
|
|
Dictionary » L » Lawn LawnLawn (Science: microbiology) a uniform and uninterrupted layer of bacterial growth, in which individual colonies cannot be observed. ![]()
Please contribute to this project, if you have more information about this term feel free to edit this page ![]()
Results from our forumRe: Digestion... this reply is a bit late, but I just joined the forum. It would be very unwise to experiment with drinking the water from boiled grass, especially lawn grasses. Many people still use pesticides on lawns, also fungicides and weed killer sprays. These chemicals may not all be boiled away, and some ...
See entire post
Phosphate bioavailability in soil... pair of gloves, to pull as much as you can out, and a thorough shoveling of the area to cut the roots then planting grass and establish a good lawn would probably do the trick. You can enrich in iron (blood meal, or some Fe salts) that limits the growth of dicots (that includes nettles) and ...
See entire post
Alternative irrigation method?More expensive? With 2 sprinklers you can cover a lawn, to have water diffuse evenly from underground, you would need to burry hundreds of meter of special pipes in the best case. What do you think people will do? Water is cheaper than piping (at ...
See entire post
Identifying a flowering tree/plantI agree. Caster Bean. Highly poisonous, but is said to repell Moles, and other tunneling lawn pests.
See entire post
Re: Serious cloning issues - gel extractions?... for 10, 60 and 120 minutes at 37oC, using fresh ligase. None of these reactions resulted in any colonies, despite uncut vector producing a near-lawn. I have been using an estimated 10 ng DNA in transformations. The only hint I have is that, following gel extraction and precipitation, there is ...
See entire post
This page was last modified 21:16, 3 October 2005. This page has been accessed 4,054 times. |
© Biology-Online.org. All Rights Reserved.
Register | Login
| About Us | Contact Us | Link to Us | Disclaimer & Privacy