- cover-crops
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Encyclopédie Universelle. 2012.
● cover-crop, cover-crops nom masculin (anglais covercrop, culture intercalaire) Lourd pulvériseur à deux rangées de disques.
Encyclopédie Universelle. 2012.
cover-crop — ● cover crop, cover crops nom masculin (anglais covercrop, culture intercalaire) Lourd pulvériseur à deux rangées de disques … Encyclopédie Universelle
Cover crop — Agriculture General … Wikipedia
cover crop — a crop, usually a legume, planted to keep nutrients from leaching, soil from eroding, and land from weeding over, as during the winter. [1905 10] * * * Fast growing crop, such as rye, buckwheat, cowpea, or vetch, planted to prevent soil erosion,… … Universalium
cover crop — noun Any of several crops planted between others in order to prevent erosion and to improve soil quality (especially by adding nitrogen) … Wiktionary
Row cover — In horticulture, row cover is any material used as a protective covering to shield plants, usually vegetables, primarily from the undesirable effects of cold and wind, and also from insect damage. Commercially available row cover is usually a… … Wikipedia
Industrial agriculture (crops) — Agriculture General … Wikipedia
surface cover — /ˈsɜfəs kʌvə/ (say serfuhs kuvuh) noun any of the substances which are independent of the geological processes which have produced an area of the surface of the earth at a given time but which may come to cover it subsequently, as crops and… …
No-till farming — The article Conservation tillage redirects to this page. This article primarily discusses No till farming, which is one of several different conservation tillage techniques. Some others are Strip till and Minimum tillage … Wikipedia
Living mulch — In agriculture, a living mulch is a cover crop interplanted or undersown with a main crop, and intended to serve the functions of a mulch, such as weed suppression and regulation of soil temperature. Living mulches grow for a long time with the… … Wikipedia
vegetable farming — Introduction growing of vegetable crops, primarily for use as human food. The term vegetable in its broadest sense refers to any kind of plant life or plant product; in the narrower sense, as used in this article, however, it refers… … Universalium