Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Yak Namaliu"'
Autor:
Michel Dollet, Sandrine Fabre, Maëva Beaumont, Christian Barnabé, Yak Namaliu, Alfred Kembu, Roland Bourdeix
Publikováno v:
Tropical Plant Pathology
Coconut significantly contributes to nutrition and livelihoods of more than 8 million Asia–Pacific households and is specifically linked to the livelihoods of more than 1.5 million people in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Coconut diversity of the region i
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::15b89db4af4b16a5497776b3be3a84fa
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/602671/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/602671/
Autor:
Yak Namaliu, John-Thomas Vano, Rosalie Daniel, Paul N’nelau, Ricky Wenani, J. K. Konam, Josephine Yaupin Saul-Maora, Anton Kamuso, David Guest, Rafiuddin Palinrungi
Publikováno v:
Food Security. 3:65-79
Income from cocoa is the main source of cash used to purchase food and services in many communities in the tropical lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG). Despite the availability of improved management technology, there has been poor transfer and uptak
Autor:
Daniel, Rosalie, Konam, John, Saul-Maora, Josephine, Kamuso, Anton, Namaliu, Yak, Vano, John-Thomas, Wenani, Ricky, N'nelau, Paul, Palinrungi, Rafiuddin, Guest, David
Publikováno v:
Food Security; Feb2011, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p65-79, 15p
Despite the healthy market demand for cocoa, smallholder yields in PNG have generally been far lower than those potentially attainable, and recently they have fallen even further due to widening infestations of cocoa pod borer. For the cocoa industry
Autor:
Konam, John, Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, University of Sydney, Cocoa Coconut Institute (Papua New Guinea)
This booklet is the second edition of the original monograph published in 2008. New management approaches, based on sound agronomic practices and integrated pest and disease management (IPDM) strategies, have been developed to assist farmers to optim
This is the Indonesian translation of MN131, a booklet that addresses knowledge gaps in cocoa production. New management approaches, based on sound agronomic practices and integrated pest and disease management (IPDM) strategies, have been developed