Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
SF538.5.A37 W56 1992 | Killer bees : the Africanized honey bee in the Americas / | 1 |
SF538.5.C65 B36 2009 | A world without bees / | 1 |
SF538.5.C65K54 2016 | Vanishing Bees : Science, Politics, and Honeybee Health. | 1 |
SF538.5.C65 M67 2014 PAL | More than honey / | 1 |
SF538.5.C65 M67 2014x | More than honey / | 1 |
SF538.5.C65 S77 2015 | The strange disappearance of the bees / | 2 |
SF538.5.P65 | Pesticide risk assessment for pollinators / | 2 |
SF538.5.V37 | European research on varroatosis control / | 1 |
SF539 | Bee products : chemical and biological properties / | 1 |
SF541 .A54 |
Journal of the American Silk Society, and rural economist. American silk grower and farmer's manual. |
2 |
SF541 .B87 | Burlington silk record. | 1 |
SF542 .G25 2003 | Comprehensive sericulture / | 1 |
SF542 (INTERNET) |
Virgo triumphans, or, Virginia in generall, but the south part therof in particular including the fertile Carolana, and the no lesse excellent island of Roanoak, richly and experimentally valued : humbly presented as the auspice of a beginning yeare, to the Parliament of England, and councell of state / Virginia's discovery of silke-vvorms, with their benefit and the implanting of mulberry trees : also the dressing and keeping of vines, for the rich trade of making wines there : together with the making of the saw-mill, very usefull in Virginia, for cutting of timber and clapbord, to build with-all, and its conversion to other as profitable uses. |
2 |
SF542 .P36 1988 | Silkworm rearing / | 1 |
SF542 .W26 1989 | Silkworm egg production : volume III / | 1 |
SF542.7 |
Silkworm biofactory : silk to biology / Methods in silkworm microbiology |
2 |
SF542.7 .S81 1995 | Control over reproduction, sex, and heterosis of the silkworm / | 1 |
SF545 .C67 | Silkworms and science : the story of silk / | 1 |
SF545 .H37 1830i | Mr. Harper's report to the legislature of the state of New-Hampshire on the culture of silk | 1 |
SF547 .H33 | The reformed Virginian silk-worm or, A rare and new discovery of a speedy way, and easie means, found out by a young lady in England, she having made full proof thereof in May, anno 1652. For the feeding of silk-worms in the woods, on the mulberry-tree-leaves in Virginia ... And also to the good hopes, that the Indians, seeing and finding that there is neither art, skill, or pains in the thing: they will readily set upon it, being by the benefit thereof inabled to buy of the English (in way of truck for their silk-bottoms) all those things that they most desire. | 1 |