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Remove Filters: Pears(X)

20 Images of 4 Subjects View Subject List View Image Details View Thumbnails

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Image Subject Name Scientific Name Description
1229031 pear Pyrus spp.
1229025 pear Pyrus spp. "Hosui"
1229027 pear Pyrus spp.
1229028 pear Pyrus spp.
1229029 pear Pyrus spp.
1229022 pear Pyrus spp. "Shin Li"
1229023 pear Pyrus spp.
1229021 pear Pyrus spp. "Shin Li"
1229026 pear Pyrus spp. "Dasui Li"
1229032 pear Pyrus spp.
1229030 pear Pyrus spp.
1229024 pear Pyrus spp.
1229020 pear Pyrus spp. "Shin Li"
1224179 pear sawfly Caliroa cerasi Pear slug (a sawfly) Damage to Peach leaves.
1224178 pear sawfly Caliroa cerasi Pearslug (A sawfly) on peachleaf.
1318091 common pear Pyrus communis Blake's Pride...A tasty, high-quality, fire-blight-resistant pear.
1321070 pear Pyrus spp. Though the pears pictured do not have a texture suitable for good eating, scientists at the ARS Appalachian Fruit Research Station in Kearneysville, West Virginia, will combine their fire blight-resistant qualities with other lines possessing traits sought in commercial pear varieties.
1321071 pear Pyrus spp. Front row, center: Shining among nine other advanced pear selections now getting their mettle tested at several U.S. locations, Potomac was released in May 1993.
1318055 codling moth Cydia pomonella The high level of attractiveness of the pear ester could be useful in developing "attract and kill" traps that reduce pesticide use while removing moths from orchards before they reproduce.
1318056 codling moth Cydia pomonella Codling moths of both sexes are strongly attracted to a chemical in pears.

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