4 results match your criteria: "PeeDee Research and Education Center[Affiliation]"
Plant Physiol Biochem
July 2025
Plant and Environmental Sciences, PeeDee Research and Education Center, Florence, SC, USA.
Despite the rich metabolic profile of sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], containing unique bioactive compounds and high antioxidant potential, its full exploitation as a breeding resource remains underexplored. This study shifts the understanding of sorghum grain biochemical profiles from discrete compound catalogues to network topology, utilizing non-targeted metabolomics to reveal systems-level insights into metabolomic architecture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2022
Plant and Environmental Sciences, PeeDee Research and Education Center, Florence, South Carolina, United States of America.
A primary criticism of organic agriculture is its lower yield and nutritional quality compared to conventional systems. Nutritionally, dry pea (Pisum sativum L.) is a rich source of low digestible carbohydrates, protein, and micronutrients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Insect Sci
March 2021
Vernon James Research and Extension Center, North Carolina State University, Plymouth, NC, USA.
Brown stink bugs, Euschistus servus, are an important early-season pest of field corn in the southeastern United States. Feeding in the early stages of corn development can lead to a number of growth deformities and deficiencies and, ultimately, a reduction in yield. An observational and two experimentally manipulated trials were conducted in 2017 and 2018 to 1) determine optimal timing for assessing brown stink bug damage, 2) assess the level of damage from which yield compensation can occur, and 3) examine the relationship between brown stink bug density and early-season damage and yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Econ Entomol
October 2020
Virginia Tech, Tidewater Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Suffolk, VA.
Economic yield loss and reduction in grain quality from brown stink bug, Euschistus servus (Say), feeding injury in early and late stages of maize, Zea mays (Poales: Poaceae, Linnaeus), development was assessed in Virginia and North Carolina in 2018 and 2019. Varying levels of stink bug infestations were introduced to seedling maize (V2-early stage), and a range of late-stages of maize, including 1) the last stage of vegetative development (V12/V14), 2) prior to tasseling, 3) at tasseling (VT), and 4) across all tested late growth stages. Euschistus servus infestation levels included 33, 67, and 100% of maize seedlings, and 25, 50, 100, and 200% of plants during later stages.
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