1. 2002-01-01 This practical manual covers the factors, which influence the successful establishment of stock, inclduing choosing a suitable site for a nurery, selecting appropriate genetic origins of seeds and cuttings, producing young trees with favourable root systems and building a well trained team of...
  2. 1986-01-01 This binder includes information on forest tree in the tropics. Trees inluded in the index: Agathis robusta - Queensland Kauri Albizia lebbek - Siris (Woman's Tongue) Albizia procera - White Siris Andira inermis - Cabbage Angelin Anthocephalus chinensis -Kadam Araucaria heterophylla - Norfolk...
  3. 1962-01-01 What grows in Florida - how to grow it and where to get it.
  4. Key Resource 2007-12-10 It has been recognized that an important factor in improving the viability of rural livelihoods in developing countries is the promotion of sustainable agriculture. As opposed to relying solely on cash crops, this can be more easily achieved through the domestication of various indigenous fruit...
  5. 1998-01-19 Adapted from selected papers presented to a symposium on Tropical Agroforestry organized in connection with the annual meetings of the American Society ofAgronomy, 5 November 1996, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Large areas of the warm, humid tropics in Southeast Asia, the Pacific, Latin America,...
  6. 1963-01-01 This book contains information on and illustrations of Florida's tropic and subtropic trees.
  7. 1989-01-01 This book consolidates the descriptive results of a pantropical project called Agroforestry Systems Inventory (AFSI), undertaken by the International Council for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) from 1982 to 1987. Since agroforestry was a relatively new term when the project was initiated, the...
  8. 2004-01-01 This exhaustive, lavishly illustrated A-Z encyclopedia describes tropical and subtropical trees by their specific attributes and profiles, such as color, shape, texture, flowers, foliage, or fruit. It also includes a collection of useful quick-reference checklists that help gardeners, designers,...
  9. A tree. It grows 65-70 m tall. The trunk can be 240 cm across. The bark sheds in strips. It is a tropical plant. It grows from sea level to 1,800 m above sea level.
  10. Key Resource 2007-01-01 By Dr. F. W. Martin. Published in parts, 1989 and 1994; Revised 1998 and 2007 by ECHO Staff Though nearly all plants are useful in some way, they are not equally valuable. For example, wheat, rice and corn may be considered the most valuable plants in the world based on the vast acreage planted...