Publications

Agriculture and Environmant

1998 | Action null

Rapport COST (original)

1988 | Action null

Evaluation Research in Regard to Primary Prevention of Drug Abuse

1998 | Action A6

ACTA SILVATICA & LIGNARIA HUNGARICA - An International Journal in Forest, Wood and Environmental Sciences: COST E30 - Economic Integration of Urban Consumer's Demand and Rural Forestry Production (Vol.2)

2005 | Action E30

International Weahter Radar Networking

1992 | Action 73

Multi-facetted Research in Rabbits: a Model to Develop a Healthy Safe Production in Respect with Animal Welfare WG3: Pathology and Prophylaxy, WG4: Nutrition

2001 | Action 848

European Symposium on the Prediction of Drug Metabolism in Man: Progress and Problems

1999 | Action B1

Vegetable Grafting: Principles and Practices

2017 | Action FA1204

Soutien Communautaire à la recherche et au développement technologique

1994 | Action null

ACTA SILVATICA & LIGNARIA HUNGARICA - An International Journal in Forest, Wood and Environmental Sciences: COST E30 - Economic Integration of Urban Consumer's Demand and Rural Forestry Production (Vol.2)

2005 | Action E30
  • Pages: 811
  • Author(s): C. Matyas
  • Publisher(s): Lover-Print KFT
  • ISBN/ISSN: 1786-691X | 1786-691X

COST Action E30 is one of the largest COST Actions thus far under the domain on forests and forestry products. COST Action E30 has 21 participating countries. The main objective of COST Action E30 is to gain better understanding of the problems and possible solutions to forest-based entrepreneurship in small-scale forestry, wood processing, and non-wood forest products and services aiming at improved employment and income in rural areas.

Vegetable Grafting: Principles and Practices

2017 | Action FA1204

This book provides comprehensive, current scientific and applied practical knowledge on vegetable grafting, a method gaining considerable interest that is used to protect crops from soil-borne diseases, abiotic stress and to enhance growth/yield. Though the benefits of using grafted transplants are now fully recognized worldwide, understanding the rootstock-scion interactions under variable environmental pressures remains vital for grafting-mediated crop improvement. In this book, the authors attend to this need and explain the reasons for, and methods and applications of, grafting.