UNSV.COM英语学习频道 - 中国最给力的免费英语学习网站

AGRICULTURE REPORT - Some Crops (Like Some People) Do Well as Companions

阅读次数:

免费配套节目资料: MP3节目录音 MP3节目录音  PDF 节目文稿 PDF 节目文稿  .txt格式文本
- 下载免费配套节目资料,请用右键点击下载链接,然后在弹出的菜单上选择“目标另存为”。
增值会员专享资料: LRC 同步字幕歌词 LRC 同步字幕歌词 <播放同步英汉翻译对照 英汉翻译对照 
- 下载增值会员专享资料,直接用左键点击下载链接即可。

This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Companion planting is the idea that when some crops are planted together, they help each other grow. These compatible plants generally have similar needs for nutrients, soil and moisture.

Farm
Farm

Advice for companion plantings is sometimes based more on tradition than proof. But Fabian Fernandez at the University of Illinois says there is evidence for some combinations. These can lead to better crops, reduce disease and help with pest control by attracting helpful insects.

For example, some kinds of soil bacteria take nitrogen from the air and make a form that plants can use. The plants keep the nitrogen in their roots. Legumes are especially good at this. Any crops sharing the same space can get the nitrogen as the roots decompose.

Crops like beans and potatoes can also share territory well because their roots reach different levels in the soil. Deep-rooted vegetables get nutrients and moisture from lower down, so they do not compete with shallower plants.

But some plants placed together may harm each other's development. For example, tomatoes do not like wet soil but watercress does, as the name suggests. So you would probably not want to put them together.

Even after harvest, some kinds of produce should be kept apart. Apples, for example, release ethylene gas, a plant hormone. It can cause other foods to ripen too quickly.

Fruits that release a lot of ethylene also include apricots, melons and tomatoes. Vegetables easily affected by ethylene include asparagus, broccoli, cabbage and cucumbers.

Markets often separate high ethylene-producing foods from those that are sensitive to the gas.

But sometimes you might want them together. For example, if you put an apple in a bag with an green banana, the banana will be ready to eat sooner.

Now what about peaches, plums and nectarines that are too firm to eat? Growers in California answer this question at eatcaliforniafruit.com. They say an apple, banana or a riper piece of fruit is not needed. The peaches, plums and nectarines themselves release enough of the gas to ripen successfully.

Their advice: Place the fruit in a fruit bowl or in a paper bag with the top folded over. Keep the fruit at room temperature, out of direct sunlight. When the fruit is soft enough to your liking, either use it or place it in a refrigerator to stop further ripening.

And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. Transcripts, podcasts and archives are at www.unsv.com. I'm Mario Ritter.

网友的学习评论(0条):
版权所有©2003-2011 南京通享科技有限公司,保留所有权利。未经书面许可,严禁转载本站内容,违者追究法律责任。 中国互联网经营ICP证:苏B2-20070025
广播台