Winter culture

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Winter culture (also winter fruit) describes plant stocks that overwinter in the field.

  • Sweet grasses , which can be assigned to winter crops, are sown or planted in autumn and usually require a frost period for vernalization as a prerequisite for the initiation of the generative phase or shooting . The winter forms of the cereals have a higher yield due to the long vegetation period and survive the spring drought more easily than the summer fruits . However, winter crops are threatened by wintering . In the event of loss, however, these crops can be replaced by summer crops such as corn .

Examples of winter crops are:

Web links

literature

  • Gerhard Geisler : Yield Physiology of Cultures of the Temperate Climate . Publisher Paul Parey Berlin and Hamburg 1983.
  • Ernst Klapp : Textbook of arable and plant cultivation , Paul Parey publishing house Berlin 1941; 6th edition 1967.
  • Manfred G. Raupp: What the grandfather already knew - thoughts on the development of agriculture in Staffort ; Lörrach and Stutensee-Staffort Citizens' Office 2005.