<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Millets / Development / Rural community development / Fodder / Pearl millet / Food security / Rice / Grains / Plant breeding / Food and drink / Agriculture / Biology
Date: 2014-07-28 11:31:31
Millets
Development
Rural community development
Fodder
Pearl millet
Food security
Rice
Grains
Plant breeding
Food and drink
Agriculture
Biology

ih_DecorativeOrnament_vector

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.mcgill.ca

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 3,55 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

The Journal of Nutrition. First published ahead of print May 6, 2015 as doi: jnThe Journal of Nutrition Community and International Nutrition A Randomized Trial of Iron-Biofortified Pearl Millet in S

DocID: 1tk6j - View Document

Road map for increasing pearl millet productivity in drought/prone arid north-west plains A brain-storming session was held on research priorities, partnerships and policies for increasing productivity of pearl millet in

DocID: 1rHeD - View Document

Millets / Food and drink / Health / Personal life / Paspalum scrobiculatum / Eleusine coracana / Foxtail millet / Pearl millet / Cereal / Potato / Panicum sumatrense / Gluten-free diet

India is the largest producer of pearl millet which is also known as Bhajra. Even though it is a major food crop it is underutilized by many as animal feeds. It was a major prehistoric diet in Indian, Korean and Chinese

DocID: 1rmKb - View Document

Millets / Food and drink / Agriculture / Cereals / Crops / Pearl millet / Eleusine coracana / Botany / Pigeon pea

PEARL MILLET SOCIOECONOMIC AND PRODUCTION CHARACTERISTICS IN UGANDA Lubadde, G., P. Tongoona, J. Derera, and J. Sibiya PEARL MILLET SOCIOECONOMIC AND PRODUCTION CHARACTERISTICS IN UGANDA

DocID: 1qQj6 - View Document

Agriculture / Food and drink / Crops / Agronomy / Sustainable agriculture / Cereals / Food security / Urban agriculture / International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics / Crop rotation / Millet / Pearl millet

Nutrient-Dense, Climate-Resilient, FUTURE CROPS for Poverty Reduction A large number of crops that are less extensively grown than the major food crops of the world (maize, wheat, rice and soybean) contribute to the inco

DocID: 1qLQO - View Document