


ScienceDaily_2013 03867.txt

It is a form of berry that grows on woody vines much like grapes and belongs to the order of Ericales where blueberries tea bushes


ScienceDaily_2013 04639.txt

and will soon test their design in plants embedding their lab on a chip in the stems of grape vines for example.


ScienceDaily_2013 07166.txt

Such information can also valuably guide decisions about where to plant new vines which typically produce their first fruit after five years and their best fruit in about a decade.

or Tannat blends and vineyards in Uruguay have begun to distinguish between old vines--descendants from the original cuttings brought over from Europe

The newer vines tend to produce more powerful wines with higher alcohol levels but less acidity as well as more complex fruit characteristics.


ScienceDaily_2013 07309.txt

Dr Bryony Jones also from the UCL Department of Genetics Evolution and Environment and lead author of the paper said:


ScienceDaily_2013 11230.txt

This built up a demand that could only be met by establishing a native industry likely done by transplanting the domesticated vine from Italy and enlisting the requisite winemaking expertise from the Etruscans.

From the beginning promiscuous domesticated grapevines crossed with wild vines producing new cultivars. Dr. Mcgovern observes a common pattern for the spreading of the new wine culture:

Next foreign specialists are commissioned to transplant vines and establish local industries he noted. Over time wine spreads to the larger population and is integrated into social and religious life.

By 3000 BCE the Nile Delta was being planted with vines by Canaanite viniculturalists. As the earliest merchant seafarers the Canaanites were also able to take the wine culture out across the Mediterranean sea.


ScienceDaily_2013 12169.txt

#Do potatoes grow on vines? A review of the wild relatives of some favorite food plantsthe Solanaceae also called the potato

The species-rich Genus solanum has remained remarkably underexplored until relatively recently despite the economic importance of some of its members such as potato (Solanum tuberosum) and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum.

and vary in appearance from shrubs to vines. Some are large canopy lianas while other vining species are woody only at the base.

Two of the most well-known decorative representatives of the group featured in the study are S. crispum also known as Chilean potato vine or Chilean nightshade and S. laxum commonly called potato climber or jasmine nightshade.


ScienceDaily_2013 12253.txt

#Do potatoes grow on vines? A review of the wild relatives of some favorite food plantsthe Solanaceae also called the potato

The species-rich Genus solanum has remained remarkably underexplored until relatively recently despite the economic importance of some of its members such as potato (Solanum tuberosum) and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum.

and vary in appearance from shrubs to vines. Some are large canopy lianas while other vining species are woody only at the base.

Two of the most well-known decorative representatives of the group featured in the study are S. crispum also known as Chilean potato vine or Chilean nightshade and S. laxum commonly called potato climber or jasmine nightshade.


ScienceDaily_2013 12871.txt

The data set collected from 2001 to 2008 includes a sample of all trees shrubs vines herbs grasses fern


ScienceDaily_2013 13699.txt

#Invasive kudzu bugs may pose greater threat than previously thoughtthe invasive kudzu bug has the potential to be a major agricultural pest causing significant damage to economically important soybean crops.

Kudzu bugs (Megacopta cribraria) are native to Asia and were detected first in the U s. in Georgia in 2009.

which we'll call Generation A. The immature bugs of Generation A normally feed on kudzu plants until they reach adulthood

Generation B kudzu bugs can feed on soybean crops during both their immature and adult life stages causing significant crop damage.

Because the immature Generation A kudzu bugs have only been seen to feed on kudzu researchers thought that the pest would not be able to migrate to northern and western parts of the United states where kudzu doesn't grow.

Under controlled conditions in a greenhouse laboratory researchers at NC State found that immature Generation A kudzu bugs were limited not to feeding on kudzu--they were feed able to exclusively on soybeans reach maturity

and the field observations indicate that kudzu bugs are potentially capable of spreading into any part of the U s. where soybeans are grown.

It also means that both annual generations of kudzu bugs could attack soybean crops in areas where the bug is established already


ScienceDaily_2013 14643.txt

In addition to Kern Gilbert and Hossain other scientists involved in the research include Kalpesh Patel Soma Ghosh and Anil Bhunia from Johns Hopkins. Story Source:


ScienceDaily_2013 14730.txt

and we have another kudzu on our hands Endres said. Quinn who is a postdoctoral research associate at the Energy Biosciences Institute at the University of Illinois conducted the research along with James Mccubbins and A. Bryan Endres both U of


ScienceDaily_2013 15714.txt

Wild potatoes which originate in the Andes of South america were brought to Europe by Spanish sailors in the late 16th century.


ScienceDaily_2013 18711.txt

The resulting graph looks less like tree branches and more like a tangled shrub or mass of vines.

But those tangled vines that crisscross the branches are the key showing migration events where a previously separate population mixed with another rejoining to form a new group at a later point in time.


ScienceDaily_2014 01840.txt

Living examples of evergreen angiosperms such as holly and ivy tend to prefer shade don't grow very fast


ScienceDaily_2014 02120.txt

#Potato ravaging pest controlled with fungiapproximately six thousand hectares of Veracruz in the west coast of Mexico are dedicated to the production of potato (Solanum tuberosum) in


ScienceDaily_2014 02196.txt

and vine to protect against and treat fungal infestation. To test for future climate conditions the experiments were performed independently at two different temperatures of 20 degrees and 26 degrees.


ScienceDaily_2014 03873.txt

'Westwood examined the relationship between a parasitic plant dodder and two host plants Arabidopsis and tomatoes.


ScienceDaily_2014 06586.txt

#Kudzu can release soil carbon, accelerate global warmingclemson University scientists are shedding new light on how invasion by exotic plant species affects the ability of soil to store greenhouse gases.

In their study Tamura and Tharayil examined the impact of encroachment of Japanese knotweed and kudzu two of North america's most widespread invasive plants on the soil carbon storage in native ecosystems.

They found that kudzu invasion released carbon that was stored in native soils while the carbon amassed in soils invaded by knotweed is more prone to oxidation

Tharayil estimates that kudzu invasion results in the release of 4. 8 metric tons of carbon annually equal to the amount of carbon stored in 11.8 million acres of U s. forest.

Climate change is causing massive range expansion of many exotic and invasive plant species. As the climate warms kudzu will continue to invade northern ecosystems


ScienceDaily_2014 08440.txt

and vines respond when the Amazonian rainforest is fragmented by cattle ranching. The fragmented forests they found change rapidly.

Lots of trees have died while vines which favor disturbed forests proliferate rapidly said Jose Luis Camargo of Brazil's National Institute for Amazonian Research.

and died faster and the vines also multiplied. These changes might be driven by increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere said Thomas Lovejoy of George Mason University In virginia USA who initiated the long-term study.


ScienceDaily_2014 09031.txt

#Vines choke a forests ability to capture carbontropical forests are a sometimes-underappreciated asset in the battle against climate change.

New research by Smithsonian scientists shows increasingly abundant vines could hamper this potential and may even cause tropical forests to lose carbon.

or woody vines can reduce net forest biomass accumulation by nearly 20 percent Researchers called this estimate conservative in findings published this month in Ecology.


ScienceDaily_2014 09243.txt

The combination of selective logging and wildfires damages turns primary forests into a thick scrub full of smaller trees and vines which stores 40%less carbon than undisturbed forests.


ScienceDaily_2014 12556.txt

and wild peanuts and develop genomic tools for peanut breeding. The initial sequencing was carried out by the BGI Shenzhen China known previously as the Beijing Genomics Institute.


ScienceDaily_2014 18190.txt

Together with Dr Soma Mitra we also assessed the background diet of all the participants before they were allowed to join the study.


Smart_Planet_1 00544.txt

We use rattan, water hyacinth, bamboo and vine. We use recycled polyethylene and recycled aluminum. Last year we came out with this product that was in the works for a couple years


Smart_Planet_1 00571.txt

But usually the food's already on the table or plucked from the vine. A new design could create a place to grow food in cities and a place for people to visit.


Smart_Planet_5 00353.txt

Show attendees clamored for photographs of the PNC Bank  Living Wall, a 16-foot high exhibit of plants, such as ferns and  vines,


Smart_Planet_8 00549.txt

Underneath the 405, ivy was growing. Nature clings, nature will adapt, nature will find a way to live.


Smart_Planet_9 00651.txt

At a testy meeting last fall between government representatives and farmers from Sukagawa and Soma,


Smart_Planet_9 00678.txt

and berry shrubs, climbing vines, herbaceous plants, and vegetables closer to the ground. Further down the path an edible arboretum full of exotic looking persimmons, mulberries, Asian pears,


WS_1452 00034.txt

and create a computerized model of the vines, figure out the canes'orientation and the location of buds all to decide which canes to cut down.


< Back - Next >


Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011