Flowers

2022 - 3 - 30

HYTN Expands Exports of Cannabis Flowers to Australia, Canadian ... (Eminetra Canada)

Vancouver, British Columbia, March 30, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — HYTN Innovations Inc. (“”HYTN” or “society”) (CSE: HYTN) is the Promethean BioPharma brand ...

In addition, the impact and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is uncertain in its extent and duration at this time and is the impact on our business and general economic and business conditions and markets. Providing high quality cannabis flowers that meet is a prime example of our commitment to improving the cannabis experience. HYTN’s mission is to be a leading provider of consistent, natural and tasty cannabis products, focused on identifying categorical opportunities and revolutionizing the discerning customer base to provide an advanced cannabis experience. And working with the best producers on the planet, our foods and extracts. Promethean and TCann are very particular about working within the legal framework of the country in which we serve, and partners like HYTN understand and support this. Jason Blum, Chief Operating Officer, said: “As part of the procurement process, we were impressed with the quality and inconsistencies of the commonly available cannabis flowers, and as a result, focused on cultivators that maximized the potential of the elite phenotype and built relationships.

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Image courtesy of "Phys.Org"

Flowers' unseen colors can help ensure pollination, survival (Phys.Org)

You can't see it, but different substances in the petals of flowers create a "bulls-eye" for pollinating insects, according to a Clemson University ...

"One thing to think about is that we often don't know all the details of what colors are perceived by pollinators, and how that could be changing with the seasons. "I think one thing people think about is planting a diversity of flowers with different colors and morphologies to attract many different types of pollinators, like a pollinator-friendly garden," Koski said. The research could also be important for agriculture, he said, because some of the same UV-sensitive pigments at work in silverweed are also present in commercial crops such as mustard and sunflowers. "The process of evolution, where you're getting changes in the genetic code over time, is thought to proceed more slowly than just responding plastically to environmental change." Koski said that one question raised by the research is whether plastic responses to environmental situations are adaptive. They found that flowers at different altitudes adapt to their environments by producing differing amounts of UV-blocking or UV-absorbing chemicals.

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