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Fiber Crop
(redirected from plant fibre)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Fiber Crop 

a plant raised for fiber. Fiber crops include annual and perennial species of different botanical families. The fiber may be obtained from the seeds (cotton), the fruit (Ceiba pentandrd), the stalks (bast plants), or the leaves (agave and New Zealand flax). In world agriculture, cotton, jute, hemp, flax, and kenaf occupy the greatest areas; in the USSR cotton, flax, and hemp are the most important fiber crops. The fibers are used by the textile industry.



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The Bare[TM] Bagasse range comprises three square plates and a bowl made from Bagasse, the plant fibre waste which remains after sugarcane has been processed to extract sugar.
Camira developed STING after four years of research into cultivating nettles, extracting and processing the plant fibre, blending, weaving and dyeing and evaluating how the finished fabric performs.
Seagrass, sisal, coir and allied fibres are natural plant fibres that are 100-per-cent biodegradable and recyclable.
 
 
 
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