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Monash University scientists have uncovered how invasive plants like white clover rapidly adapt to new environments, revealing genetic changes that underpin their global success.
The study reproduced this finding worldwide. Sampling 110,019 plants in 160 cities, the team found that the ability to HCN was affected by both climate and urbanization. White clover is less likely to ...
This clover should also thrive longer in our climate and will bloom later in the spring (May). White clover is adapted to clay and silt soils in humid and irrigated areas. It enjoys full sun and ...
RIT contributed to a massive study on a tiny roadside weed that shows urbanization is leading to adaptive evolution at a global scale. As part of the Global Urban Evolution Project (GLUE) project, ...
The first white clover cultivar was developed in 1983. Five new cultivars which have been commercialised in the last 10 years.” Clovers have an important role to play in lowering the use of ...