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FIG. 9. RECOVERY, AFTER HAY, OF THREE TYPES. True perennial (Poverty Bay Type 1) on right, Italian (odd outstanding plants) on left, and false perennial (rye-grass other than Italian) on left. The line on the left was a mixed false perennial and Italian rye-grass from the Wairarapa. [Photos by E. Bruce Levy.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZJAG19300620.2.2.9

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume XL, Issue 6, 20 June 1930, Page 379

Word Count
52

FIG. 9. RECOVERY, AFTER HAY, OF THREE TYPES. True perennial (Poverty Bay Type 1) on right, Italian (odd outstanding plants) on left, and false perennial (rye-grass other than Italian) on left. The line on the left was a mixed false perennial and Italian rye-grass from the Wairarapa. [Photos by E. Bruce Levy. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume XL, Issue 6, 20 June 1930, Page 379

FIG. 9. RECOVERY, AFTER HAY, OF THREE TYPES. True perennial (Poverty Bay Type 1) on right, Italian (odd outstanding plants) on left, and false perennial (rye-grass other than Italian) on left. The line on the left was a mixed false perennial and Italian rye-grass from the Wairarapa. [Photos by E. Bruce Levy. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume XL, Issue 6, 20 June 1930, Page 379

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