Search

    Search Constraints

    Start Over You searched for: Format Journal article Remove constraint Format: Journal article Subject Term plants Remove constraint Subject Term: plants

    Search Results

    1. "Everyone may think whatever they like, but scientists..." Or how and to what end plant scientists manage the science-society relationship

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    2. A public consultation on plant molecular farming

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    3. AGASSISTANT: an artificial intelligence system for discovering patterns in agricultural knowledge and creating diagnostic advisory systems

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    5. Challenges for the maintenance of traditional knowledge in the Satoyama and Satoumi ecosystems, Noto Peninsula, Japan

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    6. For Marijuana Venture, cannabis cultivation is serious business: how an eight-page newsletter grew into a 200-page monthly magazine in less than three years

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    7. Is it for generation me? A qualitative study exploring marketing and selling plants online to millennial-aged consumers

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    8. Leaf a message: the science and sociology of plant communication

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    9. NAL's plant genome center - a new direction for library services

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    10. Patterns of use and knowledge of wild edible plants in distinct ecological environments: a case study of a Mapuche community from northwest Patagonia

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>