| Images of Sesbania | |
|---|---|
| Note: The following cover crop images are part of an extensive collection of cover crop photographs maintained the UC SAREP staff. The images have not been completely categorized and labeled. Some will be included in a book on cover crops due out in 1997, but all images have been made available online because of the overwhelming number of requests we have had for them. | |
| Sesbania root nodules reveal red color, indicating leghemoglobin. Davis, Yolo Co., CA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Sesbania nodules show red internal color, indicating leghemoglobin. Davis, Yolo Co., CA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Cowpea aphid on sesbania, Tifton, GA. Photo by Tom Girardeau. |
| Root nodules on sesbania, cut open to reveal red color indicating leghemoglobin. Davis, Yolo Co., CA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Dissected root nodules of sesbania show red color, indicating leghemoglobin. Davis, Yolo Co., CA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Banded-winged whitefly, Trialeurodes abutilonea, commonly infests sesbania in southern Georgia. Tifton, GA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Sesbania sustains cowpea aphid, which in turn sustains predators, like this hover fly larva. Tifton, GA, photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Cowpea aphid (Aphis craccivora) commonly infests Sesbania exaltata in Georgia. Tifton, GA. Photo by Tom Girardeau. |
| Sesbania exaltata is a warm-season annual legume. Tifton, GA. Photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Sesbania exaltata root nodules show the rich pink color indicating leghemoglobin and the probably symbiotic fixation of atmospheric oxygen. Davis, CA. Photo by Bob Bugg. |
| Sesbania exaltata root nodules show the rich pink color indicating leghemoglobin and the probably symbiotic fixation of atmospheric oxygen. Davis, CA. Photo by Bob Bugg. |
Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program | |

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