Your search returned 12 results.

Sort
Results
1.
Image from Google Jackets
Effect of long-term application of NPK fertilisers on pH and nutrient levels of soil and leaf in Hevea brasiliensis by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Journal of Plantation Crops 1974
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Bibliography (1).

2.
Image from Google Jackets
Effect of soil pH and base status on the growth of young natural rubber plants by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Rubber Science 2018
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Bibliography (1).

3.
Image from Google Jackets
Leguminous ground cover Mucuna bracteata in mature rubber plantations: Effect on soil pH and organic carbon by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Journal of Plantation Crops 2015
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Bibliography (1).

4.
Image from Google Jackets
Rhizosphere adaptations of natural rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) plants for pH and nutrient availability by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: PLACROSYM XXIII. Climate Resilient Technologies for Sustainability of Plantation Crops, 6-8 March 2019, Central Coffee Research Institute, Chikkamangaluru, Karnataka, India, Abstracts, p.88.
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Bibliography (1).

5.
Image from Google Jackets
A comparison of rock phosphate with superphosphate, and of ammonium sulphate with sodium nitrate, as sources of phosphorus and nitrogen for rubber seedlings. 1. The effect upon growth and soil pH by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Journal of the Rubber Research Institute of Malaya 1964
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

6.
Image from Google Jackets
Changes in soil pH, organic matter, phosphorus and potassium under successive planting cycles of rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Proceedings of the 15th Plantation Crops Symposium, PLACROSYM XV, 10-13 December 2002, Mysore .pp.356-361.
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

7.
Image from Google Jackets
Effect of soil pH and base status on the growth of young natural rubber plants by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Rubber Science 2018
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

8.
Image from Google Jackets
Interaction of sulphur with soil pH and root diseases of Hevea rubber by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Journal of the Rubber Research Institute of Malaysia 1985
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

9.
Image from Google Jackets
Land and soil requirements for optimum growth and productivity of rubber under Sri Lankan conditions by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Bulletin of the Rubber Research Institute of Sri Lanka 2001
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

10.
Image from Google Jackets
Leguminous ground cover Mucuna bracteata in mature rubber plantations: Effect on soil pH and organic carbon by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: Journal of Plantation Crops 2015
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

11.
Image from Google Jackets
Rhizosphere adaptations of natural rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) plants for pH and nutrient availability by
Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction
Publication details: PLACROSYM XXIII. Climate Resilient Technologies for Sustainability of Plantation Crops, 6-8 March 2019, Central Coffee Research Institute, Chikkamangaluru, Karnataka, India, Abstracts, p.88.
Online resources:
Availability: Not available: RRII Library: Journals (1).

12.
Image from Google Jackets
Evaluation of Hevea brasiliensis clones in acidic and alkaline soils of the Sub-Himalayan region of North Bengal by
Material type: Text Text
Publication details: Rubber Science, 36(2): 2023. 147-153.
Availability: Items available for reference: RRII Library: Not for loan (1).