BCPC Knowledge Bank

BCPC’s Knowledge Bank provides access to a wealth of research from past BCPC Congresses and Symposia. This resource contains over 64,000 pages dating back to 1954 through to 2009.

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Found 1445 results
Publication Title.ExcerptPublication dateView/download PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 51 p1-24...still prove useful, fo r example, for comparison of herbicides used in similar situations, for consideration as components of herbicide mixtures and also for possible uses against more recent weed...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 54 p1-34...and C Parker April 1979 Price – £3.00 Agricuttural Research Council Weed Research Organization, Begbroke Hill, Yamton, Oxford, OX5 IPF ISSN 0511 4136 ISBN 7084 0112 CONTENTS SUMMARY INTRODUCTION METHODS...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 62 p1-33...009 AND DPX 4189 WG Richardson, T M West and C Parker February 1981 HARPENDEN Price – £3.50 nner Agncultural Research Council Weed Research Organization, Begbroke Hill, Yarnton, Oxford, OX5...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 64 p1-26pi (5) WEED RESEARCHORGANIZATION OT ; leoea metmaneere = Mat»...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 80 p1-32...persica in wheat and barley is an important advantageover ureaherbicides, for example, but the resistance of Galiumaparine is a disadvantage, common to all of these herbicides. Some further examination of...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 94 p1-25...regulators applied to the foliage and roots. Technical Report Long Ashton Research Station, Weed Research Division, 1986, 94, pp 41. The Weed Research Division will have transferred to Long Ashton...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 98 p1-29Kina INSTITUTE OF “Hiie) ARABLE CROPS RESEARCH hee Long Ashton Research Station BRISTOL. WEED RESEARCH DEPARTMENT TECHNICAL REPORT No.98 THE ACTIVITY, PRE-EMERGENCE SELECTIVITY AND PERSISTENCE OF SOME RECENTLY DEVELOPED HERBICIDES:...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 100 p1-25INSTITUTE OF ‘6] ARABLE CROPS RESEARCH —— Long Ashton ResearchStation BRISTOL WEED RESEARCH DEPARTMENT TECHNICAL REPORT No.100 THE POST-EMERGENCE SELECTIVITY IN WARM-CLIMATE SPECIES OF SOME RECENTLY DEVELOPED HERBICIDES: AC 263499,...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 104 p1-30tn INSTITUTE OF D GRE ARABLE CROPS RESEARCH (7 Long Ashton Research Station BRISTOL. WEED RESEARCH DEPARTMENT TECHNICAL REPORT No.104 The activity and post-emergence selectivity of some recently developed herbicides:...pdfview PDF
WRO Technical Report Number 106 p1-30inn INSTITUTE OF o RG ARABLE CROPS RESEARCH Te Long Ashton Research Station BRISTOL CROP PROTECTION DEPARTMENT TECHNICAL REPORT No.106 THE ACTIVITY, PRE-EMERGENCE SELECTIVITY AND PERSISTENCE OF SOME RECENTLY DEVELOPED...pdfview PDF
Air Assisted Spraying – Field Crops...work reported in this paper is to: (i) Examine the results from comparative drift measurements made under field conditions over three separate seasons and to compare these results with previously...1991pdfview PDF
IWM Elements in Amenity – final...herbicide based, with other solutions being very expensive and carbon use intensive by comparison. • More research to develop reliable IWM techniques is necessary for invasive weeds. Japanese knotweed for...pdfview PDF
IWM Elements in Amenity – final REV1...based, with other solutions being very expensive and carbon use intensive by comparison. • More research to develop reliable IWM techniques is necessary for invasive weeds. Japanese knotweed for sale...pdfview PDF
Application and Biology – Physics of Application I...CONCLUSIONS Deposit, retention and penetration of spray droplets represent a complex system with numerous unknown parameters involved. More research is needed to learn more details and their influence on the...pdfview PDF
Application and Biology – Physics of Application I...CONCLUSIONS Deposit, retention and penetration of spray droplets represent a complex system with numerous unknown parameters involved. More research is needed to learn more details and their influence on the...1985pdfview PDF
Field Margins – Restoration and Creation 1 A...Europe where labour costs for the gathering of seed are low. For example, hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) the most commonly planted species is often grown by British plant nurseries from imported...pdfview PDF
Field Margins – Wildlife Posters A...of one or more components: ditch, ditch bank, hedge, verge and grass track. A vegetation survey of each component for each of the 131 transects was carried out in 1986...pdfview PDF
Field Margins – Wildlife 2 B...Allerton Research and Educational Trust, Loddington House, Leddington, Leics., LE7 9XE ABSTRACT Several gamespecies makeconsiderable use offield-margin habitats, in particular grey partridges, red-legged partridges, pheasants and hares. Generally speaking, field...pdfview PDF
Biodiversity and Conservation in Agriculture 5A...then complemented by a brief examination of the effects of particular managementpractices on farmland bird communities as a whole. Finally, we consider what conclusions regardingpotentially effective conservation action for farmland...pdfview PDF
Weeds in a Changing World – Evolution IIcentury. The speciesis a tetraploid (2n=40), self-compatible, winter annualplant that grows as a ruderal in open habitats with a high degree of disturbance. Emig and Kadereit (1993) proposed that S....pdfview PDF

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