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Apiaceae.

16496 Apiaceae. http://www.bridgewater.edu/~lhill/Apiaceae.htm The Apiaceae family is usually easy to recognize because of the umbellate inflorescence. However, once you get into the family, you see many species not that easy to identify. The family has some economic importance, being a source of celery, carrots, parsley and dill. Crops > Carrot > Research yellow   pimpernel   poison   hemlock   daucus   carota   wild   parsnip   conium   maculatum   inflorescence   umbellate Jan 1, 2006  

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Other links at Crops > Carrot > Research

The DPPH radical scavenging activities of these compounds were compared with those of rutin, quercetin and rosmarinic acid at a concentration of 2×105 M.
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Other: A good source of vitamins A and E. The young leaves can be used as a salad green and the seeds can be used in place of caraway seeds for baking. The roots can be eaten after the first year, but after the second year they become tough and woody.
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G LOBAL HORTICULTURE ASSESSMENT June 30, 2005 GLOBAL HORTICULTURE ASSESSMENT June 30, 2005 USAID Award #EDH-A-00-04-00006-00 © 2005 University of California Davis International Programs Ofce College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences 260 Hunt Hall One Shields Ave. Davis, CA 95616 530.
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Ibrahim MA, Oksanen EJ, Holopainen JK. Effects of limonene on the growth and physiology of cabbage (Brassica oleracea L) and carrot (Daucus carota L) plants. J Sci Food Agric 2004:84:1319-1326.
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Initially the annual ryegrass and wheat included in the Prairie Moon mixes led to rapid greening of those areas. During the first growing season (1997) the main things visible on both sites were weeds such as foxtail (Setaria viridis) and lambsquarters (Chenopodium album).
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biennial that is closely related to garden carrots, but with a much reduced taproot. During the second year of growth, the plants produce stalks with white, flat-topped flowers.
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-Oecotroph. Marion Yvonne Lorenz aus Hürth-Hermülheim Frankfurt, 2007 (D 030) Vom Fachbereich Chemische und Pharmazeutische Wissenschaften der Johann Wolfgang Goethe  Universität als Dissertation angenommen. Dekan: Prof. Dr. H. Schwalbe Gutachter: Prof. Dr. S. Vieths Prof. Dr. A.
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Scientific Name Daucus carota Common Name Queen Anne's lace, Wild carrot Wildflowers Plant Fact Sheets Consumer Hort Life Cycle: Biennial Height: 1 to 4 feet Flower/fruit: Umbel of small white flowers in a lacy-looking flat-topped cluster 3 to 4 inches wide deep purple floret in the center
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CSL Pest Risk Analysis for Cylas formicarius Fabricius CSL copyright, 2004 Pest Risk Analysis For Cylas Formicarius FABRICIUS STAGE 1: PRA INITIATION 1. What is the name of the pest?
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Daucus carota is a biennial forb with alternate, finely-divided compound leaves and a large flat-topped inflorescence comprized of many small white flowers. The flowers are arranged in compound umbels and there are pinnately divided bracts at the base of the inflorescence.
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