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New journal issues are kept on display for two weeks.
As many of our journals are not indexed by online databases, we also provide
a current awareness service. The library staff identify a selection of key
articles from the recently received issues and they are listed in the fortnightly
new journals listing.
The journal collection is not available for loan.
Journals issues on display from 17.12.05
Journals issues on display from 5.12.05
Journals issues on display from 7.11.05
Journals issues on display from 24.10.05
Journals issues on display from 10.10.05
Journals issues on display from 26.9.05
Journals issues on display from 12.9.05
Journals issues on display from 29.8.05
Journals issues on display from 15.8.05
Journals issues on display from 1.8.05
Journals issues on display from 4.7.05
Journals issues on display from 20.6.05
Journals issues on display from 6.6.05
Journals issues on display from 23.5.05
Journals issues on display from 9.5.05
Journals issues on display from 25.4.05
Journals issues on display from 11.4.05
Journals issues on display from 28.3.05
Journals issues on display from 14.3.05
Journals issues on display from 28.2.05
Journals issues on display from 31.1.05
Journals issues on display from 10.1.05
Journals issues on display from 4.1.05
Journal
Display 17.12.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (11) December 1 2005
a. Examine your growing media: there are tools a grower can use to
determine if the media being
used is helping - not hindering - plant growth. p. 21.
b. Good looks plus good taste: fruiting shrubs offer the best of both worlds
- ornamental flair
for the landscape and tasty treats for the palate. p. 26.
c. Curtain-raising conifers in containers: for winter show, nothing gleams in
containers like evergreens.
p. 30.
ARBOR AGE 25 (10) October 2005
a. Preventive measures: a holistic approach to pest management. p.
20.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 53 November/December 2005
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 14 (2) September - November 2005
a. The grassy groundcover research project - returning complex indigenous
grassland communities
to agricultural land (by Paul Gibson Roy, The University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus). p. 8.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
503 December 2005
a. Organic viticulture - is it the future or a load of compost? p.
33.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 17 (3) November/December 2005
a. The Italianate gardens of Hepburn Springs. p. 7.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (12) December 2005
a. Pest notes - longhorned and boring. p. 15.
b. Weeds: a thorn in the nursery industry's side. p. 20.
c. Breakthrough in eucalypt transplants: previously it was thought
impossible to relocate West
Australian eucalypts above a certain size, but recent trials suggest
the right technique has been discovered. p. 42.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 7 (6) December 2005 - January 2006
a. Seashore paspalum ecotype responses to drought and root limiting
stresses. p. 42.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc.)
Summer 2005/06
GARDENING AUSTRALIA January 2006
a. The fragrant garden: Sophie Thomson shows how to use fragrant plants
for a scented paradise. p. 18.
b. Palm charm: plant a tropical oasis in your backyard. p. 25.
c. What's your native birth flower? - plants that celebrate the month you were
born. p. 42.
d. Bushfire protection: protecting your property from bushfire is something
every homeowner
should put into practice. Many steps can be taken right now to fireproof your home and garden. p. 54.
GENUS (Ornamental Plant Conservation Association of Australia Inc.
)17 (4) November 2005
GOLF & SPORTS
TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (6) November/December 2005
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (14) December 2005
a. How to know and grow your customers. p. 22.
b. You're the expert: are you tuned to your crop's nutritional needs?
See how you score with this quiz. p. 44.
c. Taking the mystery out of plant growth regulators: PGR trials. p. 56.
d. Calculate with confidence.: in a few short steps, PGR-CALC provides you
with the recipe for mixing your PGRs, as well as some great decision-making tools. p. 60.
e. How to sell more flowers: target the final consumer in your growing efforts
and you'll pave
the way for increased sales. p. 80.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (11) November 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 24 November 2005
a. Olearia: with its glossy leaves and fragrant flowers, Olearia is
a godsend in wet, windy,
salty conditions. p. 18.
INTERNATIONAL PLANT PROPAGATOR'S SOCIETY COMBINED PROCEEDINGS 54 2004
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (6) November 2005
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (6) November 2005
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (9) September
2005
a. The pros and cons of drip irrigation. p. 14.
b. Hazards of root growth and methods to prevent damage. p. 32.
c. Choosing and using plant bio-stimulant. p. 35.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (12) December 2005
a. Job title: landscape curator. A new wave of professionals oversees
the care of historic landscapes.
p. 66.
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 108 27 (4) November 2005
a. Legislative lurks: laws governing the establishment of wetlands
and urban riparian land in
NSW determine the role of the landscape architect. p. 67.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE
66 (4) October/November/December 2005
a. A Mediterranean courtyard in Santa Monica. p. 31.
PARK WATCH 223 December 2005
a. National parks around the world: variations on an enduring theme.
p.16.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (12) December 2005
a. Suppression of grapevine powdery mildew by a mycophagous mite. p.1331.
b. Biological control of Pierce's disease in the vineyard with strains
of xylella fastidiosa benign
in grapevine. p. 1348.
PUBLIC GARDENS 20 (3) 2005
a. Leadership development issue.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 5.12.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (10) November 15, 2005
a. Managing perennial plant pests. p. 28.
ARBOR AGE 25 (9) September 2005
a. Pest of the month - cytospora canker. p. 8.
b. Root growth - understanding influential factors. p. 10.
ECOS 127 October - November 2005
a. Going organic - the pros and cons of organic agriculture. p. 8.
FIELD NATS NEWS 149 December - January 2005/6
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (12) December 2005
a. Disease and pest management in roses. p. 10.
b. Greener growing: why more growers in the United States are exploring
organics. p. 18.
c. Controlling runoff: best practices for water management. p. 22.
d. Progressive plugs: how the glue plug started a quiet revolution
in Europe. p. 24.
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (12) December
2005
a. Waking the dead: exploring the restoration of the spectacular gardens
at Trentham, Staffordshire.
p.854.
b. Ebb and flow - Pinya de Rosa Botanical Garden, Spain: public support has
ensured a revival
of this cactus and succulent garden on the Costa Brava, previously at risk
from tourism and encroaching development. p. 860.
c. Where problems become inspired solutions: the Beth Chato Gardens in Essex.
p. 874.
d. The name is the game: many plant names have either a connection the their
place of origin, or the person who discovered them. p.882.
e. Containing the conifers - conifers as centrepieces. p. 884.
f. By the grace of God - gardening clerics: acknowledging the contributions
made by clergymen
over the years to the world of horticulture. p. 888.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (13)
November 2005
GREEN PLACES (Incorporating LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 20 November 2005
a. What is the likely future impact of climate change on the design,
maintenance and use of public spaces? p. 12.
b. A great LEAP forward?: a new evaluation tool for green space will allow
us to measure what we value. p. 20.
c. Tripping the light fantastic: at last, conventional lighting practice is
being challenged with the advent of bigger budgets and better design. p. 22.
d. Help with healing: Clare Cooper Marcus names the good, the bad and the ugly
in the world of hospital gardens and green spaces. p. 26.
e. Camp Hill Prison, Isle of Wight: a refurbishment of the prison buildings
provided the opportunity
to redevelop the green space around them. p. 30.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (12) December
2005
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (7) November 2005
a. Potted campanula: something different for winter sales. p. 30.
b. Pest management: pests on cabbage and kale. p. 68.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 3 November 2005
a. Persicaria: useful for landscape, Persicaria's thuggish reputation
needn't apply if chosen carefully. p.18.
b. Pests & diseases: thrips. p. 24.
HORTICULTURAL WEEK 10 November 2005
a. Outdoor palms: hardy palms are a good way to achieve impact quickly
and a few will survive deep frost. p. 20.
b. Water world: a pioneering scheme by the Thames enables people and plants
to live in harmony with the river. p. 22.
c. Pests & diseases - black root rot. p. 26.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 17 November 2005
a. Saintpaulia: african violets remain popular houseplants and more
than 2,2000 cultivars are available. p. 16.
b. Plants & diseases - winter moths. p. 34.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (6) October 2005
HORTTECHNOLOGY 15 (4) October - December 2005
a. Experiences with wastes and composts in nursery substrates. p. 739.
b. Floral product behaviors and their influence on consumer floral
purchase frequency. p.
766.
IRRIGATION & WATER
RESOURCES Spring 2005
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (1) January
2005
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (2) February
2005
a. Landscape design. What's the right turfgrass? p. 34.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION
29 (3) March 2005
a. Benchmarks, stations and pavement projects. p. 19.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION
29 (5) May 2005
a. Suppressing weeds with geotextiles, mulch. p. 29.
PARKS & RECREATION
40 (9) September, 2005
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 20 (4) 2005
a. Invasion history and ecology of the environmental weed balloon vine,
Cardiospermum grandiflorum
Swartz, in Australia. p. 140.
TRUST NEWS 34 (2) November 2005
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 105 November - December 2005
a. University to release new bent varieties. p. 54.
VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (5) October 2005
a. Wetland vegetation of the Ewing Morass and eastern Lake Tyers Reserves,
East Gippsland.
p. 224.
WEED WATCH 2 (10) November 2005
YOUR GARDEN Summer 2005-2006
a. Pruning spring shrubs. p. 40.
b. Colourful comeback - dahlias. p. 44.
c. Roses in the heat: choose roses that thrive in summer without fading.
p. 53.
d. Taming nature: Fiona Brockhoff's brilliant coastal designs on the
Mornington Peninsula.
p. 60.
e. The dynamics of harmony:Paul Bangay creates a formal poolside garden for
summer. p.
94.
f. Towards a water efficient garden: William Martin's sustainable alternatives
to standard plants. p.134,
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 7.11.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (8) October 15 2005
a. Plant health: powdery mildew is often misunderstood. p. 8.
b. The color marketing: matching the right plant with the trendy colors
of the season can result
in a positive outcome for both growers and garden centers. p.16.
c. Winter scents: create a winter garden with the invigorating fragrances and
striking hues with
these hardy species. p. 22.
d. Who's afraid of the big bad box?: garden center operators have little to fear
from mass
merchandisers and large discount stores if they implement some simple, but important,
retailing strategies. p. 31.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (7) November 2005
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 8 (3) Spring 2005
a. Park for play - more than a playground. p. 6.
b. Open space management - Larapinta trail management strategy. p.9.
c. Biodiversity - Karori wildlife sanctuary to be an international
centre for biodiversity and eco-restoration.
p. 24.
BOTANIC NEWS EXTRA Spring/Summer 2005
FIELD NATS NEWS 148 November
a. Geological history of the Yarra river: report of a talk by Lex Ferguson.
p. 5.
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (10) October
2005
a. Forgotten Jekyll garden found. p. 703.
b. A new spin on spindles - in praise of fruiting, deciduous Euonymus. p.722.
c. In pursuit of extraordinary fruit - unusual top fruit to try at
home. p.730.
d. One of a kind - Gingko biloba and selections. p. 736.
e. Chiffchaffs unchanged - established plants, carefully maintained:
the latest in the Evolving
Garden series gives a fascinating glimpse into the development of a
fine Dorset garden. p. 742.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (5) October
2005
a. Wetting agents: surfactant on trial. p. 20.
b. Pesticides - the strength of ENs: Phil Ford explains the benefits
of ENs - non-toxic biological
control of turf insect pests....p. 27.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (12) October
2005
a. Some perennials like it cold: Michigan State University researchers
share the tricks of the trade for vernalizing perennials for early flowering. p. 38.
b. Defeat ethylene damage: University of Florida researchers discuss how to
end ethylene damage to potted plants. p. 76.
c. Insect & disease I.D and diagnosis guide. p. 85.
GREEN PLACES (Incorporating LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 18 September 2005
a. Young hearts run free: Penny Travlou presents the findings of a
study into how teenagers interact with the urban environment. p. 22.
b. A tale of two greens: Pete Johnstone of the Countryside Agency assesses
the contribution
two Norfolk communities are making towards the goal of sustainable development. p. 34.
GREEN PLACES (Incorporating LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 19October 2005
a. In the zone: retro-fit home zones are opening up car-dominated neighbourhoods
for varied social use. p. 19.
b. Fresh thinking: the Dutch are fast developing the scope of home zones, but
the UK has been constrained by orthodox thinking and practice. p. 23.
c. Bidding for success: businesses are recognising the value of the public
realm and investing
in its improvement and upkeep. p. 28.
GROUNDSWELL (Nursery and Garden Industry
Victoria) 16 (11) November
2005
a. Flower power - the growing business of healing plants. p. 6.
b. Hygiene in production nurseries - propagation. p. 19.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (6) October 2005
a. Algae: choking profits from greenhouse. p. 68.
b. The invasive plants debate. p. 74.
c. Sluggin' slugs: slugs, usually a minor pest in the Northeast, are
occasionally troublesome
to growers. p. 86.
GROWER TALKS SUPPLEMENT
GrowerTalks/North Carolina State University plant growth regulator
guide 2006.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 6 October 2005
a. Pittosporum: best known for its attractive evergreen foliage, Pittosporum
can also perfume the garden. p. 18.
b. Plants in the playground: appropriate planting can make play areas far more
pleasant,
providing shade, screening eyesores and teaching children about nature. p.
26.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 13 October 2005
a. Cottoneaster: this genus thrives almost anywhere and provides colour
and cover for landscaping schemes. p. 18.
b. Pests & diseases - downy mildew. p. 28.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 20 October 2005
a. Taxus: look beyond Taxus baccata for beautifully coloured yew cultivars
for gardens of all sizes. p. 18.
b. Hardy geraniums. p. 21.
c. Pests & disease - sap-sucking bugs. p. 24.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (6) June 2005
a. Ponds, water features made easy. p. 10.
b. Systemic trunk injections: safe, easy, profitable. p. 34.
c. Plant palette - Trachelospermum jasminoides, T. asiaticum. p. 37.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 42 October 2005
a. Islamic gardens - the Prince's garden in the Casa de Jafar. p. 13.
b. The oldest Botanic Garden in Europe and the space age. p. 17.
c. The war of the roses - an Australian perspective. p. 40.
d. The millennium seed bank. p. 59.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 26 (5) October/November 2005
a. Education the key to managing turfgrass water issues. p. 8.
b. Finding & managing your employees
- Part 2. p. 48.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 24.10.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (9) May 1 2005
a. Modern abutilon: no longer reserved for stuffy sitting rooms, flowering
maples are taking
their show outdoors. p. 20.
b. Leaching a problem?: overwatering container crops can be a costly
mistake. Determining your company's leaching fraction may help solve this problem. p. 27.
c. Chill out!: heat-stress awareness is the first step to worker safety when
temperatures soar. p. 42.
d. Protecting trees from peril: professionals who understand the various dangers
woody ornamentals
face play superhero to the species living in their landscapes. p. 46.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (7) October 1 2005
a. Incredible edibles: uncommon fruits find a niche in ornamental gardens.
Here are a few trees that are able to meld beauty and good eating. p. 18.
b. Greenhouse weed control. p. 24.
c. Irrigation preparation: a 40-year veteran of the irrigation industry explains
the importance of winterizing sprinkle systems or "summerizing" the
damage. p. 31.
d. Think within the box: sometimes misunderstood, Buxus reigns as the aristocrat
of broadleaf
evergreens. p. 34.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (6) September 2005
a. Landscape dysfunction and reduced spatial heterogeneity in soil
resources and fertility in semi-arid
succulent thicket, South Africa. p.615.
b. Anomalities in grasstree fire history reconstruction for south-western
Australian vegetation.
p. 668.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 52 September/October 2005
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
501 October 2005
a. Ripe rot fungal pathogen of grapes is also a pathogen on non-grape
host plants. p. 13.
b. Downy mildew resistance to Ridomil in the Hunter Valley. p. 16.
c. Tips and tricks to establishing healthy young vines. p. 37.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (10) October 2005
a. Waging war on weeds. p. 14.
b. How long is that string? : pest plants. p. 29.
c. Turning the tide: invasive plant experts from throughout Australia
met in central Victoria
recently to discuss the future of weed control. p. 32.
d. The best medicine: the benefits of gardening - physical, intellectual and
emotional - are
catching on. p. 36.
e. Short wait with 'long johns': a grafted apple branch producing fruit in
its first year? A relatively new technique using 'long john' scions is delivering just that.
p. 56.
f. Waste not, want not: with water in short supply throughout Australia, efficient
irrigation is
a major priority for nursery operators and landscapers. p. 70.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS
MANAGEMENT 7 (5) October-November 2005
a. Unearthing a menace: earthworm castings can be a small yet frustrating
maintenance issue
to deal with for the superintendent. In this article Andrew Peart digs
beneath the surface to shed some light on the often-asked question:earthworm-friend or
foe? p. 32.
b. The effects of rootzone materials and depths on moisture retention in sloping
USGA greens. p. 34.
c. Managing golf course rough to reduce run-off. p. 44.
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (10) October 2005
a. How to improve vase life: seven simple, critical tips. p. 18.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA November 2005
a. Urban retreat: what do you do with a small, boring, underused courtyard?
With a little imagination, the options are endless. p. 20.
b. Pot-power - a garden in a pot. p. 25.
c. Heliconias - tropical divas. p. 31.
d. Screen stars - protect your space from prying eyes. p. 62.
e. Green gardening: organic potions. p. 69.
f. 15 secrets of mulch. p. 74.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 107 November 2005
a. The myth of the Mount: an amalgamation of design schemes combine
to create an enigmatic garden. p.22.
b. Ivy league: there's more to ubiquitous ivy than meets the eye, with diversity
of colour and texture to suit any outside space. p. 30.
c. Horticultural who's who - Noel Kingsbury: political plantsman and prolific
horticultural author shares his views on public planting schemes. p. 38.
d. Making fronds: contrary to popular myth, propagating ferns is not difficult,
all that is needed is a little time and some knowledge of fern reproduction. p. 48.
e. England's parterre pioneers: it was George London and Henry Wise who cornered
the market
in garden design for the rich and famous during the 17th and 18th centuries.
p.
54.
f. Fantasy flowers: Stephen Anderton discovers that these highly colourful
and unusual blooms inspire a true passion in those who cultivate them. p.
58.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (11) Mid-September 2005
a. Young plant issue.
GROUND MAINTENANCE 40 (9) September 2005
a. Chemical update: vertebrate pest controls. p. 26.
b. Charting conversion: converting perennial ryegrass fairways to Kentucky
bluegrass without non-selective herbicides, p, G2.
c. Questions & answers about pesticides. p. G8.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (5) September 2005
a. Bank on aphids: how to use unwanted pests to entice and retain beneficial
insects. p.
70.
b. Plant doctors: a new program gives the industry its first-ever doctors of
plant medicine.
p. 82.
c. Containers for the landscaper: how growers are using containers to hook
their landscape customers. p. 88.
d. Cheap tricks: three quick, low-cost, no-nonsense ideas for around the greenhouse.
p. 98
e. Pest management: are fungus gnats making you squirm? p. 106.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 33 (5) October 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 22 September 2005
a. Sedum: stonecrop offers rich late colour in foliage and flowers
and is able to withstand drought. p. 18.
b. Pests & disease - Beech bark disease. p. 32.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 29th September 2005
a. Aside from the stately horse chestnut, smaller plants in the genus
suit average gardens.
p. 18.
b. Pests & diseases - leaf spots. p. 26.
INDIGENOTES 16 (3) October 2005
IRRIGATION & WATER
RESOURCES Spring 2005
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (5) September 2005
a. The use of chlorophyll fluorescence to identify chemical and environmental
stress in leaf tissue of three oak (quercus) species. p.215.
b. The potential of mulch to transmit three tree pathogens. p. 235.
c. What do people want from their community forests? Results of a public attitude
survey in Missouri, U.S. p. 243.
d. Biological vegetation management: an alternative to chemical pesticides.
p. 251.
e. Integrated vegetation management on an electric transmission right-of-way
in southeastern
Pennsylvania, U.S. p. 263.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (10) October 2005
a. Rethinking riverside: can change be good for Olmsted's model suburb.
p. 44.
b. Without precedent or sequel: Utah's I-215 proved that native plantings
could drastically reduce
irrigation and maintenance along state highways. So why hasn't Utah
planted any more roadsides like it? p. 84.
c. Coming clean: in the 1990s, it was hailed as a model of how art and landscape architecture
could clean up acid mine drainage. Ten years later, has this park in Pennsylvania coal country panned out? p.96.
d. Research design connections: Research findings about movement-flow patterns
and forest biodiversity that may inform design. p. 136.
e. Restrained sustainability. p. 152.
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL 20 (3) August 2005
PLANT DISEASE 78 (10) October 2005
a. Genetic structure of Botrytis cinerea populations from different
host plants in California.
p.1097.
b. Development of a fungicide-based management strategy for foliar disease
caused by phoma ligulicola in Tasmanian pyrethrum fields. p.1114.
c. First report of white leaf spot caused by Pseudocercosporella capsellae
on brassica uncea in
Australia. p. 1131.
RESTORATION ECOLOGY 13 (3) September 2005
a. A climate-based approach to the restoration of fire-dependent ecosystems.
p. 429.
b. Plant functional group diversity as a mechanism for invasion resistance.
p. 448.
c. Restoration of Araucaria forests: the role of perches, pioneer vegetation,
and soil fertility.
p. 507.
d. Hydrologic, edaphic, and vegetative responses to microtopographic reestablishment
in a restored wetland. p. 515.
e. Effects of sowing treatment and landscape position on establishment of the
perennial tussock
grass Themeda triandra (Poaceae) in degraded eucalyptus woodlands in southeastern Australia. p. 552.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 10.10.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (6) September 15, 2005
a. Cool-season beauties: green industry experts pick the best ornamental
grasses to include in your fall garden. p.16.
b. Fertilize this!: is fall fertilization helping or hurting your plants? Learn
the benefits of potassium, as well as the proper guidelines for fall fertilizer
applications. p. 23.
c. Taming the beasts: plant growth regulators have long been used by growers
to control the heights of annuals and bedding plants. But herbaceous perennials
growers also can benefit from using this method. p. 38.
ARBOR AGE 25 (7) July 2005
a. Pest of the month: gypsy moth. p. 8.
b. Explore your options: take the guesswork out of arborist climbing
lines. p. 10.
c. Outside the box: soil nutrition management shouldn't end when trees
leave their containers. p. 30.
ARBOR AGE 25 (8) August 2005
a. Pest of the month - anthracnose. p. 8.
b. Systemic tree injections - the latest information on these chemical
delivery methods. p.14.
ARBORIST NEWS 14 (4) August 2005
a. Continuing education unit - utility pruning. p. 12.
b. The Quantified Tree Risk Assessment (QTRA) system - a new approach
to tree safety management. p. 19.
c. Tree worker safety: a view from the past. p. 51.
ARNOLDIA (The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum) 63 (4)
2005
a. Beach plum: a shrub for low-maintenance landscapes. p. 19.
b. Demystifying daphnes. p. 26.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 17 (2) September/October 2005
a. Strathfieldsaye - a homestead garden. p. 7.
ECOS 126 August - September 2005
FIELD NATS NEWS 147 October 2005
THE GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society)
130 (9) September 2005
a. Organic transformation: this National Trust walled garden in Devon
is back into sustainable production, thanks to a team of enthusiastic
volunteers. p. 636.
b. Dahlias for daredevils: dahlias are enjoying a return to popularity with
many cultivars providing real splashes of late-season colours. p. 640.
c. Designing for an extended season: introducing structure and form to many
styles of garden can prolong their displays through autumn and into winter.
p. 646.
d. Good companions: bulbous plants have the potential to provide a succession
of displays virtually throughout the year when teamed with other perennials.
p. 670.
e. Grasses for a new gardening age: fashionable and versatile, the popularity
of grasses continues to grow. p. 674.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (10) September 2005
a. Postharvest. Shipping savvy: University of Florida researchers focus
on shipping to improve plant quality. p. 54.
b. Q-Biotype whitefly - a time for action: with the discovery of the Q-Biotype
whitefly,growers need to pay particular attention to whiteflies that appear
to be resistant to normal controls. p. 70.
c. Keep worker's compensation costs under control. p. 116.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (10) October 2005
a. Giving skin cancer the kill. p. 10.
b. Weeds - your role and responsibility. p. 19.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 8 September 2005
a. Nerine: as the days draw in, Nerine brings welcome exotic colour
to conservatories and windowsills. p. 18.
b. Pest & diseases: bulb nematode. p. 24.
c. Growing media: when choosing a substrate, ensure the formulation will suit
the crop you intend to grow. p. 31.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 15 September 2005
a. Helianthus: annual sunflowers are great for cutting, while perennials
provide easy-care late colour. p. 18.
b. Keep your distance: creative thinking is key to resolving conflicts between
trees and
buildings. p. 20.
c. Pest & diseases - phytophthora root rots. p. 32.
d. Get the groundwork right for healthy trees: getting the soil conditions
right is well worth the time and money when planting valuable trees. p. 35.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 23 (3) September
2005
a. Landscape plant material, size, and design sophistication increase
perceived home value. p. 127.
b. Root growth of three horticultural crops grown in pine bark amended cotton
gin compost. p. 133.
c. Effects of salinity and freezing on Acer platanoides, Tilia cordata, and
Viburnum lantana. p. 138.
d. Evaluation of insecticides for suppression of Japanese beetle, Popillia
japonica Newman,and crapmyrtle aphid, Tinocallis kahawaluokaiani Kirkaldy.
p. 145.
e. Fertilizer applications on establishment and growth of three groundcover
species in sun and shade. p. 157.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (5) September 2005
LAND FOR WILDLIFE NEWS 5 (9) September/October 2005
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 28 (6) June
2005
a. Ponds, water features made easy. p. 10.
b. Systemic trunk injections: safe, easy, profitable. p. 34.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 28 (7) July
2005
a. Low - or line-voltage lighting?: one of the most difficult choices
a contractor has to make is when to use line-voltage and when to use
low-voltage lighting system. p. 24.
NATIONAL SAFETY MAGAZINE September 2005
THE PLANTSMAN (NEW SERIES) 4 (3) September 2005
a. Aster amellus and its hybrids. p. 136.
b. Ozothamnus rosmarinifolius and its hybrids: Tony Schilling explores
a range of hybrids and selections that have been raised from a drought-tolerant
Australian shrub. p. 142.
c. Overcoming seed dormancy: what growers can learn from research into seed
dormancy.p. 159.
d. Developments in Geranium: advances in breeding and selection within three
groups of Geranium as revealed by a recent RHS trial. p. 170.
e. Hardy Hyacinthaceae. p. 178.
PUBLIC GARDEN 20 (2) 2005
a. Special issue - public gardens and their communities.
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 104 September-October 2005
a. Benefits in environmental management systems. p. 44.
VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (4) August 2005
a. Ecology of the endangered Southern Shepherd's Purse Balantinia antipoda
(Brassicaceae) and the associated moss mat community on Mount Alexander, Victoria.p.
179.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 26.9.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (5) September 1, 2005.
a. Planting the seeds of learning: the ethnobotany garden at the South Carolina Botanical Gardens is used as a tool to educate children on how humans have relied on plants throughout history. p. 19.
AQIS BULLETIN 7 August 2005
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER 500 September 2005
a. Vineyard microbial soil health. p. 22.
b. What is eating your grapevine moth? p. 37.
c. Controlling powdery mildew late in the season. p. 44.
d. Grapevine disease resistance and compost. p. 51.
e. Copper fungicides inhibit powdery mildew. p. 59.
f. Phylloxera workshops: protecting the Australian viticulture industry from phylloxera. p. 62.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (9) September 2005
a. Root growth depends on five main factors. p. 13.
b. Pollen down for the count: asthma sufferers shouldn't garden - or should they? Careful plant selection can eliminate the seasonal wheeze factor before it sets in. p. 30.
c. School's in at wetland: a human-made wetland surrounds a new facility designed to introduce horticulture to the Victorian primary and secondary school curriculum. p. 50.
d. Horticulture providers consolidate for 2006. p. 53.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 23 (182) March 2005
a. Rainforests in Victoria. p. 3.
b. Colour variation in cycads. p. 26.
c. Boronia - not just pretty in pink. p. 34.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 7 (4) August-September 2005
a. Diversity and biology of dollar spot organism. p. 34.
b. Salinity tolerance among modern courchgrass cultivars. p. 40.
c. Marcum touches down in Melbourne. p. 44.
CUNNINGHAMIA (A journal of plant ecology for eastern Australia) 9 (1) 2005
a. More than symbioses: orchid ecology, with examples from the Sydney region. p. 1.
b. Ecology of Sydney plant species. Part 10 (Monocotyledon families- Lemnaceae to Zosteraceae). p. 17.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA October 2005
a. Pocket paradise: Brodee Myers-Cooke discovers big ideas for small urban spaces in an inner-city garden. p. 26. b. Lord of the natives: waratahs. p. 30.'
c. Heaven scent: fragrant garden. p. 37.
d. Water saving guide: the experts share their best tips in 16 pages of water-saving ideas for your garden this season. p. 59.
e. The science of feeding - Kevin Handreck explains the world of fertilisers. p. 81.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (8) August 2005
a. Mixing it up: if you're in a rut, your landscape designs reflect it. Now's the time to branch out. p. 8.
b. From the top: green roofs can add value to your business. p. 14.
c. Healthy choice: selecting plants for a low-allergy landscape. p. 22.
d. Starting your own nursery: whether you're looking to supply plants for your own business or to go into the retail market, here is how two businesses are turning plants into profit. p. C10.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN (Australian Plant Society - Victoria) 49.2 (193) September 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 1 September 2005
a. Heuchera: this low-maintenance plants provide colourful foliage for borders or container displays. p. 20.
b. Pests & diseases: phytophthora ramorum. p. 22.
c. Growers go for a greener future: growing media suppliers and nursery stock producers are realising that green compost is an increasingly attractive option, both economically and environmentally. p. 27.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (5) August 2005
a. Protecting the identity of plant invaders: future contributions from horticulture. p. 1168.
b. Inheritance of powdery mildew resistance and leaf macrohair density in Gerbera hybrida. p. 1246.
c. Human response to window views and indoor plants in workplace. p. 1354.
d. The influence of gardening activities on consumer perception of life satisfaction. p. 1360.
e. Chipped pine logs: a potential substrate for greenhouse and nursery crops. p. 1513.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 41 July 2005
a. The Mediterranean miracle continues: planting coastal gardens in the sand. p. 16.
b. Poison in the garden. p. 51.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (7) July 2005
a. Bringing family back to the park: recreation can bring families together and help them stay together. p. 46.
b. Danger in the dogpark: communities with dogparks should see safety as a major priority. p. 56.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (9) September 2005
a. Temperature and leaf wetness requirements for pathogen establishment, incubation period, and sporulation of phytophthora infestants on Petunia x hybrida. p. p. 975.
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 20 (3) 2005
a. Special edition - policies for weed management: who has responsibility?
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER September 2005
TELOPEA (Journal of Plant Systematics) 11 (1) 2005
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (7) July 2005
a. Creating a structured training program. p. 8.
b. Today's chain saws can cut trees and costs: what do you look for in a chain saw? p. 22.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 12.9.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (4) August 15, 2005.
a. Out of the woods: long overlooked, native woodland plants have been
gaining popularity and are finding a home in the American landscape.
p. 18.
b. How safe is your garden center?: sticking to safety plan can save garden
centers money and more importantly, lives. p. 30.
c. Freezing in plants: is cold acclimation important for frost resistance?
Can plant growth regulators affect that resistance? The owner of Petropoulos
Nurseries in Kalamata, Greece, provides answers to these questions. p.46.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 14 (1) June - August 2005
a. Special theme: THE FORGOTTEN FLORA REMEMBERED - Cryptogams (fungi,
lichens, mosses, liverworts, algae and cyanobacteria).
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
499 August 2005
a. New Zealand update on black foot disease. p. 23.
b. A strategy to win the weed war. p. 38.
c. Determining the effects of vineyard soil tillage on beneficial soil
invertebrates.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc) Spring
2005
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 436 September 2005
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (9) September 2005
FLOREO (Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, Australia) Spring 2005
THE GARDEN HISTORY SOCIETY NEWS 75 Summer 2005
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 106 October 2005
a. Horticultural who's who - plantswoman and garden consultant: HELEN
DILLON. p. 38.
b. The genius of the indigenous: creating a unique garden on the coastal
edges of Australia's southern limits called for an understanding and
empathy with the immediate environs. p. 41.
c. Seeds to savour: one of the best ways of keeping hold of your favourite
flowers is to save seed from one year ready to plant next. p. 46.
d. Stream of consciousness: by using the subtleties of Japanese garden design,
Sven-Ingvar Andersson has enhanced the very essence of a Swedish beech forest.
p. 70.
e. Bare essentials: there's a lot to be said for focusing on a year-round framework
of plants with striking bark and stems. p. 88.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (4) August/September
2005
a. War against weeds. p. 21.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (9) September 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 11 August 2005
a. Hebe: for year-round border interest or hedging in sizes to fit
any garden, Hebe is a shrewd choice. p. 20.
b. Venerable veterans: new initiatives are giving Britain's most cherished
trees a more secure future. p. 24.
c. Pests & diseases: giant polypore. p. 26.
d. Hot topic for growers: firms that ignore the growing need for glasshouse
energy efficiency will pay a heavy price. p. 33.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 18 August 2005
a. Pennisetum: this ornamental grass creates a useful link between
tall and shorter plants in borders. p. 20.
b. Adaptable education: colleges are using new learning techniques to make
courses accessible to more people. p 23
c. Pests & diseases: leatherjackets and chafers. p. 44.
d. Polytunnels and houses: before investing in protective structures, it is
important to consider the options available. p. 47.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 15 (3) July-September 2005
a. Special feature: youth in horticulture. p. 425.
b. Historical perspective on weed control and pest management in horticultural
crops. p.508.
c. History and perspectives on the use of disease resistance inducers in horticultural
crops.p. 518.
d. History and current trends in the use of allelopathy for weed management.
p. 529.
e. Review of weed control practices in container nurseries. p. 535.
f. A quantitative approach to human issues in horticulture: conjoint analysis.
p. 546.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (4) July 2005
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (4) July 2005
a. Planting depth and mulch thickness affect estalishment of green
ash (Fraxinus Pennsylvanica) and Bougainvillea Goldenraintree (Koelreuteria
bipinata). p. 163.
b. Effect or fertilization and backfill amendments on soil characteristics,
growth, and leaf gas exchange of English oak (quercus robur L.). p.182.
c. Effects of parking lot location on size and physiology of four southwestern
U.S. landscape trees. p. 191.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (9) September 2005
a. Think globally, sustain locally: a thematic park in Costa Rica focuses
on preserving biodiversity. p. 22.
b. Maintaining the high ground: used almost to death, a venerable San Francisco
park is given new life by neighborhood volunteers. p. 46.
c. Gardening on the rock: over the years, this former prison has become an
unlikely garden spot. p. 54.
d. Learning from dragon rock: whatever became of Russel Wright's inspired attempt
to design a forest garden by managing plant succession? p. 64.
e. Reweaving a campus tapestry: with an award-winning new plan, the University
of California at Berkeley hopes to link present needs with decades of illustrious
plans. p.92.
f. Garden of elitist dreams: in one of the world's poorest countries, a potentate's
garden is being restored. Will anyone gain besides wealthy tourists? p. 130.
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 107, 27 (3) August 2005
a. Rebuilding Beirut: the restoration of Martyrs Square is a symbolic
and physical gesture of reconciliation. p. 28.
b. Capital punishment: new suburban developments challenge the vision of Canberra
as a garden city. p. 48.
c. Profile - Christopher Bradley-Hole: introducing the eminent British architect
and landscape designer who is soon to visit Australia. p. 68.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 66 (3) July/August/September 2005
a. The Dunn gardens: Olmstedian gardenesque and Robinsonian woodland
gardening. p.13.
b. Are we there yet? - designing gardens that move and arrive. p. 39.
c. Tender but tough: the old tea roses. p. 47.
OUTDOOR DESIGN & LIVING 10t ed.
OUTDOOR DESIGN & LIVING 11th ed.
PARK WATCH 222 September 2005
PLANT DISEASE 89 (8) August 2005
a. Occurrence of Togninia minima peritthecia in esca-affected vineyards
in California. p.867.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 26 (4) August/September 2005
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER July 2005
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 29.8.05
AQIS BULLETIN 6 July 2005
ARBOR AGE 25 (60 June 2005
a. Mighty mycorrhizae - tiny allies perform immense functions. p. 12.
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 28 (4) July 2005
a. An evaluation of residents' attitudes to street trees in southern
England. p. 219.
b. Propagation of trees of common lime (Tilia X europea L.) planted
in Swedish gardens in the 17th and 18th centuries. p. 243.
c. Dimensioning of tree containers without windload assessment. p. 281.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (8) August 2005
a. Leading-edge retail trends. p. 14.
b. Hobhouse embraces Islamic garden style: on the eve of a much-anticipated
appearance by British gardener Penelope Hobhouse at the Australian
Landscape Conference in Melbourne, Rosalea Ryan preview the event.
p. 28.
c. Myall Park a legend: best known as the birthplace of two top gravilleas.
Myall Park houses one of Australia's most extensive collections of inland trees
and shrubs. p. 35.
d. Something for every situation: when comes to protecting horticultural crops,
a steady stream of new and improved products is trickling in. p. 42.
e. Longstem propagation makes big strides. p. 53.
FIELD NATS NEWS 146 September 2005
GARDENING AUSTRALIA September 2005
a. Dahlia delight - every garden deserves a colourful patch of these
exquisite flowers. p.20.
b. The joy of spring - spring ideas: clever designs plus classic and connoisseur
plants to try. p.30.
c. Desert dreams - discover the water-wise paradise.
d. The grape temptation: grow the fabulous fruit of the vine in your backyard.
p. 47.
e. Protect a plant: learn about species under threat in your region. p. 68.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 105 September 2005
a. American beauty: landscape designer Edwina von Gal takes Dean Riddle
to an exquisite New York state garden that encapsulates her passion
for nature and order. p. 24.
b. Heleniums: planted in bold drifts or cleverly combined with other plants,
Heleniums create a sizzling late summer display. p. 32.
c. More of the same: boost displays of your favourite bulbs by raising new
offsprings from your existing plants. p. 42.
d. Small garden. Green peace: seeking a retreat from the chaos of the city,
interior designer Diana Yakeley uses a limited plant palette in her own garden
to create an atmosphere of calm. p. 48.
e. Home free: former fashion designers, Richard Nott and Graham Fraser, tell
Ambra Edwards why Stoneacre on the Kentish Weald is now tailor-made for them.
p. 70.
GENUS 17 (2&3) May & August
2005
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (9) August 2005
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (4) August 2005
a. Propagation - the seven habits of effective propagators. p. 84.
b. The organic greenhouse - what's driving growers to explore organics?
p. 92.
c. Pest management: plume moth problems. p. 94.
d. Pest management : Thielaviopsis root rot. p. 102.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 4 August 2005
a. Passiflora: show-stopping blooms and edible fruit make passion flowers
well worth giving shelter to. p. 18.
b. Pests & diseases: beetles. p. 28.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (6) June 2005
a. If you don't count, your parks won't count: park and recreation
agencies need to count users for community governments to take notice.
p. 8.
b. Weaving a new web: using an Internet, agencies can find new ways to reach
park users. p. 48.
c. Making the connection: trails and paths can link park and recreation sites,
prompting destinations and diversions. p.57.
d. Divided by ocean, unified by park: an exchange program has Australians turning
in their boomerangs for Boston ballfields. p. 68.
e. Recruiting for the park and recreation profession: professionals should
examine what attracts them to the job, and apply it to recruiting new faces
to the field. p. 73.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 32 (2) 2004
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 33 (2) 2005
a. Towards the future in seed production, evaluation and improvement.
p. 265.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 15 (11) November 2004
a. Wildfire prevention: a natural fit for forests, arborists. p. 12.
b. Recruiting & retaining a winning
workforces. p. 42.
c. Sprouting, dormant and adventitious buds. p. 58.
d. Effective leadership skills. p. 74.
e. Fatal falls and the economics of tree care. p. 84.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 15.8.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN202 (2) July 15, 2005.
a. Containing the landscape: mixing it up with a variety of colors,
textures and species is the key to planning the perfect container garden.
p. 16.
b. Training young trees. p. 22.
c. Weed management: a successful landscape weed management program is all in
the plan. p. 36.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 202 (3) August 1, 2005.
a. Fertilizing woody plants. p. 24.
b. Tropical punch: exotic plants can easily be used as focal points
and accents in Midwestern garden. p. 28.
c. The ABC of P-I-P: pot-in-pot production has been around long enough to be
a proven means of growing tree and plant stocks, and may be worth a second
look. p. 39.
d. Operation irrigation: a discussion with an engineer, a manufacturer and
a grower brings to light the importance of successful irrigation management.
p. 49.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (5) August 2005
a. Effect of season of burning and removal of herbaceous cover on seedling
emergence in a eucalypt savanna of north-eastern Australia. p. 491.
b. Floristic richness of three perhumid New Zealand alpine plant communities
in comparison with other regions. p.518.
c. Two fine-resolution Pliocene charcoal records and their bearing
on pre-human fire frequency in south-western Australia. p. 592.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 435 August 2005
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (8) August 2005
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (8) August
2005
a. Suburban succulents - growing succulents in the garden. p. 570.
b. Off with their heads - cutting back for longer displays. p. 576.
c. Out of Africa - a gardener's guide to agapanthus. p. 580.
d. Nurseryman's retreat - John Massey's private garden. p. 586.
GREEN PLACES (Incorporating LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 17 Summer 2005
a. Forum: Is it time to drop opposition to wind farms on aesthetic
grounds given their potential to mitigate the harmful effects of climate
change on our landscape? p. 14
b. The lure of les jardins: Louisa Jones describes the growing garden tourism
movement in France. p. 22.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (3) July 2005
a. Poinsettia diseases - what you need to know. p. 32.
b. Technical tips for nutrition - how to lay the foundation, and keep
it strong, for ultimate plant health. p. 90.
c. Pest management. Cyclamen mites and broad mites: these two mites proved
to be prevalent in greenhouses this year. p. 96.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 33 (4) August 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 14 July, 2005.
a. Dierama: this trouble-free plant is grown for its graceful stems
and fragile flowers of varied colours. p. 18.
b. Make training pay - make sure you specify courses accurately to deal with
levels of skills, time, money and legislation. p. 21.
c. Sowing seeds of skill: are government initiatives helping colleges to attract
the young recruits horticulture desperately needs? p. 23.
d. Pests & diseases: Fireblight. p. 26.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 21 July, 2005.
a. Syringa: lilacs have had some bad press but are versatile and can
make quite a statement. p. 18.
b. Take practical steps to recycle nursery water. p. 26.
c. Getting to grips with strangler on the shore: Himalayan balsam could kill
off many native species if it's not kept in check. p. 28.
d. Pests & diseases: Whitefly. p. 30.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 28 July, 2005.
a. Paeonia: this easy to maintain plant has striking blooms and its
foliage offers good autumnal hues. p. 18.
b. Pests & diseases: Fairy rings. p. 20.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (3) June 2005
a. Effects of low-growing perennial ornamental groundcovers on the
growth and fruiting of "Seyval
blanc" grapevines. p. 561.
b. The effect of daily light integral on bedding plant growth and flowering.
p. 645.
c. Isotopic and nonisotopic estimation of nitrogen uptake efficiency in container-grown
woody ornamentals. p. 665.
d. Seed germination of Rhamnus caroliniana: implications for ecology and horticulture.
p.767.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (4) July 2005
a. Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation of highly regenerable
cell suspension cultures in Dianthus acicullaris. p. 393.
b. In vitro propagation of an endangered medicinal bulbous plant Sternbergia
clusiana Ker-Gawler (Amaryllidaceae) p. 399.
c. Fertiliser application affects susceptibility of chrysanthemum to western
flower thrips - abundance and influence on plant growth photosynthesis and
stomatal conductance. p.403.
d. Plant regeneration from somatic embryos of interspecific hybrids of grapevine
formed in liquid medium. p.461.
e. Effect of sucrose at different concentrations and cold dry storage on vase-life
of three ornamental Eucalyptus species. p. 471.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (8) August 2005
a. Design is the best defence: at the U.S Courthouse in Seattle, the
landscape is the first layer of security. p.44.
b. A better Battery Bosque: Landscape architects and garden phenom Piet Oudolf
fine-tune a London plane grove. p.50.
c. So you're LEED accredited - now what?: in a win-win situation,
LEED accredited landscape architects can secure more jobs and protect
the environment. p. 54.
d. Leaders of the pack: designers and other professionals shepherd
many dog park issues. p. 66.
e. Captured alive - Hotarumibashi Park is a triumph of Japanese contextualism.
p. 78.
f. East by Northwest: Robert Murase's wetland retreat showcases the sculptural
use of stone. p. 88.
MUELLERIA 21, 2005.
a. 'Wild' Cistus L. (CISTACEAE) in Victoria - future problem weeds
or benign escapees from cultivation? p. 77.
b. A new species of Isopogon (Proteaceae) from southwest Western Australia.
p. 27.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (7) July 2005
a. Use of boron for the control of eutypa dieback of grapevines. p.
734.
b. Survey for viruses of grapevine in Oregon and Washington. p. 763.
c. Disease notes. Absence of oospores of downy mildew of grape caused
by plasmopara viticola as the source of primary inoculum in most Western
Australian vineyards. p. 777.
PUBLIC GARDEN 20 (1), 2005.
a. Special issue - Garden stewardship: past, present, and future.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (6) June 2005
a. Foreign invasion - a lesson in biodiversity.: beech bark disease
strays south. p. 26.
b. Fungal diseases of camellias. p. 34.
c. Grow your business through consulting. p. 42.
TRUST NEWS 34 (1) August 2005
a. A meaning of gardens: a recent visit to Kashmir with gardening writer
Penelope
Hobhouse has helped Warwick Forge to discover why gardens and garening is important.
p. 14.
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 103 July-August 2005
a. Pests, weeds and diseases - methods to control weeds. p. 24.
b. Pests, weeds and diseases - what does 'organic' means in turf management?
p. 28.
c. Irrigation and water management. Municipal-treated effluent water
application. p.41.
WEED WATCH 2 (9) July 2005
YOUR GARDEN Spring 2005
a. Better on the balcony: clever and creative ideas to boost your balcony
garden. 52.
b. Putting in a pond: some simple tips to get that water feature you've
always wanted. p.60.
c. All dressed up and ready to grow: lovely lavenders in new and pretty mouth-watering
colours. p. 72.
d. My way: transformation from a barren paddock to a bubbling waterways. p.
82.
e. Sowing the seeds: James Hitchmough creates stunning prairie gardens that
hark back to
a natural habitat once rich in herbaceous perennials and grasses. p. 130.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 1.8.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 200 (9) November 1, 2005.
a. The water front: water gardening is gaining in popularity, and professionals
in the industry are spreading the word. p. 26.
b. Waste not, want not - two researchers make a case for using byproducts in
the horticulture industry. p. 44.
c. After the trade show - make the most of your trade show visits by employing
a few smart follow-up techniques. p.49.
AQIS BULLETIN 5 June 2005.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 51 July/August 2005.
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 8 (2) Winter 2005.
a. Turning up the heat on bushfire interpretation. p. 13.
b. Clearing the smoke: bushfire, national parks and the visitor experience.
p. 17.
c. New Zealand. Pest plants in parks. p. 29.
d. Scale development of wildfire management basic beliefs. p. 44.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
498 July 2005.
a. What's happening in the world of grapevine trunk diseases? p. 18.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 17 (1) July/August 2005.
a. William Paterson - amateur colonial botanist, 1755 -1810. p. 8.
b. Past card memories or - more?: Melbourne Royal Botanic Gardens.
p. 15.
FIELD NATS NEWS 145 August 2005.
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 130 (7) July
2005.
a. Fatal attraction - the deadly charms of Aconitum: often ignored,
monkshoods are
available in a range of beautiful colours and different habits, suitable for
most gardens. p. 492.
b. Snake charmers - a gardener's guide to Arisaema. Despite their unusual appearance,
Arisaema are straightforward to grow and many are easy to propagate, so experiment
with their weird and wonderful looks. p.502.
c. Take a swim on the wild side - swimming ponds in Germany and the UK. p.
520.
d. A future for bedding plants?: though the heyday of carpet bedding may be
over, gardeners today are more likely than ever to use bedding plants alongside
perennials and bulbs in mixed planting schemes. p. 526.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (3) June/July
2005.
a. Greens construction - some thoughts! p. 10.
b. Wash bay feature. The time has come: wastewater from machinery wash-down
bays is
a major pollutant of our waterways. Tony Cashmore investigates what can be
done to overcome the problem.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (8) July 2005.
a. Nature's planting tool - researchers discuss the benefits of and
uses for mycorrhizae in grower operations. p. 24.
b. Fertilizing for the future: maximize your fertilizer budget with staged
nutrient release technology. p. 32.
c. The orchid grower: orchids are the second hottest potted flowering plant
in the United States. p. 64.
d. Biologically based pest management - just where do you begin? p. 136.
e. Catching up on container gardens - focus on how to capitalize on the container
gardening craze. p. 142.
f. A coneflower is a coneflower - unless it's a Mexican hat. p. 150.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (8) August 2005.
a. The power of advertising - the secret of Chris & Marie's
success. p. 6.
b. What's ahead for production nurseries? p. 19.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 30 June, 2005.
a. Mandevilla: the spectacular blooms of Mandevilla come at a price
- most will not tolerate cold. p. 20.
b. Going for pot luck: containerised trees have an impressive success rate
that is raking in sales. p. 25.
c. Back to the roots: which stock to specify - container-grown, bare-root or
rootballed. p.29.
d. Trees and the city - specimens that can withstand pollution are essential
in urban areas.p. 30.
e. 10 things you always wanted to know about tree guards and shelters. p. 35.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 7 July 2005.
a. Ground-covering roses: this low-maintenance plant is ideal for landscape
and helps to suppress annual weeds. p.16.
b. Pest and diseases: glasshouse red spider mite. p. 24.
INTERNATIONAL TURFGRASS BULLETIN 228 April 2005.
a. Making golf courses more user friendly - a golf course architect
perspective. p. 10.
b. The ryegrass debate. p. 12.
c. Habitat creation for biodiversity on golf courses. p. 17.
LAND FOR WILDLIFE NEWS 5 (8) March/April 2005.
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 105, 27 (1) February 2005.
a. The eye of the storm: Associate professor Richard J. Weller offers
some observations from his recent study tour of China. p. 18.
b. Future gardens: re-enchantment of the garden as a place of hope. p. 36.
c. Soft centre: Computer Aided Design (CAD) software has transported the realm
of the landscape architect from pen and paper drawings to high-tech, multi-dimensional
imagery. p. 44.
d. Zen, stones and a dialogue with Masuno Shunmyo: Ken Madej meets with an
eminent Japanese landscape architect and Buddhist priest. p. 54.
e. Greening the Olympic green. p. 63.
LANDSCAPE JOURNAL 24 (1) 2005.
a. Dan Kiley and classical modernism: Mies in leaf. p. 1.
b. Sketching the landscape: exploring a sense of place. p. 13.
c. Land-scopic regimes: exploring perspectival representation beyond
the 'pictorial' project. p. 50.
d. Indoors outdoors at Brightside: a critical visual study reclaiming landscape
architecture in the feminine. p.70.
e. Can gardens mean? p. 85.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (5) May 2005.
a. Landscaping with evergreen conifers. p. 8.
b. Industry best practices for crane safety. p. 40.
c. Nature's tree protection: beneficial fungi and bacteria. p. 50.
d. Forecasting work using the weather. p. 58.
5. The 10 Ts of customer acquisition & retention.
p. 66.
THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (3) June 2005.
a. Does application of firefighting foam affect soil invertebrates?
p. 128.
b. Studies on Victorian bryophytes 1. The genus Orthotrichum. Hedw.
p. 134.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 4.7.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (12) June 15, 2005.
a. The heat and the humidity: extension specialist recommend a variety
of plants that not
only stand up to hot, humid weather - they enjoy it. p. 22.
b. Fairly new fungicides. p. 28.
c. Propagating helleborus. p. 33.
d. The greenhouse effect: global climate changes already are affecting the
green industry.
Though hotly debated, the topic is one well-worth understanding. p. 36.
AQIS BULLETIN 4 May 2005.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (4) June, 2005.
a. Effects of inter-fire intervals on the reproductive output of resprouters
and obligate seeders in the proteaceae. p.407.
b. Plasticity in photosynthetic response to nutrient supply of seedlings
from a mixed conifer- angiosperm forest. p.426.
c. Interactive response of herbivores, soils and vegetation to annual burning
in a South African savanna. p. 435.
FIELD NATS NEWS 14 July 2005.
GARDEN HISTORY (Journal of the Garden History Society) 32 (1), 2004.
a. The great parterre at Chatsworth: refining non-invasive archaeological
methods as investigation techniques. p.49.
b. The Oxford University parks: the first fifty years. p. 87.
c. The diffusion of useful knowledge: John Claudius Loudon and his influence
in the Australian colonies. p. 101.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 104 July/August 2005.
a. Dutch master: Piet Oudolf adopted a leaner approach to his usual
style when he created a garden for one of Netherlands's leading architects.
p. 28.
B. Split definitive: dividing rhizomes and tubers can extend the life of tired-looking
perennials and even double your potato crops. p. 36.
p. In praise of Pelargoniums: John Hoyland revels in the history and simple
delights of a summer plant that has become a British obsession. p. 46.
d. The new world order: New Zealander Ross Palmer has brought a little bit
of the homeland to a small north London backyard. p. 54.
e. International design - Vladimir Sitta: Tim Richardson talks to landscape
artist Vladimir Sitta from Room 4.1.3, an Australian company that specialises
in surreal and uncompromising design. p. 99.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (6) June 2005.
a. Get educated: Michigan State University's Floriculture College of
Knowledge offers grower certification courses to OFA Short Course attendees.
p. 52.
b. Vegetative annuals - Osteospermum: focus on the greenhouse production of
osteospermum. p. 66.
c. Public display of affection: bringing the beauty and wonder of plants into
the public eye, community gardening promotes plants , energizes gardeners and
revitalizes communities. p. 110.
GREEN PLACES (INCORPORATING LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 16 June 2005.
a. Keeping up appearances: squeezed budgets have had a detrimental
impact on the maintenance of public open space, but new strategies
are set to improve matters. p. 20.
b. Where have all the 'parkies' gone?: The traditional role of the park keeper
has vanished within current park management structures. p. 24.
c. Second time around: Peter Skelton of the Waste and Resources Action Programme
advocates the use of recycled products in public space projects. p. 32.
d. Space in action: a London museum encourages biodiversity on the outside
to echo the lessons in conservation on the inside. p. 32.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (7) July 2005.
a. Fungi - reduce costs of impact! p. 21.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (2) June 2005.
a. From the ground up: the floor. What's best for your greenhouse:
dirt, gravel, concrete? Or a combination? Plus, which floor heating
should you choose? p. 64.
b. Sanitation for your sanity - it's not a case of if, but when: when a major
outbreak of a virulent pathogen infects your facility, will you be ready? p.
96.
c. Growing with vision: sales can be affected by everything from Mother Nature
to the economy, but a loss of market share is typically preceded by a lack
of vision. p. 100.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN (Australian Plants Society - Victoria) 49.1 (192)
June 2005.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 2 June, 2005.
a. Pansies and violas. p. 16.
b. New crystal palaces to teach of natural world: public gardens are
building glasshouses to combine the best in design with education and
growing technology. p. 22.
c. Pests & diseases - Sooty moulds. p. 28.
d. Skills solution: new recruits, often already skilled, are increasingly entering
horticulture via volunteering. p. 30.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 9 June, 2005.
a. Nicotiana - tall, perfumed varieties are regaining popularity after
mildew problems with dwarf types. p. 16.
b. Community forests: 15 years on. p. 18.
c. Flower of Scotland: The Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, is not just a major
attraction but a hallowed place of learning. p. 29.
d. Pest & diseases - sciarid fly. p. 34.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 16 June, 2005.
a. Dianthus: long lasting and highly scented, pinks are popular for
bedding, rockeries and containers. p. 16.
b. Prickly problem: thistles are a pain for amenity managers, but various controls
are at hand. p. 22.
c. Pests & diseases: dutch elm disease. p. 28.
IFPRA WORLD June 2005.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 94 (12) December 2004.
a. Unobtrusive measures: can the vast and rugged landscape once inhabited
by Quebec's indigenous peoples be successfully represented in an urban
garden setting? p. 28.
b. Anticipating climate change: how landscape architects must alter their practices
and plant choices in the face of subtle but steady climate changes. p. 48.
c. Developing entry-level design portfolios - strategies for graduating students.p.
76.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (6) June 2005.
a. Light at the ends of the alley - Strawberry Way project hopes to
bear bright fruit. p. 48.
b. Charismatic plants - endangered plants need poster children, too.
p. 58.
c. Views of Vegas and beyond: a team of landscape architects is changing
how an entire state addresses landscape aesthetics in its planning
decisions. p. 72.
d. Stone soup: when it comes to reviving parks in distressed neighborhoods,
Steve Coleman says everyone from landscape architects to kids has something
to contribute. p. 124.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (5) May 2005.
a. Understanding tolerance, embracing diversity: park & recreation
professionals should have tolerance and respect diversity in the field.
p. 20,
b. Going for the green - how to prepare your turf before the drought season.
p. 46.
c. Hole new world: golf course managers need to find a way to open up their
service to golfers with disabilities. p. 56.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (4) April 2005.
a. Big trees now - the business of moving specimen trees. p. 24.
b. Controlling Japanese beetle on apples. p. 40.
c. Proper chain saw sharpening. p. 46.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 20.6.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (11) June 1 2005
a. A contained career: a nursery professional with more than 40 years
of experience offers a glimpse of his research in root system improvement,
patented products and the future of container-grown plants. p. 16.
b. Underfoot wonders: a broad selection of beautiful groundcovers stands up
to foot traffic and adds unique texture to landscapes. p. 22.
AQIS BULLETIN October-November 2004
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 28 (3) April 2005
a. The non-native invasive Phellodendron amurense Rupr. in a new York
City woodland. p.151.
b. Development of decay in the sapwood of trees wounded by the use of decay
detecting devices. p.165.
c. The potential for biosolids as soil conditioners and fertilisers in arboriculture.
p. 183.
d. A critic of the static integrated analysis (SIA) method. p. 191.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (6) June 2005
a. Is there a future for garden centres? p. 14.
b. Students put design into action. p. 25.
c. Beleura - Australia's own lost garden. p. 27.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (3) May 2005
a. Post-fire vegetation dynamics in nutrient-enriched and non-enriched
sclerophyll woodland. p. 250.
b. Pollinator activity can explain variation in outcrossing rates within individual
trees. p.319.
c. Effects of salinity on the establishment and early growth of Prosopis alpataco
seedlings in two contrasting soils: implications for their ecological success.
p. 325.
d. Ecosystem wicks: woodland uses enhance water infiltration in a fragmented
agricultural landscape in eastern Australia. p. 336.
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society ) 130 (6) June 2005
a. Partners in climb - growing climbers through companions. p. 416.
b. Growing to unusual heights - rarely seen but floriferous climbers.
p. 430.
c. Wild, but with style - the evolving garden at Sticky Wicket in Dorset.
p. 440.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA July 2005
a. The primrose path - be seduced by these old-fashioned meadow flowers.
p. 20.
b. Winter planting - the ultimate guide to what to plant this winter.
p. 34.
c. Operation rose prune - Peter Cundall's complete guide. p. 39.
d. Penelope Hobhouse - in search of Eden. p. 43.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (4) May 2005
a. Want a client? Adopt a highway: this cleanup program could be a
moneymaker for landscapers. p. C10.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 33 (3) June 2005
a. Living in the hothouse - impacts of climate change on the natural
environment. p. 20.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 26 May 2005
a. Buxus: grown for its compact foliage, this plant is ideal for hedging,edging
and providing shape. p. 16.
b. Ground pressure: more environmentally sensitive fertilisers are emerging
in response to growers' demands. p. 27.
c. Pests & diseases: wilt. p. 30.
d. Pots and containers: choices are increasing as product development continues
to adapt to changing processes. p.33.
INDIGENOTES 16 (2) June 2005
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Winter
2005
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (3) May 2005
a. Trees and wind: a practical consideration of the drag equation velocity
exponent for urban tree risk management. p. 101.
b. Arboriculture and urban forestry education in the United States: results
of an educators survey. p. 139.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 23 (2) June 2005
a. Effectiveness of commercial mycorrhizal inoculants on the growth
of Liquidambar styreciflua in plant nursery conditions. p. 72.
b. Resistance of shrub and groundcover roses to black spot and cercospora leaf
spot, and impact of fungicide inputs on the severity of both diseases. p. 77.
c. Effects of mycorrhizal fungi, biostimulants and water absorbing polymers
on the growth and survival of four landscape plant species. p. 108.
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 106 27 (2) May 2005
a. Special issue - memorials.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (4) April 2005
a. Pursuing happiness though parks: the obesity argument for continued
investment in public parks. p. 8.
b. Special section - playgrounds. p. 43.
c. It's only natural: a new landscape design movement says goodbye to roses
and hello to sedges. p. 71.
PARK WATCH 221 June 2005
a. The case for burning our bush. p. 7.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (6) June 2005
a. Relative pathogenicity of Cryphonectria cubensis on eucalyptus clones
differing in their resistance to c.cubensis. p.659.
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 20 (2) 2005
a. Special edition - urban grassland, their management and restoration.
PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 4 (2) June 2005
a. Clematis from cuttings. p. 81.
b. Clematis breeding in Crimea: dedicated hybridising and selection
at State Nikitsky Botanic Garden near Yalta in Ukraine. p.84.
c. Evergreen climbing hydrangeas: the performance and cultivation of three
relatively uncommon species. p.92.
d. Sir Harold Hillier - memories of a great plantsman: personal recollection
of time spent with a dedicated plant collector. p. 100.
e. The genus Richea: a comprehensive account of a genus of south-east Australian
shrubs which deserve wider cultivation. p. 106.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA 116 (1) 14 November 2004
a. Special issue - environmental history of the newer volcanic province
of Victoria.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA 116 (2) 4 December 2004
PUBLIC GARDEN 19 (1) 2004
a. Special edition - communication.
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER May 2005
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 6.6.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (10) May 15 2005
a. Tiny predator fights fire ant. p. 10.
b, A hybridized life: a conversation with one of the industry's top
rose experts sheds light on both the breeder and his blooms. p. 20.
c. Establishing roots: time, as well as hydration and proper site selection,
help transplanted trees re-establish a healthy root system. p. 24.
d. Let the land light shine: lighting not only brightens the landscape, it
puts a warm glow on profits. p. 30.
e. Garden gluttons: you won't need to set the table for these uninvited dinner
guests. They have no problem finding - or eating - your project out of house
and home. p. 35.
ARBOR AGE 25 (3) March 2005
a. PGRS: the latest information about Plant Growth Regulators. p. 14.
b. Princeton's double lightning-struck tulip tree: case study in strategic
tree removal. p.26.
ARNOLDIA (The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum) 63 (3) 2005
a. Chosenia: an amazing tree of Northeast Asia. p. 8.
b. Capturing and cultivating Chosenia. p. 18.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 50 May/June 2005
a. Up to standard?: Keith McAuliffe questions the quality of our sportsfields.
p. 50.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 13 (4) March - May 2005
a. Special edition: PATHOGENS AND PLANT CONSERVATION.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
497 June 2005
a. Downy mildew: spread and control. p. 28.
b. Spotlight on suppliers and sustainability. p. 35.
c. Herbicides use affects vineyard soil microbes. p. 39.
d. Soil management: the organic way. p. 41.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 16 (5) May/June 2005
a. Mooramong - is it Edna's garden , or Claire's? (by Sandra Pullman,
Burnley (Honors) student). p.10.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc.)
Winter 2005
a. Protecting the living collections in Royal Botanical Gardens, p.
10.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. 433 June 2005
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (6) June 2005
a. Special edition: POSTHARVEST: an investment in consumer satisfaction.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 103 June 2005
a. Touching base: taking basal cuttings in late spring is a useful
way to propagate many types of perennial. p.34.
b. Barnsley revisited: the late Rosemary Verey's classic gardening
style lives on in the garden at Barnsley House. p.44.
c. Climbers, ramblers and scramblers: renowned rosarian Peter Beales
describes the beauty and versatility of climbing roses. With
so many to choose from, he presents his personal selection of the very
best varieties. p.56.
d. Jungle explorer - Ted Smyth, New Zealand's leading landscape designer,
has developed his own garden into a lush oasis of subtropical plants. p.
64.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (5) May 2005
a. Focus on: vegetative annuals - Heliotrope.
b. You're the expert: are you tuned in to your crops' nutritional needs?
See how you score with this case study quiz. p. 74.
c. Research seeks to stem crop losses. p. 96.
d. Fundamentals of flowering. Pulling it all together: research from the University
of Minnesota summarizes how to schedule bedding plant flowering. p. 100.
GREEN PLACES 15 May 2005
a. The Thames trial: Caroline Ednie examines the policies and plans
for green space at part of the Thames Gateway development. p. 18.
b. Inner city living: Christie Walk in Adelaide, Australia, shows how social
sustainability can be achieved through public space design. p. 26.
GREEN PLACES NEWS 18 May 2005
GROUNDSWELL 16 (6) June 2005
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 69 (1) May 2005
a. Consumer relations: an in-depth look at the real effects that live
plants and flower have on humans - psychologically, physically and
socially. Plus, ways to make the evidence work for you, your customers
and your community. p. 46.
b. Whitefly biocontrols: which one? p. 54.
c. Bet you didn't know...All the ways computer software can make life in the
greenhouse better. Inside looks at what you do with different programs. p.
60.
d. PGR on perennials - bonus supplement.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 5 May 2005
a. Salvia: there's more to sage than aromatic leaves. p. 18.
b. Learning the ropes: Managers in horticulture need training and education
that suits their needs. p. 21.
c. Pests & diseases: Fusarium patch/snow mould. p. 26.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 12 May 2005
a. Phyllostachys: evergreen bamboo makes a hardy, fast-growing screen
with attractively coloured stems. p.16.
b. Pest & diseases: vine weevil. p.32.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 19 May 2005
a. Clematis: the right Clematis combination can give flowers from May
to September, even facing north. p. 20.
b. Polytunnels: two growers with two different budgets relate their experiences
of installing a polytunnel. p.27.
c. Pests & diseases: aphids on protected crops. p. 30.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 15 ( 2) April-June 2005
a. The English garden at Stan Hywet Hall and gardens: interpretation,
analysis, and documentation of a historic garden restoration. p. 196.
b. Environmental effects on the performance of foliar applied plant growth
regulators: a review focusing on tree fruits.
c. Effects of garden visits on long-term care residents as related to depression.
p. 298.
d. Turf and ornamental plant tolerances to endothall in irrigation water 1.
Ornamental species. p. 318.
e. Turf and ornamental plant tolerance to endothall in irrigation water 2.
Turf species. p. 324.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 30 (4) July 2004
a. Community forestry in Missouri, U.S.: attitudes and knowledge of
local officials. p. 205.
b. A literature review of nitrogen availability indices for use in
urban landscapes. p. 214.
c. Old park trees: a highly desirable resource for both history and
beetle diversity. p. 238.
d. Assessing the integrated pest management practices of Pennsylvania
U.S., landscape companies. p. 253.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 30 (5) September 2004
a. Urban and peri-urban forestry in a development context - strategy
and implementation. p. 269.
b. Long-term effects of rights-of-way maintenance via the wire-border zone
method on bird nesting ecology. p. 288.
c. Integrated vegetation management on an electric transmission right-of-way
in Pennsylvania, U.S. p. 295.
d. Effects of amendments, soil additives, and irrigation on tree survival and
growth. p. 301.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 30 (6) November 2005
a. Relationship among tree canopy quantity, community demographics,
and tree city USA program participation in Maryland, U.S. p. 321.
b. Relative susceptibility of woody landscape plants to Japanese beetle (Coleoptera
: scarabaeidae). p. 328.
c. Trees and business district preferences: a case study of Athens, Georgia,
U.S. p. 336.
d. The accuracy of formulas used to assess strength loss due to decay in trees.
p. 347.
e. Sugar feeding enhances root vigor of young trees following containerization.
p. 357.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (1) January 2005
a. Multiple disease resistance to powdery mildew, bacterial blight,
and alternaria blight in lilacs (Syringa spp.). p. 1.
b. The influence of calcium and nitrogen fertilization on the freezing and
salinity tolerance of two urban tree species. p. 10.
c. A framework for applying integrated vegetation management on right-of-way.
p. 28.
d. A review of sampling procedures available for IPM decision-making of forest
and shade tree insects in North America. p. 38.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (2) March 2005
a. Quantified tree risk assessment used in the management of amenity
trees. p. 57.
b. Use of sugars to improve root growth and increase transplant success
of birch (Betula pendula Roth.) p. 66.
c. The reliability of a windshield survey to locate hazards in roadside trees.
p. 89.
d. Research note. Preliminary evaluation of a living willow (Salix spp.) sound
barrier along a highway in Quebec, Canada. p. 95.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (3) May 2005
a. Physical mapping of 45S rDNA to mataphase chromosomes in 30 taxonomically
diverse plant species. p.287.
b. Far-red light filtering by plastic film, greenhouse-cladding materials:
effects on growth and flowering in Petunia and Impatiens. p. 303
c. Effect of training-pruning regimes on Eutypa dieback and performance of
'Cabernet Sauvignon" grapevines.
p. 313.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 130 (2) March
2005
a. Plant age, fertilization, and biological control affect damage caused
by twospotted spider mites on ivy geranium: development of an action
threshold. p. 159.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 66 (2) April/May/June 2005
a. Trees of Santa Barbara: a conservatory of global biodiversity. p.
26.
b. Great plant picks 2005: Rhododendrons. p. 47.
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (3) March 2005
a. Making cents out of a tight budget: with shrinking funds, park and
recreation agencies need to look at a new options to be more efficient.
p. 60.
TURF CRAFT INTERNATIONAL 102 May-June 2005
VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (2) April 2005
a. Vegetation condition assessment of the semi-arid woodlands of
Murray-Sunset National Park, Victoria. p.85.
b. The biology, ecology and horticultural potential of Banksia L.f.:
a bibliography of recent literature. p. 102.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 23.5.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (9) May 1 2005
a. Modern abutilon: no longer reserved for stuffy sitting rooms,
flowering maples are taking
their show outdoors. p. 20.
b. Leaching a problem?: overwatering container crops can be a costly
mistake.
Determining your company's leaching fraction may help solve this
problem. p. 27.
c. Protecting trees from peril - professionals who understand the various
dangers woody
ornamentals face play superhero to the species living in their landscapes.
p. 47.
AQIS BULLETIN 3 April 2005
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
496 May 2005
a. Is industry is using the right rootstocks in hot irrigated regions
of Australia? p. 33.
b. Matching rootstock and scion combinations in Sunraysia. p. 37
c. Post harvest, time to assess trellis. p. 41.
d. Avoiding pruning disasters in your vineyard. p. 43.
e. Steel posts avoid contamination and timber posts breakage. p. 49.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (5) May 2005
a. Native cedars make perfect shade trees. p. 16.
b. Roses: new for 2005. p. 41.
c. Great little gums: there is room for a small, decorative eucalypt
in any domestic
landscape. From the west and the east, Julia Berney seeks opinions on worthy
species. p. 52.
CUNNINGHAMIA (A journal of plant ecology for eastern Australia) 8 (4)
2004
a. Population decline and potential for local extinction in a population
Pultenaea glabra
(Fabaceae) in Victoria. p. 431.
b. Progress in the recovery of the flora of treeless subalpine vegetation in
Kosciuszko
National Park after the 2003 fires. p. 439.
c. Bryophyte composition in a native grassland community subjected to different
long-term
fire regimes. p. 485.
d. The importance of seasonality in the timing of flora surveys in the south
and central
western slopes of New South Wales. p. 514.
ECOS 124 April - May 2005
a. A united plan for the Mekong: can the Mekong Wetlands Biodiversity
Project protect two
of the world's greatest areas? p. 8.
b. Re-enter the dragon: after furious growth, China is now trying to tackle
its stark
environmental challenges in a critical face-off with the future. p. 12.
c. Simple faith from a green revolutionary: despite pervasive concerns, both
public and
political, of the potentially unknown effects of genetically engineered crops,
the revered
80-year-old Indian plant geneticist, Professor MS Swaminathan, is convinced
by his
achievements that genetic technology is the timely answer to feeding the world's
increasing population. p. 16.
d. Reign of fire: with recent strides made in understanding the complex ecological
cycles of
our rainforests, scientists are now better aware of the severe effects of both
climate
change and creeping development on forest ecosystems. p. 18.
FIELD NATS NEWS 143 June 2005
THE GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (5) May
2005
a. Begonias for the great outdoor - hardier begonia species. p. 334.
b. Scene in green - plants with extraordinary hues: green flowers are
becoming
increasingly fashionable, and with their subtle hues have their own intrinsic
charm. p.348.
c. Lilac time - the best cultivars of Syringa vulgaris. p. 352.
d. Can you feel the heat? - Paul Spracklin's subtropical garden. An Essex garden
with a
miraculous microclimate, in which tender exotics thrive. p. 366.
THE GARDEN HISTORY SOCIETY NEWS 74 Spring 2005
GARDENING AUSTRALIA June 2005
a. Secrets of cyclamen - bright flowers for inside or out. p. 16.
b. Crunch time for apples - recapture the real taste of apples. With
their glossy skin and
tasty flesh, apples have been famously tempting people for thousand of years.
Yet
despite their delicious flavours and versatility in the kitchen, the number
of antique
varieties is dwindling. p. 20.
c. A growing investment. Find out how your garden can enhance your property
value. p.34.
d. Your green guide to grey water. p. 50.
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (2) April/May
2005
a. Seed vs sod: options for establishing a turf surface. p. 26.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (4) April 2005
a. On target: the right amount and type of nitrogen fertilizer will
help you accurately treat
dollar spot. p. 10.
b. The power of H - adjusting soil pH. p. 16.
c. Make time to update technology - learn how to use technology for scheduling
tree
maintenance. p. C8.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 28 April 2005
a. Molinia: the graceful stems of purple moor grass give movement,
texture and colour in
borders. p. 16.
b. Pests & diseases: Leafminers. p. 28.
c. Walling materials: consider form and function when choosing from the vast
array of
building materials available. p. 31.
INDIGENOTES 16 (1) April 2005
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 28 (5) May 2004
a. Natural or artificial? - Choose when building water features. p.
8.
b. Biological insect control. p. 34.
LANDSCAPE & IRRIGATION 29 (4) April 2005
a. Landscape irrigation: looking at the big picture. p. 16.
b. Residential ponds: ready to get your feet wet? p. 28.
c. Specially formulated to kill/control aquatic weeds. p. 34.
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 40 April 2005
a. Positive reflections from Aphrodite's Island. Part 2: Replanting
an asbestos mine. p. 33.
b. Plant tolerance of dry heat: Part 2. p. 50.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (5) May 2005
a. Diversity and mealybug transmissibility of ampeloviruses in pineapple.
p. 450.
b. Pathogenicity of Xanthomonas translucens from annual bluegrass on
golf course putting
green. p. 469.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 26 (2) April/May 2005
a. Autumn fertilising. p. 20.
b. Small business management. Cash flow - cash management Part V: Controlling
cash
flow payments. p. 48.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 16 (3) March 2005
a. Transplanting bare-rooted trees. p. 8.
b. Design a pest-tolerant landscape. p. 24.
c. Vertical mulching improves tree health. p. 32.
TRUST NEWS 33 (4) May 2005
WEED WATCH 2 May 2005
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 9.5.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (8) April 15 2005
a. Singing the blues: a dedicated Hosta grower delivers a few pointers
on achieving a blue
hue in the landscape. p. 18.
b. Grow with us this summer: a state nursery and landscape association
uses a poster
campaign in high schools to attract summer labor. p. 24.
c. Software solutions: simple-to-use software helps landscape professionals
take their first
steps into digital design. p. 34.
ARBORIST NEWS 14 (2) April 2005
a. Can trees get fat, too? p. 13.
b. Protocol for assessing tree stability: wind load and tree hold.
Pt. 1. p. 20.
c. Tree biology and problem trees. p. 24.
d. Son of a Hitch: a genealogy of arborists' climbing hitches. p. 51.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (2) April 2005
a. Epiphytic ferns and bryophytes of Tasmanian tree-ferns: a comparison
of diversity and
composition between two host species. p. 146.
b. Fire frequency and biodiversity conservation in Australian tropical savannas:
implications from the Kapalga fire experiment. p. 155.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 432 May 2005
FIELD NATS NEWS 142 May 2005
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (5) May 2005
a. Woody ornamentals: why some Dutch growers are setting aside traditional
markets in
favor of new opportunities in unexpected niches. p. 24.
GOLF ARCHITECTURE 8 2005
a. Great Australian golf course architects: Eric Apperly (1889 - 1951).
p. 58.
GREEN PLACES (Incorporating LANDSCAPE DESIGN) 14 April 2005
a. Transforming cities: author and urban designer Nick Corbett charts
the influence of the
public realm on urban regeneration - from Victorian Britain to present-day
Lebanon. p.16.
b. Refugee reflections: how asylum seekers and refugees perceive and use urban
open
space needs to be better understood. p. 28.
GREEN PLACES NEWS 17 April 2005
GROUNDSWELL 16 (5) May 2005
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 68 (12) April 2005
a. POP: Power Of Plants. Just what are you promoting on the retail
bench? And can POP
make a difference? Here are the theories behind good point-of-purchase materials.
p.48.
b. Pest roundup: Notes from this year's SAF pest management conference provide
updates
on everything from botrytis to thrips. p. 54.
c. Phytotoxicity: don't burn your plants. p. 70.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 14 April 2005
a. Tilia: lime trees are one of the most popular and successful genera
in landscape and
gardens. p. 20.
b. Making the most of waste: using green waste in the production of growing
media offers
a lesson in eco-friendly thinking. p. 31.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 21 April 2005
a. Osteospermum: this African daisy can produce stunning colour and
form, even in a
single flower. p. 16.
b. Countdown to 2010: the industry has broadly taken on board the need to develop
alternatives to peat, but Geoff Sawyer finds that funding shortfalls are holding
up
research for viable products. p. 18.
c. Developing standards: much is at stake with the review of the British Standard
on trees
and construction. p. 24.
d. Light on the pocket: Baginton Nurseries is using a variety of technologies
to conserve
energy and save money. p. 33.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (2) April 2005
a. Pollination biology of Hydrangea macrophylla. p. 335.
b. Fertilization of two container-grown woody ornamentals based on
their specific nitrogen
accumulation patterns. p. 451.
c. Responses of creeping bentgrass to salinity and mowing management: growth
and turf
quality. p. 463.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 22 (1) March 2004
a. Survey of the monitoring and control practices for arthropod pests
by the nursery
industry in Pennsylvania. p. 5.
b. Models for predicting the risk of naturalization of non-native woody plants
in Iowa. p.23.
c. Effect of chilling duration on growth of Hosta plantaginea and 11 related
cultivars. p. 37.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 22 (2) June 2004
a. Impact of application rate and interval on the control of powdery
mildew and cercospora
leaf spot on bigleaf Hydrangea with azoxystrobin. p. 58.
b. Auxin application to stem cuttings of selected woody landscape plants by
incorporation
into a stabilized organic rooting substrate. p. 63.
c. Fertilizer placement and herbicide rate affect weed control and crop growth
in
containers. p. 93.
d. Nursery floor affects containerized plant growth. p. 100.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 22 (3) September 2004
a. Effects of transplants season and container size on landscape establishment
of Kalmia
latifolia L. p. 133.
b. Short term drought conditioning influences adventitious rooting of Firebush
and Fraser's
Photinia stem cuttings. p. 144.
c. Assessing the infectivity of commercial mycorrhizal inoculants in plant
nursery
conditions. p. 149.
d. Effects of soil compaction and flooding on the growth of 12 willow (Salix
L.) species. p.155.
e. Effects of magnesium-sulfate on leaf chlorosis, plant growth and nutrient
uptake in
Camellia sasanqua "Shishi Gashira'. p. 161.
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 22 (4) December 2004
a. Auxins and water-retaining polymer root dips affect survival and
growth of newly
transplanted bare-rooted European beech and silver birch. p. 183.
b. Water loss estimates for five recently transplanted landscape tree species
in a semi-arid
climate. p. 189.
c. Effect of transplanting and paclobutrazol on root growth of 'Green Column'
Black Maple
and 'Summit' Green Ash. p. 209.
d. A comparison of subcanopy versus overhead application of constructed wetland
treated
nursery runoff on short and long rotation nursery crops. p. 217.
e. Harvest seasons influences fertilizer effects on seed production of lanceleaf
coreopsis. p.229.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (5) May 2005
a. Saving altered landscape: plans to redo a Dan Kiley design ruffle
feathers of some and
earn praise from others. p. 28.
b. The national vegetation classification system: a holistic way to look at
natural system. p.62.
c. Let that soak in: breaking ground with low impact development methods. p.70.
d. Landscape architecture students take top awards in EPA competition and prove
that
students have a lot to teach professionals. p. 82.
e. Contested terrain: this month's LA forum visits two ailing Seattle parks
to ponder the
question: to what extent should these icons be preserved. p. 114.
RESTORING ECOLOGY 13 (1) march 2005
a. Effects of multispecies clumping on survival of three succulent
plant species translocated
onto mine spoil in the succulent Karoo Desert, South Africa. p. 15.
b. Natural colonization of plants on five lead/zinc mine tailings in southern
China. p. 49.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 33 (1) 2005
a. Development of education and training in seed science and technology.
p. 1.
UNDER CONTROL (Pest Plant and Animal Management News) 29 March 2005
a. Implementation of the VPMF weed management strategy. p. 10.
b. What makes a good herbarium voucher specimen? p. 18.
WEED WATCH 2 (8) March 2005
YOUR GARDEN Winter 2005
a. Sunny in summer, shady in winter: plants that show-off in shadow
as well as survive the
scorching sun. p. 40.
b. Winning ways with annuals: daring displays that dazzle. p. 50.
c. Peerless pieris: this exquisite flower is a connoisseur's delight.
p. 68.
d. A fairy garden: the perfect magical hideaway, for little and big
people alike. p. 76.
e. Your passionate garden: living with plant stress - embracing natives alongside
exotics.p. 104.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 25.4.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (7)April 1 2005
a. Kids vs. boomers: a better understanding of younger customers
is essential before
nursery professionals can marker to the needs of new generations.
p. 30.
b. Trees with benefits: an expert examines the energy, watershed
and air quality benefits
of trees, while recognizing that other economic, social, aesthetic and environmental
attributes are of equal or greater importance. p. 34.
c. Are your customers loyal to your store?: a good loyalty program doesn't
have to cost a
lot and allows you to compete with larger stores and focus on your best customers.
p43.
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 7 (1) Autumn 2005
a. Planning for a safe outdoor play. p. 4.
b. Working with the community to achieve better park management. p.
15.
c. Urban parks in the urban tourism experience: a neglected area of
inquiry. p. 35.
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 9 (6) April/May 2005
a. Soils, water and tree establishment (by Dr Peter May, Head of Campus,
University of
Melbourne - Burnley Campus). p. 4.
b. CODIT: the Branch Collar and the responsibility of the professional tree
contractor - a
summary of Cassian's study of the work of Dr Shigo - proof read by Dr Shigo.
p. 16.
c. Assets: how to protect your assets from the litigation explosion that's
gripping Australia. p. 32.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (4) April 2005
a. Non-slip paves the way: pavers have come a long way. There are pavers
that minimise
the risk of slips, pavers that take pressure off the stormwater system, pavers
that make
decorative work a breeze, and more. p. 25.
b. Latest trends in garden lights. p. 32.
c, Plant hormones: more research needed. p. 35.
d. Sharing bare-rooted secrets: bare-rooted production is a method well suited
to
deciduous plants and is used by many major growers, particularly for fruit
trees. p. 42.
AUSTRALIAN SYSTEMATIC BOTANY 18 (1) 2005
a. Generic concepts and modern taxonomy.
THE RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER March 2005
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (4) April 2005
THE GARDEN (JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY) 130 (4) April
2005a.
a. Tulips to the manor born: Spring explodes into colour at Chenies
Manor in
Buckinghamshire when the marvelous tulip display begins. p. 250
b. Uncovering a rocky past: Aysgarth rock garden. The story of the restoration
of this
important Edwardian rock garden in Wensleydale, North Yorkshire. p. 260.
c. At the root of it all: understanding vegetative propagation. p. 266.
d. Ever-changing moods - Penelope Hobhouse's evolving garden. p. 282.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA May 2005
a. Alluring alliums: think you know your onions? Look at this stunners.
P. 22.
b. Majestic maples - Japanese maples: fiery foliage that's out of this
world. p. 30.
c. Devils in disguise: don't be fooled by those lookers that are weeds.
p. 64.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 102 May 2005
a. The great divide: Carol Klein explains how to divide herbaceous
perennials, helping you
fill out your borders and rejuvenate some of your old favourites. p. 32.
b. Dicentra: these delicate, easy-flowering perennials, which are also known
as Dutchman's
breeches, lady's locket and bleeding heart. p. 52.
c. The director's cut: after a decade in the film industry, Eduardo Mencos
headed for the
hills of Guadalajara, Spain, to carve out a garden. p. 60.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (3) March 2005
a. Alternative treatments for turf diseases: over-reliance on one fungicide
group leads to
resistance. p. 10.
b. Chemical update: turfgrass fungicides. p. 26.
c. On the edge: perimeter pest control as an add-on service. p. C12.
d. Nematodes nabbed: how one superintendent kept digging to find the real culprit
behind
a mysterious turf disease. p. 40.
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 33 ()2 April 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 24 March 2005
a. Analysis. Stick and carrot for colleges - specialist colleges face
cuts, but vocational
training plans for teenagers are promising. p. 14.
b. Bulbous Iris: the three-branched petals of Iris brighten spring and provide
colour into
the summer. p. 18.
c. On the move - advances in the practice of relocating trees are making it
an attractive
business. p. 27.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 31 March 2005
a. Narcissus: there is a huge range of daffodils to choose from and
they are virtually
problem-free. p. 18.
b. Water powered park: aquatic features have been the impetus behind Woking
Park's
renewal. p. 21.
c. Mulching materials: mulch fabrics vary in specification and price, but cheapest
is not
always most economical. p. 28.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 7 April 2005
a. Cyclamen: these popular self-seeders offer delicate winter beauty
and variable leaf and
flower colours. p. 18.
b. Pest and diseases - Botrytis. p. 28.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Autumn
2005
PARK WATCH 220 March 2005
PARKS & RECREATION 20 (2) February 2005
a. Including people who are deaf in recreation: despite advances in
opportunity, people
who are deaf still need more. p. 26.
b. Paving over parkland: cash-strapped communities are trading green space
for
greenbacks. p. 40.
PUBLIC GARDENS 19 (4) 2004
a. How has public garden design changed over the last 15 years - four
garden designers
and four garden directors reflect on recent changes in public garden design.
p. 12.
b. Organizational ecosystems and nature based design. p. 25.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY 16 (2) February 2005
a. Soil amendments can aid healthy tree growth. p. 38.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 11.4.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 200 (6) September 15 2004
a. The great cover-up: great groundcovers can be familiar or exotic,
and tempting selection
from next door or another hemisphere offer beautiful solutions to
landscape puzzles. p.28.
b. Ornamental value: from a mystical playground to an austere setting, garden
ornaments
help transform modern landscapes into a little slice of heaven. p. 32.
c. In perfect harmony: a landscape professional offers tips on how to make
sweet music
between home and landscape though design integration. p. 51.
d. Project EverGreen: in the face of ever-increasing restrictions, industry
stakeholders have
created a national alliance to promote the environmental responsibility and
economic
value of their products and services. p. 57.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (6) March 15 2005
a. Cold-hardy camellias: successful hybridization and selection prove
the camellia isn't just
for warm climates anymore. p. 16.
b. Will the patient live?: improper transplant practices can expose woody plants
to stress,
disease and early death. p. 20.
c. What a nuisance: when wildlife start attacking valuable landscape plants
and nursery
stock, they stop being fun creatures of nature and swiftly become pests. p.
31.
d. It's a Zoo in there!: stunning flora, valuable lessons in conservation and
cutting edge
landscapes prove when it comes to designing today's zoos, horticulturists don't
monkey
around. p. 51.
AQIS BULLETIN 2 March 2005
ARBOR AGE 23 (5) 2003
a. First line of defense: minimizing the impact of non-native invasive
insects. p. 10.
b. Organic waste management: municipal uses for tub and horizontal
grinders. p. 30.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
495 April 2005
a. Vine health & improvement. Hot
water treatment: cooling the confusion. p. 34.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 53 (1) 2005
a. Ecosystem services: an ecophysiological examination. p.1.
b. Herbivore damage, resource richness and putative defences in juvenile
versus adult
Eucalyptus leaves. p. 33.
c. Effects of leaf age and psyllid damage on the spectral reflectance properties
of
Eucalyptus saligna foliage. p. 45.
d. A novel in vitro rooting method employing a aerobic medium. p. 81.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 22 (180) September 2004
a. A is for Acacia, symbol of Australia.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 22 (181) December 2004
a. Allergy to grevilleas. p. 355.
AUSTRALIAN TURFGRASS MANAGEMENT 7 (2) April - May 2005
a. Melbourne Grammar's hi-tech turf - Edwin Flack Park. p. 14.
b. Nickson breeds a new future: well-respected turfgrass breeder David
Nickson is in the
final stages of having two new vegetative couchgrass cultivars evaluated for
Plant
Breeders Rights. Fellow agronomist John Neylan outlines this Australian turfgrass
breeding first. p. 32.
c. The story of progress: North Carolina State University turfgrass entomologist
Rick
Brandenburg passes on some of his observations and experiences from the United
States about dealing with negative press surrounding major turfgrass management
issues such as pesticide usage. p. 38.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 10 March 2005
a. Ligularia: although it's particular about conditions, this genus
can make a striking point
of interest. p. 18.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 17 March 2005
a. Pulsatilla: wild-growing and steeped in folklore, pasque flower's
seedheads are as lovely
as its blooms. p. 20.
b. Growing media comes to life: the next generation of growing media is likely
to contain
beneficial micro-organisms. p. 29.
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. 431 April 2005
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (3) March 2005
a. Fundamentals of flowering: research from the University of Minnesota
sheds light on the
effects of day length on bedding plant flowering. p. 108.
GREEN PLACES 13 March 2005
a. The social life of spaces - Pauline Gallacher reflect on the need
for urban design in
neighbourhood spaces, not just in the city centres. p. 38,
b. Space in action. Millennium Park, Chicago, USA: Diane Millis looks at Chicago's
multi-
million dollar city centre park, while visitors from Project for Public Spaces
add their
impressions. p. 32.
GREEN PLACES NEWS 13 December 2004
GREEN PLACES NEWS 16 March 2005
GROUNDSWELL 16 (4) April 2005
a. Eye damage and the nursery industry. p. 13.
b. Accredited nursery profile: Adalia Park nursery. p. 17.
c. Creating a loyalty scheme. p. 19.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 68 (11) March 2005
a. Is peat helping you? - understand your peat media and you'll reduce
the potential of
root disease. p. 32.
b. Why put PGRs on perennials?; proper PGR use can give you more than compact
plant,
but make sure you weigh all the factors. p. 38.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN 48.4 (191) March 2005
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Autumn
2005
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HORTICULTURE 23 (1) March 2005
a. Influence of selected surface disinfestants, fungicides, and temperature
on seed
germination and initial growth of Southern Seaoats (Uniola paniculata). p.
4.
b. Evaluation of 19 American elm clones for tolerance to Dutch elm disease.
p. 21.
c. Evaluation of clones, container types and tissue culture media for production
of Calla
lilies as a nursery crop. p. 42.
d. A new system to monitor water and nutrient use in pot-in-pot nursery production
systems. p. 47.
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (2) March 2005
a. Effects of salinity and rootstock on growth, water relations, nutrition
and gas exchange
of loquat. p. 199.
b. Temperature affects Chrysanthemum flower characteristics differently during
three
phases of the cultivation period. p. 209.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (4) April 2005
a. Landscape architecture: a terminal case? Late last year, two faculty
members at Iowa
State University circulated a manifesto to other department of landscape architecture,
charging that the field has outlived its historic purpose. LAM asked a few
practitioners
and academics to respond. p. 26.
b. An interior garden: a hospital tower' atrium garden brings Michigan's outdoors
inside. p.46.
c. Planting under trees: protecting tree roots from damage is important when
creating beds
under trees. p. 56.
d. The research connection: more studies that shed light on what works in plazas,
open
spaces, and other landscapes. p. 102.
e. True symmetry of False Creek: renaissance classicism finds a place in twenty-first
century Vancouver, British Columbia. p. 124.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (4) April 2005
a. First report of an Altenaria leaf spot caused by Altenaria brassicae
on Crambe abyssinicia
in Australia. p. 430.
THE PLANTSMAN NEW SERIES 4(1) March 2005
a. Top snowdrops. p. 10.
b. Large-flowered magnolias from New Zealand. p. 16.
c. Paeonia Itoh hybrids: Martin Page explains the history and garden
performance of
intersectional hybrid peonies. p. 36.
d. Preventing invasive pathogens: deficiencies in the system. p. 54.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 26 (1) February/March 2005
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA POCKET SPECIFICATIONS GUIDE 2005
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 101 March/April 2005
a. Legend chosen for uni's village green. p. 10.
b. Irrigation benchmarking and nutrient monitoring. p. 28.
VICTORIAN NATURALIST 122 (1) February 2005
a. Feasibility study for the use of small format large-scale aerial
photography for vegetation
conditions assessment in north-west Victoria. p. 35.
b. Fire and hollow formation in Box-Ironbark eucalypts of the Warby Range State
Park. p.47.
c. Relationship between perennial species richness and distance from water
in Belah
Casuarina pauper woodland. p. 57.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 28.3.05
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 30 (1) February 2005
a. Frequent mowing is better than grazing for the conservation value
of lowland tussock grassland at Pontville, Tasmania. p. 74.
b. Germinable soil seed banks in a tropical savanna: seasonal dynamics
and effects of fire. p. 79.
c. Do Eucalyptus plantations host an insect community similar to remnant
Eucalyptus forest?.103.
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 49 March/April 2005
a. Big bang theory: Don Williams explain how facilities should deal
with bomb threats. p. 22.
FIELD NATS NEWS 141 April 2005
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (5) March 2005
a. Life everlasting: by choosing plants carefully, exciting floral
displays in containers can brighten gardens
during summer, and beyond. p. 170.
b. Hard ferns, easy choices: choosing from less hardy ferns. p. 178.
c. Off to a good start: understanding propagation. p. 182.
d. Growing an ever more elaborate garden: a colourful garden with a conifer
backbone. p. 206.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA April 2005
a. Kids paradise: a visit to a plant paradise that's fun for all the
family. p. 22.
b. Tulip mania: why we're obsessed with these bulbs. p. 36.
c. Gardening's united nations: explore multicultural community gardens.
p. 51.
d. Heal thyself: herbs for health. p. 61.
GREEN PLACES NEWS 15 February 2005
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (2) February 2005
a. On the level: thresholds for insects tell you when it's time for
a treatment program. p. 10.
b. Chemical update: turfgrass insecticides. p. 24.
c. Earthworms: beneficials or pests? p. G1.
d. Value vs. volume: customizing a business plant to maximize your
profit potential. p. C2.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN 48.2 (189) September 2004
a. (Nutters)...in search of imaginary Hakeas. p. 34.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 24 February 2005
a. Meconopsis: blue is not only colour for this beautiful cousin of
the true poppy. p. 20.
b. Taking a practical approach: Spence Gunn looks at the rise in availability
of commercial horticulture
courses and the options open to those who want to study while working. p. 23.
c. It's got to be perfect: to get ahead, container tree producers need to exceed
the basic quality standards. p.25.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 3 March 2005
a. Leucojum: This versatile genus is often underestimated, but it will
thrive in a range of conditions from damp
shade to full sun. p. 14.
b. Tactics to trust to tackle rust: rust disfigure crops and can be fatal,
but wise chemical use and good
husbandry can keep them at bay. p. 16.
c. The final cut for hedge horrors: when they are finally enacted, new rules
on nuisance hedges should be
good news for quality contractors. p. 18.
d. An open house: a wholesale venture can alter to include retail with the
right adjustments and attitude p.27.
HORTSCIENCE 40 (1) February 2005
a. Daily light integral affects flowering and quality of greenhouse-grown
Achillea, Gaura and Lavandula. p.114.
b. Resistance of greenhouse , laboratory, and native populations of western
flower thrips to spinosad. p. 146.
c. Grape phylloxera gallicole and radicicole activity on grape rootstock vines.
p. 150.
d. Assessment of narrow-band canopy spectral reflectance and turfgrass performance
under drought stress. p.242.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 130 (1) January
2005
a. Genetic variation in date palms propagated from offshoots and tissue
culture. p. 46.
b. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, organic and inorganic controlled-release
fertilizers: effect on growth and
leachate of container-grown bush morning glory (Ipomoea carnea ssp. fistulosa)
under high production temperatures. p. 131.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE95 (3) March 2005
a. No ordinary garden: Alzheimer's and other patients find refuge in
a Michigan dementia-care facility. p. 26.
b. Updating Olmsted: preserving Detroit's Belle Isle Park for learning,
life, and nature. p. 66.
c. The landscape in 3-D: 3-D graphics are becoming "real".
p. 76.
d. Bogota dresses in green: The transformation of a Latin American
metropolis. p. 105.
e. Landscapes below the surface: interpreting the past at Pio Pico
State Historic Park. p. 113.
f. Go out and play: on Robin Moore's playgrounds, nature is the attraction.
p. 128.
LANDSCAPE AUSTRALIA 105 26 (1) February 2005
a. From China with love: like the Montagues and the Capulets, the east
and west have had a great many
affairs that have stirred suspicions of one another, but for those of us fortunate
enough to cross the cultural
divide, there is much about which to be curious, excited and anxious. p. 24.
b. Future gardens: re-enchantment of the garden as a place of hope. p. 36.
c. Soft centre: computer aided design (CAD) software has transported the realm
of the landscape architect
from pen and paper drawings to high-tech, multi-dimensional imagery. p. 44.
OUTDOOR DESIGN SOURCE (Information Management for Specifiers of External
Works) 7 2005
PARKS & RECREATION 40 (1) January 2005
a. Youth at risk: recreation and prevention. p. 16.
b. ADA spins guidelines for wheelchair seating. p. 22.
c. Fighting for Fido: is there enough room for both dogs and children to enjoy
the same park. p. 33.
PARK WATCH 219 December 2004
a. Chiltern-Mount Pilot National Park - recovering from the 2003 fires.
p. 8.
PLANT PROTECTION QUARTERLY 20 (1) 2005
a. People-as the forgotten ecological elements of lowland grassland
ecology - new perspectives on values and management. p. 9.
b. Management strategies for preventing weed invasion in urban grasslands.
p. 12.
c. The economic impact of weeds in Australia. p. 25.
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 32 (2) 2004
a. Seed size variability and its influence on germination and seedling
growth of five multipurpose tree
species. p. 319.
b. A statistical method for testing the composition of seed mixtures. p. 485.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal
Display 14.3.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (5) March 1 2005
a. Nutrition count: understanding your plants' nutritional needs and
their current status can help you plan the
proper fertilization program. p. 18.
b. Whacking weevils: understanding the ways of weevils can help plant professionals
outwit these
objectionable competitors in nurseries and landscapes. p. 24.
c. Evaluating Cornus kousa cold hardiness: in an effort to extend the range
of this beautiful tree in the US,
researchers are examining specimens from the species' natural range to see
how much cold they can
tolerate. p. 32.
d. Marvelous midlevel maples: colorful Acer offers texture, structure and beauty
to the middle layers of any
landscape. p. 40.
ARBOR AGE 25 (1) January 2005
a. Sudden oak death. p. 10.
ARBOR AGE 25 (2) February 2005
a. Dealing with electrical hazards: safe practices for working in proximity
to power lines. p. 12.
b. Keeping your rights-of-way in check. p. 18.
c. Understanding fungi that infect trees. p. 30.
ARBORICULTURAL JOURNAL 28 (1&2)
December 2004
a. Detection of decay in trees with stress waves and interpretation
of acoustic tomograms. p. 3.
b. Reviewing tree preservation orders: implications for local planning
authorities. p. 21.
c. Soil injections of carbohydrates improve fine root growth of established
urban trees. p. 95.
d. Costs of urban woodland management. p. 103.
e. Dating damage to trees. p. 113.
ARBORIST NEWS 14 (1) February 2005.
a. Palms not just for the tropics. p. 13.
b. Determining change of lean: tips for measuring the change of lean
in trees - and why it is important to
know. p. 22.
c. Forest health - an emerging issue: environmental conditions in the U.S.
west lead to an outbreak in bark
beetles. p. 24.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
494 March 2005
a. Winegrapes use lower rates of irrigation and fertiliser. p. 19.
b. Botryosphaeria canker, an emerging issue in eastern Australian vineyards.
p. 22.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 16 (3) November/December 2004/January 2005
a. Japanese gardens for Ipswich. p. 9.
b. Genesis of a historic garden. Part 2 - After Edna Walling at Folly
Farm. p. 11.
AUSTRALIAN GARDEN HISTORY 16 (4) February/March/April 2005
a. Gardening under threat. p. 3.
b. Correspondence on Colonial plants. p. 18.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (3) March 2005
a. Indoor plants: beauty and better air quality. p. 25.
b. Indoor flowering beauties still an important sector. p. 30.
c. Flood-floor irrigation in profile. p. 36.
d. One-stop wetland shop. p. 42.
e. Category with enormous sales POTential: successful pot retailing
takes more than just... well, pot luck.
Keep up with the latest trends and fire the customer's imagination with inspirational
displays. p. 51.
BOTANIC NEWS (Friends of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne Inc.)Autumn
2005
CAMELLIAS VICTORIA INC. NEWSLETTER 430 March 2005
ECOS 123 January - March 2005
a. Plants for people: a new project is helping Aboriginal people develop
innovative small businesses around
traditional knowledge of native plants and their uses. p. 22.
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (3) March 2005
FLOREO (Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne) Autumn 2005
GARDEN HISTORY 31 (2) Winter 2003
a. The Englishness of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown. p. 122.
b. Spanning the political divide: neo-palladianism and the early eighteenth
century landscape. p. 180.
GARDENS ILLUSTRATED 101 April 2005
a. Sowing kit: basics of sowing from seed. p. 32.
b. Horticultural who's who - landscape architect: Martha Schwartz.
p. 48.
c. Currant affairs: the Ribes genus may seem ubiquitous to the British
gardener but this family of flowering
currants has a surprisingly exotic character. p. 50.
d. Silent white The Jardin de Loire is situated in a peaceful part of rural
France and the stunning formal
garden, abundant with pale and creamy blooms is a breathtaking vision in white.
p. 68.
GENUS (Ornamental Plant Conservation Association of Australia Inc.)
17 (1) February 2005
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 13 (1) February/March
2005
a. Turf biology: organic matter sustains soil fertility. p. 21.
b. Biostimulants - their place in turf management. p. 23.
c. Municipal grounds: safety first.(by David Aldous, School of Resource
Management, the University of
Melbourne, Burnley Campus and Ian Chivers, Racing Solutions, Sandringham, Victoria).
p. 30
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (1) January 2005
a. Industry outlook. Still alive in 2005: here are five issues we can
expect to see come to fruition or become
more important in the coming year. p. 22.
b. New varieties, new tricks: according to this geranium research case study,
bedding plant growers' methods
may be due for a change. p. 66.
c. Focus on: vegetative annuals - Torenia. p.92.
d. Adding structures to production. p. 132.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 23 (2) February 2005
a. Play poker or do business: Gambling games like poker or blackjack
are a lot like our industry. Here are 10
points (after observing poker players) that can be applied to the nursery industry.
p. 18.
b. Don't lose to leafminer: research reveals how to combat insecticide resistance
and manage leafminers in
ornamental crop. p. 30.
c. Focus on: vegetative annuals - Sutera. p. 56.
d. You're the expert: are you tuned in to your crops' nutritional needs? See
how you score with this case
study quiz from three renowned plant researchers. p. 66.
GREEN PLACES 12 February 2005
a. International perspective. Australia: lacking public realm vision.
p. 7.
b. A place in the park: the scope for creating both useful and exciting
park buildings is immense and there
are positive signs that the years of neglect are over. p. 18.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (3) March 2005
a. Living sustainably: how to live with integrity in the 21st century.
p. 6.
b. Smart approved watermark. p. 13.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 68 (10) February 2005
a. Great containers: from production and marketing tips to the hottest
new container styles, growers and
retailers share their best-kept combo secrets. p. 34.
b. All that glitters - what's new in poinsettias. p. 44.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 17 February 2005
a. Crocus: with a little planning, it is possible to have crocuses
in bloom almost all year round. p. 18.
b. Glasshouse: Take heat off energy costs. p. 20.
JOURNAL OF ARBORICULTURE 31 (2) March 2005
a. Quantified tree risk assessment used in the management of amenity
trees. p. 57.
b. Use of sugars to improve root growth and increase transplant success
of birch (Betula pendula Roth.) p.66.
c. Irrigation effects on the growth of newly planted oaks (Quercus spp.). p.
83.
d. The reliability of a windshield survey to locate hazards in roadside trees.
p. 89.
e. Preliminary evaluation of a living willow (Salix spp.) sound barrier along
a highway in Quebec, Canada. p.95.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (3) March 2005
a. Toxicity of fungicides to urediniospores of six rust fungi that
occur on ornamental crop. p. 255.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY 15 (4) April 2004
a. Growing your business by selling fertilization services. p. 22.
b. Flowering trees in a landscape. p. 28.
c. Can preventive maintenance improve safety for aerial lift operators.
p. 34.
d. Sales and marketing strategies that work. p. 42.
e. North American emerald ash borer infestation: ashes, ashes, all
fall down. p. 50.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY 16 (1) January 2005
a. Sudden oak death is on the move. p. 10.
b. Getting a leg up on chain saw safety. p. 32.
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 94 January-February 2004
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 28.2.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (3) February 1 2005
a. Stuck in the middle: unique and unusual, small-stature trees and shrubs
fill in the often overlooked middle
layer of a landscape design between garden beds and canopy trees. p. 18.
b. The retail greenhouse pest challenge. p. 26.
c. Made for shade: with the many shading cloths, structures and systems on
the market today, it's never felt
this good to beat the heat. p. 37.
d. How much H2O?: an ongoing study is looking at exactly what young trees need
in terms of water during
production. p. 45.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (4) February 15 2005
a. Big money in little trees: a nursery professional shares his experience
of how an education in -and love for-
dwarf conifers has become profitable personally and professionally. p. 16.
b. Beating the hibiscus sawfly. p. 22.
c. The plant/water relationship. p. 28.
AQIS BULLETIN 7-8 2004
AQIS BULLETIN 1 2005
ARBOR AGE 24 (12) December 2004
a. The tree of life - restoration of sacred mythology. p. 26.
AUSTRALASIAN PLANT CONSERVATION 13 (3) December 2004
a. Restoring plant diversity in upland swamps of the Mount Lofty ranges. p.
6.
AUSTRALIAN AND & ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
493 February 2005
a. A rapid method of screening grapevine cultivars for susceptibility to eutypa
dieback. p. 14
b. Nutritional treatment of a Margaret River vineyard following acute herbicide
damage. p. 19.
c. Temple Bruer: living life to an organic philosophy. p. 34.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (2) February 2005
a. Rehabilitation work in N T. p. 22.
b. New resort creates garden paradise: the aim of a new development in tropical
Far North Queensland was
to create a feeling that the buildings were in perfect harmony with the garden.
p. 27.
c. Turning to pots: one of the wonderful things about landscape design is using
plants and accessories to
indulge our imaginations and express ourselves. p. 31.
d. The latest technology: biodegradable pots. p. 61.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 52 (6) 2004
a. No snow in the mountain: early Eocene plant fossils from Hotham Heights,
Victoria, Australia. p. 685.
b. Vegetation patterns of permanent spring wetlands of arid Australia. p. 719.
c. Genetic variation in Eucalyptus globulus in relation to susceptibility from
attack by the southern leaf
beetles,Chrysophtharta agricola. p.747.
d. Vascular cambium necrosis in forest fires: using hyperbolic temperature
regimes to estimate parameters
of a tissue-response model. p. 757.
e. Advance in pollination techniques for large-scale seed production in Eucalyptus
globulus. p. 781.
FIELD NATS NEWS 140 March 2005
FLORA CULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (2) February 2005
a. Breeders rights.
GARDEN (Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society) 130 (2) February 2005
a. In from the cold: unbeknown to the West, many unusual crops were developed
by resolute Soviet scientists
during the 20th century. p. 102.
b. Any colour you like...: an unusual trial, held at RHS Garden Wisley in 2003,
looked at a range of plants in
the hyacinth family that share the common features of being bulbous, relatively
small and produced blue
flowers. p. 106.
c. Bowled over by bales: growing plants on straw bales is not only environmentally
friendly, but can produce
bumper crops and dazzling displays. p. 110.
d.. Gothic revival: Andrew Lawson's evolving garden. p. 126.
e. In conversation - Graham Rice and Simon Crawford: a passionate plantsman
and a professional plant
breeder discuss developments in breeding over recent years. p. 132.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA March 2005
a. Magnificent mangoes: even gardeners outside the tropics can grow them. p.
29.
b. The bulb and the beautiful: bulbs made easy (14-page guide). p. 43.
c. Dog-friendly garden. p. 63.
GARDEN ILLUSTRATED 98 December 204-January 2005
a. In the bleak midwinter - Dan Pearso's garden. p. 34.
b. Enchanted forest: Yves Gosse de Gorre's fantastical garden in the tiny French
village of Sericourt. p. 38.
c. Winter berries: winter berries can rescue the garden from the winter doldrums.
p. 48.
d. Water tight: for more than 30 years, Ruth Bancroft has been lovingly carving
a drought-tolerant garden out
of an old orchard in the San Francisco suburbs. p. 70.
GARDEN ILLUSTRATED 99 February 2005
a. Light fantastic: a Menorcan garden by Spanish landscape designer and philosopher,
Fernando Caruncho
bedazzles with its clever use of light. p. 36.
b. Hepatica: a member of the buttercup family, this vibrant perennial, though
popular in many continents, is
particularly revered by collectors in Japan. p. 46.
c. Cliffhanger: Ambra Edwards start off our new series with a visit to Newark
Park - a magnificent house and
grounds in the Cotswolds with an intriguing story to tell. p. 54.
d. New romantics: a contemporary London home does not preclude a 'proper' garden.
p. 62.
e. Family trees: Van den Berk Nurseries in the Netherlands specialises in mature
and semi-mature trees, and
is the supplier of choice for several award-winning designers at Chelsea. p.
76.
GARDEN ILLUSTRATED 100 March 2005
a. Muscari: the genus Muscari, with tubular and bell-shaped flowers adds a
touch of blue to the plant world. p.36.
b. Unfolding passions: ferns have always played a role at Attadale Gardens
in Scotland, but a recent gift has
truly transformed the collection. p. 48.
c. Early gardening books: Charles Quest-Ritson takes a look at garden literature
of the 16th century and the
advent of the English lady gardener. p. 56.
d. Karma Camellia: camellias are traditionally associated with the Far East,
but a corner of Tuscany has
made these kaleidoscopic blooms its own. p. 64.
e. Eucalyptus pauciflora: this month Roy Lancaster focuses on the snow gum,
which with its beautiful bark
and evergreen foliage, is among the most beautiful and robust of the whole
eucalyptus family. p. 76.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 22 (6) June 2004
a. International trade: can it be safer? p. 60.
b. Lighting up profits: light management for stock plants. p. 96.
GREEN PLACES NEWS 14 January 2005
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 40 (1) January 2005
a. Fighting the resistance: a plan of action for weeds that stand up against
herbicides. p. 8.
b. Pesticide practices: proper treatments ensure safety and maximize effectiveness.
p. 18.
c. Chemical update: turfgrass herbicides. p. 39.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (2) February 2005
a. Think for your customer - dealing with customers has never been easier.
p. 6.
b. Occupational health & safety - are you
ready? p. 18.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 68 (9) January 2005
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 33 (1) February 2005
HORTICULTURE WEEK 13 January 2005
a. Buddleja: unfairly given a bed press, Buddleja is fantastic for attracting
wildlife. p. 14.
b. Space to blossom: well-designed school grounds give children a sense of
ownership and can greatly
improve social behaviour. p. 17.
c. Tree guards and shelters. p. 23.
HORTTECHNOLOGY 15 (1) January-March 2005
a. Improving irrigation water use in container nurseries. p. 8.
b. More plant per gallon: getting more out of your water. p. 14.
c. Uses of compost in potting mixes. p. 58.
d. Influence of tree size on transplant establishment and growth. p. 118.
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Summer 2004
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE & BIOTECHNOLOGY
80 (1) January 2005
a. Effects of photosynthetic photon flux density and inorganic nutrient salts
on post-harvest flower bud
opening of tight bud-cut carnations. p. 43.
b. Heterogeneity in fruit distribution and stem water potential variations
in peach trees under different
irrigation conditions. p. 82.
c. In vitro organogenesis from seedling explants of the ornamentals Eucalyptus
erythronema, E. stricklandii
and the interspecific hybrid E. erythronema x E. stricklandii cv. 'Urrbrae
Gem'. p. 97.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (2) February 2005
a. Big dots, little dumpsters: landscape architect Ken Smith's pro bono ideas
remake a schoolyard in Queens.p. 22.
b. Where the river came last: in San Jose, landscape architects were hired
to do downtown flood control. The
rest is history. p. 46.
c. Complex simplicity: designing a serene space in an unlikely location. p.
66.
d. Restoring a Latin landmark: the restoration of a garden in Venezuela's largest
urban park is a model for
other Latin American cities. p. 106.
e. Burle Marx's complex modernism: musing from a recent visit to Brazil. p.
152..
MEDITERRANEAN GARDEN 39 January 2005
a. Stone, water, plants: a fine Greek garden. p. 3.
b. Soil - the most neglected resource of Mediterranean gardens - and mulch.
p. 25.
c. Plant tolerance of dry heat: "If
you can't stand the heat get out of the garden". Part 1, p. 32.
NEW ZEALAND TURF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL February 2005
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 66 (1) January/February/March 2005
a. Gardening with California's monocots: stink-pod. p.26.
b. Great plant picks: a special something for every garden. p. 45.
PARKS & RECREATION 39 (11) November 2004
a. Programming for mixed-ability recreation. p. 70.
b. Looking into the eye of the storm: the town of Port Charlotte, Florida,
rallies around parks, and learns some
tough lessons after Hurricane Charley strikes. p. 81.
c. Pirates, primates and pyramids: to compete with area attractions, regional
waterparks look into theming to
set them apart. p. 85.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (2) February 2005
a. Identification, mefenoxam sensitivity, and compatibility type of phytophthora
spp. attacking floriculture
crops in North Carolina. p. 185.
PUBLIC GARDEN 19 (3) 2004
a. Ex situ conservation.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY MAGAZINE 15(12) December 2004
a. Hurricane cleanup drives business in Florida. p. 8.
b. Best and worst business decisions: your colleagues' successes and failures
- and what you can learn from
them. p. 48.
c. Preservation plan saves the real treasures of Oakleigh, Tennessee. p. 56.
TURFCRAFT INTERNATIONAL 100 January-February 2005
a. Managing saline water impact on soil and turf. p. 32.
VICTORIAN NATURALIST 121 (6) December 2004
YOUR GARDEN Autumn 2005
a. Banksia prionotes: growing this Ausie beauty as a cut flower or in a pot.
p. 54.
b. Bogged down: rivers of colour that will brighten up even the soggiest of
gardens. p. 62.
c. An abiding passion: be inspired by this generous rose walk and themed herb
garden. p. 92.
d. Seed saviours: produce higher and tastier yields with locally adapted seeds.
e. Beautiful banksia: showy plants to suit everyone. p. 134.
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 31.1.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (2) January 15 2005
a. Tropical treasures: the latest landscape trend focuses on tropical
plants that make bold, architectural
statements in today's gardens. p. 22.
b. Tree placement: does it really matter? - a researcher shares an alternative
way to arrange trees within a
nursery so professionals can grow high-quality crops more efficiently. p. 28.
c. What's at stake? - the risks can be many when dealing with tree-stabilization
methods and products - but
they don't have to be. p. 40.
ARBOR AGE 24 (11) November 2004
a. Twenty-four years latter: a case study regarding a severely damaged
water oak. p. 24.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY 29 (6) December 2004
a. Net woody vegetation increase confined to seasonally inundated lowlands
in an Australian tropical
savanna, Victoria River district, Northern Territory. p. 667.
AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND GRAPEGROWER & WINEMAKER
492 January 2005
a. Harvest and winemaking management during heat waves. p. 29.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 103 (1) January 2005
a. Sensory garden creates experience and opportunity. p. 23.
b. Greenhouses structures & technology
(14-page special)
FIELD NATS NEWS 139 February 2005
GARDEN 130 (1) January 2005
a. Australian plants special edition.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA February 2005
a. Passionfruit power - all about this vine. p. 26.
b. Cool world - an eco-friendly garden. p. 34.
c. New bamboo - it's time to rethink these useful plants. p. 59.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 6 January 2005
a. Acer: with strong seasonal colour and arresting bark, acers make
a bold arboreal statement. p. 16.
b. Artificial turf: for increased use and better surfaces, synthetic
turf can solve the problems of seasonal
sports. p. 29.
IFPRA WORLD December 2005
IRRIGATION & WATER RESOURCES Summer
2004
a. Horticulture - citrus: Taking the salt out of Riverland citrus production.
p. 6.
b. Water efficiency given a sporting chance. p. 14.
c. Horticulture - vegetables: Sweet rewards for water efficient farming
enterprise. p. 28.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE 129 (6) November
2004
a. Rootstock and plant water relations affect sugar accumulation of
citrus via osmotic adjustment. p. 881.
b. Bending alters water balance and reduces photosynthesis of rose
shoots. p. 896.
RESTORATION ECOLOGY 12 (4) December 2004
a. Seed bank viability in disturbed longleaf pine sites. p. 503.
b. Influence of mycorrhizal inoculation, inundation period, salinity,
and phosphorus availability on the growth
of two salt marsh grasses, Spartina alterniflora Lois. and Spartina cynosuroides
(L.) Roth., in nursery
systems. p. 533.
c. Spacing and competition between planted grass plugs and preexisting perennial
grasses in a restoration
site in Oregon. p. 546.
d. Restoration efforts for plant and bird communities in tallgrass prairies
using prescribed burning and
mowing. p. 575.
e. Endangered cactus restoration: mitigating the non-target effects of a biological
control agent (Cactoblastis
cactorum) in Florida. p. 605
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER January 2005
[Back to Display Index]
Journal Display 10.1.05
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 200 (12) December 15 2004
a. New plants for 2005.
AMERICAN NURSERYMAN 201 (1) January 1 2005
a. Growing azaleas from seed. p. 20
b. Switch - hitters: panicum virgatum has made the move from roadside nobody to ornamental star for
modern landscapes. p. 24.
c. 2004 editorial index. p. 33.
ARNOLDIA 63 (2) 2004
a. Horticulture and the development of American identity. p. 9.
b. Lingonberry: dainty looks, sturdy disposition and tasty berries. p. 18.
c. Herbarium specimens as a novel tool for climate change research. p. 26.
AQIS BULLETIN 11 December 2004
AUSTRALASIAN LEISURE MANAGEMENT 48 January/February 2005
AUSTRALASIAN PARKS AND LEISURE 7 (4) Summer 2004
a. The future of recreation planning. p. 4.
b. Public events and community engagement. p. 40.
AUSTRALIAN SYSTEMATIC BOTANY 17 (6) 23 December 2004
a. A revision of Cassinia (Asteraceae: Gnaphalieae) in Australia. 2. Sections Complanatae and Venustae. p.505.
b. A revision of Cassinia (Asteraceae: Gnaphalieae) in Australia. 3. Section Leptocephalae.p. 535.
FLORACULTURE INTERNATIONAL 15 (1) January 2005
GOLF & SPORTS TURF AUSTRALIA 12 (6) December 2004/January 2005
GREENHOUSE GROWER 22 (13) November 2004
a. The guru of floriculture: a tribute to Carl Ball who will be remembered as one of the key leaders in both his
family business and the entire horticultural industry. p. 20.
b. Calling the plays: having control over your greenhouse climate is critical to efficiency and success. p. 34.
c. IPM on spider mites. p. 102.
GREENHOUSE GROWER 22 (14) December 2004
a. Heating magic: one New Yorker is working on a system to use compost as a heating mechanism for
greenhouse. p. 43.
b. Focus on: vegetative annuals - Nemesia. p. 58.
c. Building on tradition: Cornell researchers have found that using preplant growth regulator dips with Easter
lily bulbs aids in production and increases profits. p. 80.
d. Triple threat: insect growth regulators offer triple protection in greenhouses. p. 94.
GREEN PLACES 11 Winter 2004/2005
a. The future is CLERE: Alan Barber discusses the findings of his research into the management of green
space and outlines the key components of the CLERE management model he has developed as a result. p.34.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 39 (12) December 2004
a. Bull's-eye: make direct mail part of your marketing plan for the new year and hit your target audience. p.22.
GROUNDSWELL 16 (1) January 2005
a. The future for production nurseries. p. 6.
GROWER TALKS MAGAZINE 68 (8) December 2004
a. How to offset energy costs. p. 52.
b. Economic sense: how a city beautification program can turn a downtown around - and create more
markets for your plants in the process. p. 58.
c. It's in the bag (or is it?): is peat moss the source of your black root rot problems? Probably not, according
to new research . p. 64.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 16 December 2004
a. Prunus: these popular trees are valued for their fruits, spring blossoms and colourful foliage. p. 16.
b. Window shopping: second-hand glass, polythene or new-build? Alys Fowler asks industry leaders which
materials are most suitable for your glasshouse project. p. 21.
c. EPoS: from handling stock to reducing queues, electronic point of sale is a crucial sales tool. p. 28.
HORTSCIENCE 39 (7) December 2004
a. Effects of powdery mildew of grape on carbon assimilation mechanisms of potted 'Chardonnay'
grapevines. p. 1670.
b. Survey of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities in northern California vineyards and mycorrhizal
colonization potential of grapevine nursery stock. p. 1702.
c. Minimum water requirements of four turfgrasses in the transition zone. p. 1740.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 (1) January 2005
a. Art yard: land and art come together at Michigan's Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. p. 40.
b. The research connection: more studies that shed light on what works in gardens, parks, and other
landscapes. p. 82.
c. Proving ground: in restoring Lever House plaza, Ken Smith brought Noguchi back into focus. p. 88.
d. Beyond the path: a modern translation of Japanese garden design creates a spiritual passage through the
seasons. p. 96.
e. When worlds collide: in suburban Minneapolis, can Modernism and ecology find common ground? p. 102.
LANDSCAPE RESEARCH 29 (4) October 2004
a. Reading and assessing the landscape as cultural and historical heritage. p. 335.
b. Mental landscape: landscape as idea and concept. p. 371.
c. New challenges in the field of spatial planning: landscapes. p. 399.
d. Spatial planning for landscape: mapping the pitfalls. p. 423.
PARKS & RECREATION 39 (12) December 2004
a. Time for a play day: safety concerns on the play-ground shouldn't impose on creative design and fun for
kids. p. 60.
b. Designing the urban preserve boundary. p. 64.
PLANT DISEASE 89 (1) January 2005
a. Susceptibility of Oregon forest trees and shrubs to Phytopthora ramorum: a comparison of artificial
inoculation and natural infection. p. 63.
b. Diagnosis and population analysis of Pythium species using AFLP fingerprinting. p. 81.
POWER EQUIPMENT AUSTRALASIA 25 (6) December 2004/January 2005
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Journal Display 4.1.05
AUSTRALIAN ARBOR AGE 9 (4) December 2004/January 2005
a. 2015 Treenet : Avenues of Honour project. p. 4.
2. Tree butchers - the destruction of the urban forest, by power line clearance overkill. p. 40.
3. The science of tree cultivation. p. 46.
AUSTRALIAN HORTICULTURE 102 (12) December 2004
a. Simple steps to preventing pests and diseases. p. 25.
b. Exploring the potential of companion planting. p. 30.
c. Garden a symbol of reconciliation and peace: in this, the 60th year since the infamous "Cowra Breakout",
Melanie Kinsey looks at the garden - Cowra Japanese Garden - that evolved from the events of 1944. p.35.
AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 22 (179) June 2004
a. Woollsia pungens - germination and seedling growth. p. 243.
CUNNINGHAMIA 8 (3) 2004
a. Flora and vegetation of Montagu Island - past and present. p. 285.
b. Drought-related dieback in four subalpine shrub species, Bogong High Plains, Victoria. p. 326.
c. Fire response syndromes of shrubs in grassy woodlands in the New England tableland bioregion. p. 348.
GARDENING AUSTRALIA January 2005
a. The garden sanctuary. Summer pleasures: 100 ideas for summer gardens. p. 22.
b. Tropical punch: cordyline colour. p. 28.
GROUNDS MAINTENANCE 39 (11) November 2004
a. Trend setters: no matter what the trend, form still follows function in landscape design. p. 10.
b. Room to breathe - trees and tees: not always a good combination for airflow. p. G2.
c. Finding your foundation - traditional plantings aren't always required. p. C10.
d. Lighting up the landscape: the proper lighting can enliven and help secure any property. p. 17.
GROWING AUSTRALIAN 48.3 (190) December 2004
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 32 (1) February 2004
HABITAT AUSTRALIA 32 (2) June 2004
HORTICULTURE WEEK 2 December 2004
a. Cymbidium: with starfish-like flowers and glossy foliage, these orchids are perfect conservatory plants. p.14.
HORTICULTURE WEEK 9 December 2004
a. Poinsettia: new varieties are bringing ever more tropical colour to this popular Christmas fixture. p. 16.
HORTTECHNOLY 14 (4) October-December 2004
a. Germinating seeds of wildflowers, an ecological perspective. p. 467.
b. Writing across the curriculum: where does horticultural science fit in? p. 621.
PACIFIC HORTICULTURE 65 (4) October/November/December 2004
a. Rudolph Ulrich's Arizona gardens. p. 3.
b. Sudden oak death. p. 17.
c. Koala Blooms: new Australian plants. p. 24.
d. Ralph Moore: father of the miniature rose. p. 43.
PARKS & RECREATION 39 (10) October 2004
a. Touch terrain: the conflicts associated with multi-use trails. p. 57.
b. Maintenance mishaps: installing a spray playground, spraypad or spraypark could bring you more
maintenance headaches. p. 65.
c. Religious traditions in recreational programming: understanding the religions in your community can help
you plant accordingly. p. 75.
PLANTSMAN (New Series) 3 (4) December 2004
a. Liberty Hyde Bailey surmounting the garden fence. p. 191.
PLASTICULTURE 5 (123) 2004
a. The situation of plasticulture in the world. p. 48.
RHODODENDRON NEWSLETTER November 2004
SEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 32 (3) 2004
a. Seed germination characteristics in the perennial grass species Leymus chinensis. p. 717.
b. Germination of seeds of huisache (Acacia schaffneri) and catclaw (Mimosa monancistra) as affected by
sulphuric acid and mechanical scarification and subsequent growth and survival in a greenhouse and field
experiment. p. 727.
TELOPEA 10 (4) December 2004
a. Dendrobium carssilabium (Orchidaceae Dendrobieae), a new species from Papua New Guinea, Northern
Province. p. 781.
b. Phebalium bifidum (Rutaceae), a new species from the Capertee Valley, New South Wales. p. 787.
TREE CARE INDUSTRY 15 (10) October 2004
a. Evaluating and working with high risk trees. p. 8.
b. Care needed to protect trees in winter. p. 34.
c. Guiding principles of tree care. p. 48.
d. Understanding understory trees. p. 69.
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