"A cooperative project of the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station, Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University ... and the USDA-Agriculture Research Service, Natural Resources Research Center, Great Plains Systems Research Unit.", "November 2004"--Cover., Includes bibliographical references (p. 108-116) and statistics., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
CSU conducts hybrid performance trials to provide unbiased and reliable information to Colorado producers so they can select the best hybrids for their farming conditions., Cover title., "January 2006.", Mode of access: World Wide Web; file viewed on April 26, 2006.
Colorado producers annually spend millions of dollars on pinto bean seed which makes variety selection important. CSU's Crops Testing program, conduct uniform variety trials annually to provide unbiased and reliable performance results., Cover title., "December 2005.", Mode of access: World Wide Web; file viewed April 26, 2006.
Cover title., "Inside: Agricultural Outlook Articles [and] 2006 Agricultural Industry Directory."--Cover., "Thursday, February 23, 2006 Renaissance Denver Hotel.", State of the Colorado economy and agricultural overview / by Jim Rubingh -- Bio-pharming in Colorado / by the Colorado Institute of Public Policy, Colorado State University -- The climate of Colorado / by Nolan Doesken and Roger Pielke, Sr.-- Fruit industry outlook / by Harold J. Larsen -- Feed grain outlook / by Rod Sharp -- Livestock outlook : cattle and hogs / Stephen R. Koontz, James G. Robb and Erica I. Rosa -- Sunflower and oilseed outlook / by Dennis A. Kaan -- Vegetable crop production outlook / by Michael Bartolo -- Wheat outlook / by Stephen Koontz, James Pritchett, John Deering -- Green industry outlook / by Jim Klett -- Colorado's agricultural export trends / by Timothy J. Larsen -- 2006 Colorado agricultural outlook forum directory., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
CSU conducts hybrid performance trials to provide unbiased and reliable information to Colorado producers so they can select the best hybrids for their farming conditions., Cover title., "February 2007.", Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Colorado producers annually spend millions of dollars on pinto bean seed which makes variety selection important. CSU's Crops Testing program, conduct uniform variety trials annually to provide unbiased and reliable performance results., Cover title., "October 2006.", Mode of access: World Wide Web.