Site

Search results

  1. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Amur Corktree (Phellodendron amurense)

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/f-0108

    gray (Figure 5). The flowers are produced in late spring to early summer and are upright with 2–3-inch, ... root system remain in the soil. Cutting of seedlings or saplings is best conducted in early summer ...

  2. Giving New Life to Tired Pastures

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0159

    reduce the severity of the summer slump. This application should occur after grazing. A third option is ... changed or reduced by varying the timing of mowing throughout the late spring and summer growing period ...

  3. Choosing a Laboratory for Nutrient and Soil Health Testing

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0107

    as standard checks or internal reviews. Staff Expertise Any lab can generate numbers, but if you need ... from, all of which offer a variety of soil and other valuable tests. This fact sheet lists labs in or ... near Ohio, and important factors to consider when choosing the right lab for you. Factors to Consider ...

  4. Ohio Private Pesticide Applicator License Requirements: Who Needs a License and What Steps to Take

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0141

    Training: Core Student Workbook (OSU Bulletin 825-A) pested.osu.edu/onlinetraining (supplemental exam ... category 1 or 3. Ohio Pesticide Applicator Training: Field Crops Student Workbook (OSU Bulletin 821 ... soil, grain storage, greenhouse, or any other confined areas. Stored Grain Student Workbook (OSU ...

  5. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Japanese Stiltgrass

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-70-11

    Flowers — Delicate, spikelike flowers up to 3 inches long develop in late summer or early fall in the ... these products have no residual effect, control is most effective when applied in late summer just prior ... the growing season through mid-summer. These treatments have been shown to effectively control ...

  6. Blacklegged (Deer) Tick, Ixodes scapularis

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/ent-0096

    Larvae are most active in the summer and fall, nymphs are primarily active in the spring and summer, and ...

  7. Timber Theft in Ohio

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-97

    boundaries. Inspect property regularly. If you do not live on the property, hire a forester or ask a neighbor ...

  8. The She-cession: How the Pandemic Forced Women from the Workplace and How Employers Can Respond

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/cdfs-4110

    International Day.” UN News. March 8, 2014. news.un.org/en/story/2014/03/463472-equality-women-means-progress-all-un-officials-declare-marking-international ... declared in 2014 for International Women’s Day. “Empowered women lift up society as a whole: countries with ... 2020). allow employers to hire top talent. Hiring from all over the state, (country, or world,) builds ...

  9. Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/vme-1037

    based on the virus genes and ability to cause disease and death in chickens in a lab setting. LPAI ... infection in poultry (H5 or H7 viruses) can cause disease that affects multiple internal organs resulting in ... million domestic birds (International Steering Committee for Surveillance for Highly Pathogenic Avian ...

  10. Forage as Vegetative Cover for Utility-Scale Solar in Ohio

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/cdfs-4106

    developers’ height thresholds (Sulc, Barker, and Tilmon 2017) and therefore are not discussed in this fact ... grasses perform best when air temperatures are between 65–75°F and growth declines when summer ... August, but these grasses return with a second growth spike in the late-summer and early-fall when ...

Pages