- Dr. Deblain Sarangi's research papers on Google Scholar (is this a good way to highlight Deblain’s research?)
- Developing robust identification assays for Amaranthus palmeri in seed mixtures (U of MN)
- Climate change and range expansion of invasive plants (U of MN)
Research on Palmer amaranth in Minnestoa
- Dr. Deblain Sarangi's research papers on Google Scholar (is this a good way to highlight Deblain’s research?)
- Developing robust identification assays for Amaranthus palmeri in seed mixtures (U of MN)
- Climate change and range expansion of invasive plants (U of MN)
- Dr. Deblain Sarangi's research papers on Google Scholar (is this a good way to highlight Deblain’s research?)
- Developing robust identification assays for Amaranthus palmeri in seed mixtures (U of MN)
- Climate change and range expansion of invasive plants (U of MN)
- Select five plants to sample within each field/site
- For each plant sample:
- Collect 5 leaves
- Place leaves into a Ziplock® bag (as pictured below) with a piece of paper towel and a paper label that indicates the suspected species and includes the collector’s name, collection date, county, plant location within the field (latitude/longitude), and a sample letter - A, B, C, D, or E, depending on which sample of the five collected it represents.
- Place all five plant samples (i.e. individual bags) for a field/site into a single gallon bag
- Please write on the gallon bag a sample identifier using the following protocol: collector’s initials, year collected and herbicide sample number (for example, JP22HS#001 – where JP are the initials for Jane Public who collected the sample, 22 represents the year collected – 2022, HS#001 identifies that this is the first herbicide sample collected)
- Go to #4
- Repeat for each new field/site.
- For each plant sample:
Herbicide Resistance
- Select five plants to sample within each field/site
- For each plant sample:
- Collect 5 leaves
- Place leaves into a Ziplock® bag (as pictured below) with a piece of paper towel and a paper label that indicates the suspected species and includes the collector’s name, collection date, county, plant location within the field (latitude/longitude), and a sample letter - A, B, C, D, or E, depending on which sample of the five collected it represents.
- Place all five plant samples (i.e. individual bags) for a field/site into a single gallon bag
- Please write on the gallon bag a sample identifier using the following protocol: collector’s initials, year collected and herbicide sample number (for example, JP22HS#001 – where JP are the initials for Jane Public who collected the sample, 22 represents the year collected – 2022, HS#001 identifies that this is the first herbicide sample collected)
- Go to #4
- Repeat for each new field/site.
- For each plant sample:
If requested to collect samples for a research project, MDA will provide a specific collection protocol to be followed.