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commercially and important
Other commercially important staple foods like wheat, maize, barley, rye, pearl millet and soybean are also having their genomes sequenced.
The forest is highly diverse, and includes commercially important species of Ayous, Sapelli and Sipo.
Plant-based dyes such as woad, indigo, saffron, and madder were raised commercially and were important trade goods in the economies of Asia and Europe.
Ivigtut was formerly the world's premier source of natural cryolite, an important mineral in aluminum extraction, but the commercially viable reserves were depleted in the 1980s.
In modern times, geology is commercially important for mineral and hydrocarbon exploration and for evaluating water resources ; it is publicly important for the prediction and understanding of natural hazards, the remediation of environmental problems, and for providing insights into past climate change ; plays a role in geotechnical engineering ; and is a major academic discipline.
The most commercially important of these have the distinction of being impervious to thermal shock.
Electron beam lithography is also important commercially, primarily for its use in the manufacture of photomasks.
There is a small, autonomous, and commercially important Hindu community present in Melilla, as well.
The Sinclair QL ( though the QL was a sister machine to the ICL One Per Desk, which also used a 68008 ) was the most commercially important.
The commercially important micas are muscovite and phlogopite, which are used in a variety of applications.
It is also used as fuel for vehicles and as a chemical feedstock in the manufacture of plastics and other commercially important organic chemicals.
There are approximately 400 brightener types listed in the Color Index, but less than 90 are actually produced commercially and only a handful are commercially important.
Many commercially important polymers are synthesized by chemical modification of naturally occurring polymers.
They have proven easy to spoof in some famous incidents testing commercially available systems, for example, the gummie fingerprint spoof demonstration, and, because these characteristics are unalterable, they cannot be changed if compromised ; this is a highly important consideration in access control as a compromised access token is necessarily insecure.
This is important commercially because liquid nitrogen can be produced cheaply on-site from air, and is not prone to some of the problems ( for instance solid air plugs ) of helium in piping.
Power rectifiers, using copper oxide and selenium, were developed in the 1920s and became commercially important as an alternative to vacuum tube rectifiers.
The most commercially important of these elements are silicon and germanium.
None of thulium's natural compounds are commercially important.
The land known as the Toledo Strip was and still is a commercially important area.
The nine commercially important species of salmon occur in two genera.
Electrolysis is commercially highly important as a stage in the separation of elements from naturally occurring sources such as ores using an electrolytic cell.
Pines are among the most commercially important of tree species, valued for their timber and wood pulp throughout the world.
They are also consumed by sea birds, whales, and commercially important fish, which they can render unsaleable if consumed in large quantities.

commercially and plum
As traditionally defined, the Amygdaloideae includes such commercially important crops as plum, cherry, apricot, peach, and almond.
A genetically modified plum resistant to plum pox virus, named " HoneySweet ", has been developed but is not commercially available.

commercially and trees
Pines are also commercially grown and harvested for Christmas trees.
During the late 1960s, Arkin began cultivating plants and trees in his backyard, eventually developing a kind of carambola, or star fruit, that became commercially viable and was named after him.
While the area of natural stands with large old trees is rapidly decreasing, substantial areas of regrowth exist and it is increasingly grown in plantations, the long, straight, fast growing trunks being much more commercially valuable than the old growth timber.
The Hinds ' black walnut ( J. hindsii ) is native to northern California, where it has been widely used commercially as a rootstock for J. regia trees.
Wire fences are typically run on wooden posts, either from trees commercially grown in plantations or ( particularly in the American West ) cut from public lands.
The eight genera in the family include the commercially important nut-producing trees walnut ( Juglans ), pecan ( Carya illinoinensis ), and hickory ( Carya ).
The gum is harvested commercially from wild trees throughout the Sahel from Senegal and Sudan to Somalia, although it has been historically cultivated in Arabia and West Asia.
Some farmers in the Wide Bay / Sunshine Coast regions have experimented with growing bunya trees commercially for their nuts and timber.
After the site has been successfully regenerated, seed trees may be commercially harvested or the trees may be retained for visual enhancement and as backup against catastrophic losses of regeneration due to agents such as fire or drought.
Many species grow to become large trees, with Ceiba pentandra the tallest, reaching a height to 70 m. Several of the genera are commercially important, producing timber, edible fruit or useful fibres.
Huon pine is so rot resistant, that fallen trees from many years ago are still commercially valuable.
The trees are grown commercially for this product, particularly in Brazil.
There are numerous types of flora in the tropical rain forest of the island, including a variety of trees and other commercially important species plus the lush vegetation of mangrove swamps.
They are evergreen trees with pinnately compound leaves, and edible drupaceous fruit ; one species, N. lappaceum ( Rambutan ) is commercially important for its fruit.
In the 1880s, Spanish-born and New York-based Gavino Gutierrez came to the area to search for wild guava trees that might be cultivated commercially.
It also provides an opportunity to capture mortality and cull the commercially less desirable, usually smaller and malformed, trees.
* Nursery ( farming ) a farm or farm products retailer who commercially grows flowering plants, shrubs, and trees as ornamental plants for floristry, landscaping, or for horticultural purposes.
Clearcutting contrasts with selective cutting, such as high grading, in which only commercially valuable trees are harvested, leaving all others.
Cork-oak, known in Portugal as " sobreiro ", has been grown commercially in the region for the past 300 years, with the areas between the trees typically given over to grazing, or on the more productive soils, to the growing of citrus fruit, vines or olives.
# Plant two types of trees: early successional species for wildlife and soil stability, then commercially valuable crop trees.
The trees remain commercially viable longer under drier conditions.
The essential oil from the Madagascar trees is commercially known as Ravintsara.

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