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3 results

  1. CORESTA Congress, Kunming, 2018, Agronomy/Phytopathology Groups, AP 16

    Flue-cured tobacco tip leaf yield, quality, value, and color distribution as influenced by cultivar and harvest schedule

    VANN M.C.; FISHER L.R.; INMAN M.D.; WHITLEY D.S.; SEAGROVES R.W.; BARNES K.
    North Carolina State University, Department of Crop & Soil Sciences, Raleigh, NC, U.S.A.
    Changes in consumer preference and export strategy strongly influence the buying practices of tobacco leaf dealers and cigarette manufacturers. In current times, a dark-colored (orange to red) style of flue-cured tobacco is preferred over a brighter...
  2. CORESTA Congress, Kunming, 2018, Agronomy/Phytopathology Groups, AP 22

    Field screenings of S-metolachlor for weed suppression in flue-cured tobacco

    CLAPP A.M.; VANN M.C.; FISHER L.R.; INMAN M.D.; SEAGROVES R.W.
    North Carolina State University, Department of Crop & Soil Sciences, Raleigh, NC, U.S.A.
    With limited herbicide options and a growing concern to herbicide-resistant weeds, there is a strong need for additional chemical weed control materials in tobacco. S-metolachlor is labeled for use in a variety of agronomic and horticultural crops in...
  3. CORESTA Congress, Berlin, 2016, Agronomy/Phytopathology Groups, AP 36

    Spinosad and cyantraniliprole residues in flue-cured tobacco

    INMAN M.D.; VANN M.C.; SEAGROVES R.W.; FISHER L.R.
    North Carolina State University, Dept. of Crop Science, Raleigh, NC, U.S.A.
    From 2013 to 2015 research was conducted to establish the maximum expected pesticide residue on cured tobacco that would result from a maximum labeled application rate and minimum pre-harvest interval of specific active ingredients. Residues of two...