0 a type of grain, the seeds of which are used to make flour or whisky or to feed animals:
1 a type of plant, the grain of which is used to feed animals and to make flour for bread
The field comprised a mosaic of conventionally-tilled and rye-mulched plots, surrounded by fields of maize, soybeans, alfalfa hay and mixed hardwood forest.
They were non-significant for the rye grass extracts.
We found a similar sequence of events in our just non-viable rye embryos.
Six increasing concentrations of rye grass were used as negative control for the extraction procedure.
Therefore, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that microbiological differences among inoculum soils affected post-vernalization rye growth.
Particularly noticeable is the very considerable fall in the prices for wheat, rye and barley between 1891 and 1894.
In addition to assessing the net effect of soil microbiota from various management systems on early growth of rye, we examined two other related issues.
Of the crops tested, oat and rye grass yielded much more, on average, than the other crops.