A master’s thesis in the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Engineering at the College of Agriculture at the University of Karbala discussed the response of two varieties of pomegranate (punica granatum) to some natural and chemical radicals.

The Department of Horticulture and Landscape Engineering at the College of Agriculture at the University of Karbala discussed a master’s thesis entitled Response of two varieties of pomegranate (punica granatum) to some natural and chemical radicals. The thesis also included the title Response of two varieties of pomegranate (punica granatum) to some natural and chemical radicals by the student Sajjad Majid Amin. Mahdi, which included three chapters: the introduction, review of references, materials, work methods, results, and discussion, headed by Dr. Suzan Muhammad Khudair and membership of Dr. Makki Numan Nayef.
Dr. Harith Mahmoud Aziz, under the supervision of Dr. Kazem Muhammad Abdullah, and in the presence of professors of the College of Agriculture, graduate students, and distinguished researchers. The thesis aimed to determine the best treatment of natural and artificial roots in improving the characteristics of vegetative and root growth. And knowing the best variety in responding to natural and artificial roots in improving rooting, as well as identifying the best binary interactions between the variety and the combination of roots in improving the characteristics of vegetative and root growth and chemical content.