Another option for cultural control is the use of trap crops or catch crops.
2.
The same applies to catch crops and livestock.
3.
Or, a catch crop can be planted between the spring harvest and fall planting of some crops.
4.
Another use of radish is as cover or catch crop in winter or as a forage crop.
5.
Catch crops allow parasitism but are destroyed before the parasitic plant flowers, so the broomrape seeds cannot be produced and dispersed.
6.
Catch crops are typically fast-growing annual cereal species adapted to scavenge available nitrogen efficiently from the soil ( Ditsch and Alley 1991 ).
7.
Catch crop-topped combat babes huddling between takes, the pale flesh on their arms covered in goose bumps from the chill of the dank basement.
8.
A catch crop refers to a specific type of succession planting, where a fast-growing crop is grown simultaneously with, or between successive plantings of, a main crop.
9.
The nitrogen tied up in catch crop biomass is released back into the soil once the catch crop is incorporated as a green manure or otherwise begins to decompose.
10.
The nitrogen tied up in catch crop biomass is released back into the soil once the catch crop is incorporated as a green manure or otherwise begins to decompose.
a crop that grows quickly (e.g. lettuce) and can be planted between two regular crops grown in successive seasons or between two rows of crops in the same season