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单词 seedling
释义

seedling


seed·ling

S0214300 (sēd′lĭng)n. A young plant, especially one that grows from a seed, rather than from a cutting, for example.

seedling

(ˈsiːdlɪŋ) n (Botany) a very young plant produced from a seed

seed•ling

(ˈsid lɪŋ)

n. 1. a plant or tree grown from a seed. 2. a tree not yet 3 ft. (1 m) high. 3. any young plant, esp. one grown in a nursery for transplanting. [1650–60]

seed·ling

(sēd′lĭng) A young plant that is grown from a seed, rather than from a cutting or bulb, for example.
Thesaurus
Noun1.seedling - young plant or tree grown from a seedseedling - young plant or tree grown from a seedphanerogam, seed plant, spermatophyte - plant that reproduces by means of seeds not spores
Translations
秧苗籽苗

seed

(siːd) noun1. the (part of) the fruit of a tree, plant etc from which a new plant may be grown. sunflower seeds; grass seed. 種子 种子2. the beginning from which anything grows. There was already a seed of doubt in her mind. 萌芽 萌芽3. (in a sporting competition etc) a seeded player. 種子選手 种子选手 verb1. (of a plant) to produce seed. A plant seeds after it has flowered. 結籽 结籽2. in golf, tennis etc, to arrange (good players) in a competition so that they do not compete against each other till the later rounds. 選出種子選手 抽出种子选手ˈseeded adjective having been seeded. a seeded player. 被選為種子選手的 被选为种子选手的ˈseedling (-liŋ) noun a young plant just grown from a seed. Don't walk on the lettuce seedlings! 秧苗 籽苗,秧苗 ˈseedy adjective1. shabby. a rather seedy hotel. 破舊的 褴褛的2. ill or unhealthy. He's feeling a bit seedy. 身體不適 不舒服ˈseediness noun 破舊,身體不適 结籽ˈseedbed noun ground prepared for growing seeds. 苗床 苗床go to seed1. (of a person) to become careless about one's clothes and appearance. Don't let yourself go to seed when you reach middle age! 變得不修邊幅 变得不修边幅2. (of a place) to become rather shabby and uncared for. This part of town has gone to seed recently. (地方)變得凋零破舊 污秽3. (also run to seed) (of a plant) to produce seeds after flowering. (植物)開花後結籽 花谢结果

Seedling


seedling

a very young plant produced from a seed

Seedling

 

a young plant raised from seed for subsequent transplanting in a permanent location.

Seedlings are used in vegetable and seed culture, floriculture, forestry, and the cultivation of certain industrial crops. The use of seedlings is most common in vegetable culture. The planting of seedlings makes it possible to shorten the period of vegetation in the open ground, to grow valuable crops and varieties having a long vegetative period in regions with a short summer, to obtain earlier vegetable harvests, and to economize on planting material (three to five times fewer seeds are needed than when sowing in the open ground).

Seedlings to be transplanted in open ground are raised in hotbeds, heated plastic-covered greenhouses, seedbeds, and tunnels and portable plastic-covered shelters. For subsequent transplantation in sheltered ground (winter and spring green-houses), seedlings are prepared in pots (10×10 or 12×12 cm) in winter shelf greenhouses and plastic-covered hotbeds. Seedlings set out in greenhouses in January and February are provided with supplementary electrical lighting, which accelerates production by seven to 15 days and increases the yield of cucumbers by 15–20 percent and the yield of tomatoes by 20–30 percent. Seedlings to be set out in glass-enclosed or plastic-covered spring greenhouses in March or April are grown in pots (8×8 or 10×10 cm) without supplementary lighting.

Cucumbers, early white cabbage, early cauliflower, vegetable marrow, eggplant, peppers, and melons are sown in pots. Tomatoes and lettuce are sown in flats but are transplanted into pots when the first true leaves appear. Seedlings of celery, onion, and medium and late varieties of cabbage are not raised in pots but directly in the ground of greenhouses or hotbeds.

To obtain high-quality seedlings, the plants must have a nutritive medium (soil mixture, nutrient solutions). The seeds must be disinfected, and protective measures against insect pests and disease must be taken. Before seedlings can be planted in the open ground, they must be hardened off, that is, exposed to lowered temperatures (at night and in overcast weather, to - 14°C), moderately watered, and treated with phosphorus-potassium fertilizers. In hotbeds the frames should be removed five to seven days before the plants are transplanted in order to improve the light regime.

REFERENCES

Markov, V. M. Ovoshchevodstvo. Moscow, 1966.
Rubtsov, M. I., and V. P. Matveev. Ovoshchevodstvo. Moscow, 1970.

Z. S. CHEKUNOVA


Seedling

 

a one- or two-year-old plant grown from seed in the sowing section of a fruit or forest nursery (without transplanting). The seedlings of fruit plants are used as stocks for propagating cultivated varieties; they are often called grafting stocks. In plant selection, hybrid seedlings are grown to develop new varieties. Tree seedlings are used for forestation.

seedling

[′sēd·liŋ] (botany) A plant grown from seed. A tree younger and smaller than a sapling. A tree grown from a seed.
MedicalSeeseed

seedling


  • noun

Words related to seedling

noun young plant or tree grown from a seed

Related Words

  • phanerogam
  • seed plant
  • spermatophyte
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