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⢠Other Related Knowledge of plum tree
Stigmella slingerlandella of plum tree
Plum Leaf Miner (Stigmella slingerlandella) is a moth of the family Nepticulidae. It is found in North America from Ontario, New York, Michigan and Ohio, possibly south to Florida.
The wingspan is 3.55mm.
The larvae feed on Prunus species, including Prunus nigra and Prunus serotina species. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The larva first eats a narrow linear mine, then widens the mine so as to produce an irregular, more or less ovate blotch. Three to twelve mines are often found on a single leaf. When full grown the larva leaves the mine through a cut in the upper surface of the leaf, falls to the ground, and there constructs a small flattened brownish cocoon in cracks in the soil, under loose stones, or between the base of the tree and the surrounding soil.
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Educational Concerts of plum treeLinton's educational wing, "Peanut Butter and Jam Sessions", an early childhood educational concert series was created in 1994. The 40-minute programs, presented by small ensembles on Saturday mornings in churches and community centers, introduce musical concepts and instruments and tell stories through music. Audience participation is encouraged, and children are invited to meet the musicians, touch their instruments and ask questions afterward. In addition to its Saturday programs, several free concerts are offered each season to provide access to families not otherwise able to attend.
In 1999, "Peanut Butter and Jam Sessions" received a Post-Corbett Award for Excellence in Arts Education and Outreach from the Scripps Howard Foundation.
Another Linton spinoff, "The Mayor's 801 Plum Concerts", created in 1994 to attract young urban professionals and featuring diverse, contemporary programming in an early Friday evening, downtown setting (Cincinnati City Hall), has been discontinued.
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Goodenow, Illinois of plum treeGoodenow, has a long history and is an unincorporated community near where the Calumet Expressway and Illinois Route 1 combine in Will County, Illinois, United States. First surveyed in 1839. 160 acres were purchased in 1853 by George Goodenow. Divided into blocks, lots, streets and alleys in 1872. It is in a semi-rural area with the closest town being Crete to the north and Beecher to the south. It is very wooded and contains remnant Oak trees and prairie grass with many houses on large, wooded lots. The major industry was the now-closed Beecher Landfill which took in garbage from the Chicago metropolitan area. Will Township Unity To the east of the area is the 700-acre (2.8km2) Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve. To the south, it is open farmlands for several miles until you get to the town of Beecher. The town lies on the Valparaiso Moraine and the small stream, Plum Creek, runs through the area.
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University of Nevada, Reno Arboretum of plum treeCoordinates: 393245N 1194900W / 39.54583N 119.81667W / 39.54583; -119.81667
University of Nevada, Reno Arboretum is a state arboretum located across the campus at the University of Nevada, Reno in Reno, Nevada.
The arboretum was established in 1985 and contains a collection of trees, shrubs, flowers, ornamentals and native flora, including over 60 genera and about 200 species of trees, many with several cultivars present. Thirty-six mature elm trees line the Quad.
Cherry Blossom Garden Mt. Fuji cherry trees, azaleas, bamboo and ornamental grasses.
Benson Gardens and Xeriscape, with Challenger Tree Memorial crabapples, plums, maples, evergreens, plus an area of drought tolerant plants. Blue Atlas Cedars commemorate the astronauts lost in the Challenger Space Shuttle accident.
The Quad The Quad was originally used as a parade ground for student cadets in the late 19th century and in 1908 replanted to Thomas Jefferson's design for the University of Virginia lawn. In 1988, several elms were removed due to Dutch elm disease. The Quad is now planted with a mixture of elm, hackberry, ash and oak trees, and the lawn is interspersed with weeping white birch, oak and evergreen trees.
Jimmies Garden rock daphne, hornbeam, weeping Nootka cypress, a Japanese pagoda tree, star magnolias, rhododendrons, perennial shrubs and flowers.
Fleischmann Agriculture Entry Landscape magnolia, spring-flowering bulbs and annuals. Trees include crimean lindens, ash, blue spruce, dwarf montgomery spruce and flowering pears along the street.
Merriam A. Brown Rose Garden roses.
Manzanita Lake
Joe Robertson Native Garden plants from the Great Basin Desert, Mojave Desert and Sonoran Desert.
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Jenna Johnson of plum treeJenna Leigh Johnson (born September 11, 1967) is an American former competition swimmer and Olympic gold medalist.
As a 16-year-old, Johnson represented the United States at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. She won three medals: a gold medal in the women's 4100-meter freestyle relay, a gold medal in the 4100-meter medley relay, and a silver medal in the 100-meter butterfly.
She attended and swam for Ursuline High School in Santa Rosa her freshman and sophomore years. She swam for the Santa Rosa Neptunes Swim Club in Santa Rosa from age 12-15. She is an alumna of Whittier Christian High School, where in 1984 she set the national record of 53.95 seconds in the 100-yard butterfly and the D1 record of 23.07 seconds in the 50-yard freestyle. While living in Southern California, she trained at the Industry Hills Aquatic Club in the City of Industry, California. She received an athletic scholarship to attend Stanford University, where she swam for the Stanford Cardinal swimming and diving team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and Pacific-10 Conference competition. As a 19-year-old, she received the Honda Sports Award for Swimming and Diving, recognizing her as the outstanding college female swimmer of the year in 198586, was a runner-up for the award the following year and won again in 198889.
Johnson made Rivals.com's list for the "Top 100 Female Athletes In State History."
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44th New York Monument of plum treeThe 44th and 12th New York Infantry Monument (3947.475N 7714.221W / 39.791250N 77.237017W / 39.791250; -77.237017) is a Gettysburg Battlefield memorial erected near the summit of Little Round Top to commemorate combat in the Battle of Little Round Top. The castellated building is the largest monument to a regiment on the battlefield, is the 1st of only 2 Battle of Gettysburg memorials with observation decks (cf. 1910 The Pennsylvania State Memorial), and supplemented the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association wooden towers on Big Round Top and East Cemetery Hill (replaced in 1895 with 2 observation towers at Big Round Top and at Culp's Hill). The July 3, 1893, memorial dedication was the site of an altercation against photographer William H. Tipton by Gen. Sickles, who was served a court writ the following day and was forced out of the New York Monuments Commission in 1912 after malfeasance.
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Biography of plum treeLivingston was born in New York City in January 1933. He grew up in New York, California and Texas, and graduated from Cornell University. He spent two years in Japan and Korea in the U.S. Army in the early 1950s, and studied and travelled in Europe after his Army discharge. After three years as a registered representative of the New York Stock Exchange, he returned to Europe where he was head of an international financial services corporation for ten years. He then retired from the business world and began practising Zen with Master Taisen Deshimaru in Paris.
He became a close disciple of Deshimaru, who made Livingston a Zen teacher. Before his death in 1982, Deshimaru asked him to go to America and open a Zen dojo and teach true Zen practice in the United States. Livingston Roshi founded the American Zen Association and the New Orleans Zen Temple in 1983. Robert Ray Livingston, Sr. passed away on Thursday, April 21, 2016.
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Development of plum treeGeographically, Malkot almost is in the center of union council and the nearest village to Punjab. People can reach Ayubia, Khera Gali Murree, Dunga Gali in 20 to 40 minutes. Malkot produced many politicians and also many other professionals like judges, doctors, engineers and businessmen.
Sardar Mehtab Khan was Chief Minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa from March 1997 to October 1999 during the government of PML(N) and became governor of KPK from 2014
In comparison to neighbouring villages such as Riala, Palak, Kalaban, Khushikot, Arwar and Longal, Malkot is well-developed.
Mehtab Ahmed Khan became the 22nd chief minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa on 21 February 1997.
Dividing Abbottabad district to sub Tahseels was one of the major demand community at large was dreaming for but was overturned.
Van services are available for Rawalpindi and Islamabad. Travelling to Islamabad by road from Malkot takes two hours.
The Lower Malkot area has a Ptcl exchange. Additionally, all Pakistani mobile phone companies service are available at Malkot.
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Danan Henry of plum treeMichael Danan Henry (born 1939) is an American Roshi in the Harada-Yasutani lineage, a Zen sect derived from both the Rinzai and St traditions of Japanese Zen), practicing in the Diamond Sangha lineage of Robert Baker Aitken. The founding teacher of the Zen Center of Denver, Henry received Dharma transmission from Philip Kapleau Roshi in 1989 and was subsequently recognized as a Diamond Sangha teacher and Diamond Sangha master by Robert Baker Aitken. Danan Henry Roshi created and implemented the Monastery Without Walls training program; the Lotus in the Flame Lay Order; and the "Every Minute Zen" mindfulness practice as abbot and spiritual director of the Zen Center of Denver.
On September 12, 2010, Danan Roshi conferred Dharma transmission and appointment of abbacy to Karin Kempe, Ken Morgareidge, and Peggy Sheehan, and stepped aside as abbot of the Zen Center of Denver. Danan Roshi has since been serving as the teacher of the Old Bones Sangha, a small group of mostly senior students.
On June 30, 2016, Danan Roshi conferred Dharma transmission to Rafe Martin.
On April 26, 2018, Danan Roshi conferred the status of apprentice teacher to Hoag Holmgren.
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List of Lepidoptera that feed on of plum treeSorbus species (rowans, whitebeams and allies) are used as food plants by the caterpillars of a number of Lepidoptera species (butterflies and moths). These include:
Bucculatricidae leaf-miners:
Bucculatrix bechsteinella
Bucculatrix ulmella
Coleophoridae
Several Coleophora case-bearer species:
C. anatipennella leaves recorded on European rowan (S. aucuparia), and possibly others
C. cerasivorella recorded on European rowan (S. aucuparia)
C. spinella (apple-and-plum case-bearer)
Geometridae
Alcis repandata (mottled beauty) recorded on rowans
Cabera pusaria (common white wave) recorded on rowans
Chloroclysta truncata (common marbled carpet) recorded on rowans
Colotois pennaria (feathered thorn) recorded on rowans
Crocallis elinguaria (scalloped oak) recorded on rowans
Ectropis crepuscularia (engrailed) recorded on rowans
Epirrita autumnata (autumnal moth) recorded on rowans
Epirrita christyi (pale November moth)
Erannis defoliaria (mottled umber)
Eupithecia exiguata (mottled pug) recorded on rowans
Geometra papilionaria (large emerald) recorded on rowans
Gymnoscelis rufifasciata (double-striped pug) recorded on rowans
Hemithea aestivaria (common emerald) recorded on rowans
Odontopera bidentata (scalloped hazel) recorded on rowans
Operophtera brumata (winter moth)
Opisthograptis luteolata (brimstone moth) recorded on rowans
Lymantriidae
Euproctis chrysorrhoea (brown-tail)
Euproctis similis (yellow-tail)
Noctuidae
Acronicta leporina (miller)
Acronicta psi (grey dagger)
Acronicta tridens (dark dagger) recorded on rowans
Amphipyra berbera (Svensson's copper underwing) recorded on rowans
Amphipyra pyramidea (copper underwing) recorded on wild service tree (S. torminalis)
Cosmia trapezina (dun-bar) recorded on rowans
Eupsilia transversa (satellite) recorded on rowans
Melanchra persicariae (dot moth) recorded on rowans
Orthosia gothica (Hebrew character) recorded on rowans
Nolidae
Nola cucullatella (short-cloaked moth)
Notodontidae
Ptilodon capucina (coxcomb prominent) recorded on rowans
Saturniidae
Pavonia pavonia (emperor moth)
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Career of plum treeIn 1997, Pantastico joined the Pacific Northwest Ballet in Seattle as an apprentice, and became a member of the corp de ballet a year later. She was named soloist in 2001 and a principal in 2004.
In 2008, she left the PNB and joined Jean-Christophe Maillot's Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo in Monaco as a soloist, having previously danced Maillot's Romo et Juliette at PNB. She was named first soloist a year later.
In 2015, she returned to PNB, again as a principal dancer. During her time in PNB, she has danced danced in productions such as Cendrillon, The Nutcracker and Giselle. She was also featured in the 1999 filmed version of PNB's A Midsummer Nights Dream.
In 2017, Pantastico choreographed Picnic for Sculptured Dance.
Outside of PNB, in 2004, she made a guest appearance at the New York City Ballet, dancing the second movement of Balanchine's BrahmsSchoenberg Quartet at NYCB's Balanchine Centennial. She also founded Seattle Dance Collective with fellow PNB principal dancer James Moore.