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  2. Shorter days mean the fragrant dracaena, or corn plant, may ...

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    Depending on how old the plant is, it may bloom indoors. Outside, the corn plant is more selective in its environment with a planting range confined to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s zones ...

  3. Indian corn again finds the spotlight. Here’s how to grow it ...

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    Popcorn is a type of flint corn that has a soft, starchy center inside the hard shell. When heated, the moisture causes the kernels to explode. ... either plant it 250 feet away from the Indian ...

  4. Euphorbia mammillaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euphorbia_mammillaris

    Euphorbia mammillaris (often mis-spelled Euphorbia mamillaris) is a plant species endemic to Cape Province of South Africa. [2] Euphorbia mammillaris, also known as African or Indian corn-cob, is a fast-growing shrublet, with thick stems that are chalky green, erect and ribbed.

  5. Dracaena fragrans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dracaena_fragrans

    Dracaena fragrans (cornstalk dracaena), is a flowering plant species that is native throughout tropical Africa, from Sudan south to Mozambique, west to Côte d'Ivoire and southwest to Angola, growing in upland regions at 600–2,250 m (1,970–7,380 ft) altitude. [1] [2] It is also known as striped dracaena, compact dracaena, and corn plant.

  6. Conopholis americana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conopholis_americana

    Conopholis americana, the American cancer-root, bumeh or bear corn, is a perennial, [3] non-photosynthesizing (or "achlorophyllous") parasitic plant. It is from the family Orobanchaceae and more recently from the genus Conopholis but also listed as Orobanche , native but not endemic to North America .

  7. Corn silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_silk

    Up to 1000 ovules (potential kernels) form per ear of corn, each of which produces a strand of corn silk from its tip that eventually emerges from the end of the ear. The emergence of at least one strand of silk from a given ear of corn is defined as growth stage R1, and the emergence of silk in 50% of the plants in a corn field is called "mid-silk".

  8. Aw, shucks: An inside look at the great American corn-maze ...

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    Kevin Watson, assistant director at Howell Living History Farm in New Jersey, stops at a time clock inside a corn maze. The farm is part of the Mercer County Parks System and offers historical and ...

  9. Zea (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zea_(plant)

    Zea species are used as food plants by the larvae (caterpillars) of some Lepidopteran species including (in the Americas) the fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda), the corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea), and the stem borers Diatraea and Chilo; in the Old World, it is attacked by the double-striped pug, the cutworms heart and club and heart and ...