The impacts of different fall/winter cover crops on alleviating maize drought in the subsequent season by changing soil water content remain unclear in Ultisol. Our aim was to investigate whether different fall/winter cover crops (taproot and fibrous root) can improve soil water content to ...
, vetch‐rye biculture, and winter fallow (WF) all with and without fall‐applied PL. Prior to CC termination and corn planting, aboveground dry matter, N content, and C/N ratios of CC and weed biomass were measured; soil inorganic N (ΣNO3? and NH4+) was analyzed every 2 wk ...
Fallisbeforewinter.Winterisbeforespring.Thenitstarts(4)___.The(5)___ indifferentplacesisquitedifferent.Inmostplacesofour(6)___,springcanbe(7)___.Itoftenrainsandthecropsgrowfast.Summercanbehot.Peopleoftengoswimmingin(8)___ andlakes.Fallcanbecool.Itisharvest(收获)time.Thefarmersare(9)___ inr...
There are four seasons in a year, spring, summer, fall and winter. Spring is green, because trees and grass begin to grow. Summer is red, because the sun keeps burning (炽热的) in the sky and people feel very hot. Autumn is yellow, because the crops (庄稼) mature (成熟) and the ...
Fall is before winter. Winter is before spring. Then it starts 4 . The 5 in different places is quite different. In most places of our 6 , spring can be 7 . It often rains and the crops grow fast. Summer can be hot. People often go swimming in 8 and lakes. Fall can be cool....
1.Be mindful of frost. A window for planting cool-season crops opens up in late summer and early fall; once mature, many of these crops can actually survive a light frost (in mild climates, they may even continue producing into the winter months). ...
So autumn was the go-to term for this time between summer and winter for a couple of centuries. Fall as a name for the season came about sometime in the 1500s, a shortened version of the very poetic phrase for fall, "the fall o...
Winter Doesn’t Mean Gardening Has to Stop Cool Season vs Warm Season Crops A good way to think about the difference between cool season (fall, winter, spring) and warm season (summer) crops is how warm the soil temperature needs to be for the seeds to germinate or for transplanting. ...
Before either word emerged in the lexicon, the season between summer and winter was known as harvest, or hærfest in Old English. The word is of Germanic stock and meant “picking,”“plucking,” or “reaping,” a nod to the act of gathering and preserving crops before winter. ...
During this season, crops(庄稼) would become ripe and farmers would have a big harvest(丰收). So in old English, this season was simple called “harvest”.Then, in the 1600s, more people left their farms and moved to cities. Wish fewer people farming, the word “harvest” become less ...