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Manganese Stresses and Mineral Nutrition of Cucumber PlantsCrawford, T. W. Jr., Stroehlein, J. L., Kuehl, R. O. 05 1900 (has links)
Cucumber plants in the vegetative phase of growth received deficient, sufficient, or toxic treatment of manganese (Mn) during a 15-day period beginning 43 days after germination. Deficiency and toxicity of manganese both supressed accumulation of fresh and dry weight. Stem length, number of leaves, and number of seconday meristems per plant were not significantly different among Mn treatments. Manganese-deficient plants accumulated less manganese and nitrogen but more copper and iron, and about the same amount of zinc, phosphorus, and potassium as the Mn-sufficient plants. Manganese toxicity caused cucumber plants to accumulate less copper, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, but more manganese, and about the same amounts of iron and zinc as the Mn-sufficient plants.
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Cucumber Variety Trial, Safford Agricultural Center, 1985Clark, Lee J., Harper, Fred, Thatcher, L. Max 04 1900 (has links)
Slicing cucumbers were studied as an alternative crop for farmers in the Safford valley. Four varieties were tested, with the top variety yielding more than 676 cwt per acre. More work needs to be done to determine the quality and value of the crop, but generally it appears that slicing cucumbers could be produced in the area.
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