EurekaMag.com Publishes 1,102 New Articles on Vegetable Growing
Mannheim, Germany (PRWEB) January 24, 2014 -- EurekaMag.com has newly published 1,102 references and abstracts on vegetable growing. The site's Research Category extensively covers the horticultural practices of intensively growing a selected number of crops and market them as perishable fresh produce to domestic and overseas markets. The Life, Earth & Health Sciences Research Section 18 provides many articles on vegetable growing in many parts of the world including the US, Australia, India, Israel, Mongolia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Romania and Bulgaria. These articles provide insights into supplying multiple vegetable species in bulk to major markets or middlemen, producing them for local customers, and production of vegetables for sale through on-farm stalls and local farmer's markets.
The Life, Earth & Health Sciences Research Chapter 17639 presents a selection of the current total of 1,102 references and abstracts on vegetable growing including articles on vegetable growing in containers, vegetable growing in greenhouses, vegetable growing in the home gardens, vegetable growing in the suburbs, peri-urban vegetable production, vegetable improvement program of Malaysian highlands, the vegetable industry in the Philippines, vegetable insect control for commercial growers, vegetable insect control recommendations for commercial growers, vegetable insect control recommendations for home gardeners, vegetable insect control using less insecticide, vegetable marketing and production in South East Asia, vegetable marketing system and desirable approaches for its reorganization, vegetable oil methyl esters for fuel, and on vegetable oil-based biodegradable industrial lubricants.
EurekaMag.com was launched in 1998 and has become a comprehensive publisher of references in biology, in the applied life sciences agriculture, horticulture and forestry, in the earth sciences, in the environmental sciences, and in the health sciences. After its latest update stemming largely from the agricultural sciences, it contains a total of 38,897,688 bibliographic references from as early as the beginning of the 18th century (1703). 58% of these entries feature a summary of their scientific content. Besides its new streamlined design and a much improved site search, the site features a mobile version for smartphones and frequently updated accounts at Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Google+.
Frank Linne, EurekaMag.com, http://eurekamag.com/, +84 962103061, [email protected]
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