Tropical horticulture includes plants such as perennial woody plants ( arboriculture ), ornamentals ( floriculture ), vegetables ( olericulture ), and fruits ( pomology ) including grapes ( viticulture ).
22.
With Oberdieck and Friedrich Jahn, he was editor of the 8-volume " Illustrirtes Handbuch der Obstkunde " ( " Illustrated Handbook of Pomology "; 1859 75 ).
23.
1981 saw the disbandment of two of Long Ashton's major research divisions, the " Pomology and Plant Breeding Division " and the " Food and Beverage Division ".
24.
His " A View of Cultivation of Fruit Trees, and the Management of Orchards and Cider " ( 1817 ) was the first book on pomology written by an American or about American fruit trees.
25.
The journal was his most frequent influence on society and operated under the premises of horticulture, pomology, botany, entomology, rural architecture, landscape gardening, and, unofficially, premises dedicated public welfare in various forms.
26.
In 1891 he began work at the " Forschungsanstalt f�r Garten-und Weinbau " in Geisenheim, and in 1893 became director of the botanical department in the experimental station at the institute of pomology in Proskau.
27.
A native of Columbus, Ohio, he graduated with a degree in horticulture from the University of Maine in 1929 and received a doctorate in pomology, the science of fruit cultivation, from the University of Maryland in 1934.
28.
The town was renamed Michurinsk in 1932 after the biologist Ivan Michurin, who had developed a genetic laboratory and agricultural testing fields in the Tambov region, dedicated to pomology ( the study of fruit growing ) and selection biology.
29.
He also wrote many articles upon horticultural subjects under the initials " C . D . " His work throughout was conscientious and accurate, and he was internationally recognized as an authority upon pomology, horticulture, and tree growths.
30.
"' August Friedrich Adrian Diel "'( born February 4, 1756 in Gladenbach; April 22, 1839 in Diez ) was a German physician and founder of Pomology at the turn of the 19th century.