Navigation boxes
This section is used to demonstrate how the content relation engine can be utilized in oder to create a kind of additional local navigation based on categories.
All the contents are assigned to a single category and at each page, there is a list box displayed linking to all other contents of the same category.
Composite Plants
Recent news
Transportationbag for Christmastrees
Dec 10, 2010

Since this season, carrying bags for christmas trees are available.
The advantage of these bags is clear. Well stored trees cannot soil cars, clothes and houses. But this bag is also useful for a needle-free removement of the tree. The manufacturer offers also the possibility to print advertisements on the bags- this can ba a good campaign for the christmastree vendors.
Dahlia
Dahlia is a genus of bushy, tuberous, perennial plants native to Mexico, Central America, and Colombia.
There are at least 36 species of Dahlia. Dahlia hybrids are commonly grown as garden plants. The Aztecs gathered and cultivated the dahlia for food, ceremony, as well as decorative purposes, and the long woody stem of one variety was used for small pipes.
In 1872 a box of Dahlia roots were sent from Mexico to the Netherlands. Only one plant survived the trip, but produced spectacular red flowers with pointed petals. Nurserymen in Europe bred from this plant, which was named Dahlia juarezii with parents of Dahlias discovered earlier and these are the progenitors of all modern Dahlia hybrids. Ever since, plant breeders have been breeding Dahlias to produce thousands of cultivars, usually chosen for their stunning and brightly coloured flowers. Dahlia plants range in height from as low as 12" (30cm) to as tall as 6-8 feet (180-240cm). The flowers can be as small as 2" (5 cm) in diameter or up to a foot (30 cm) "dinner plate". The great variety results from Dahlias being octoploids (they have eight sets of homologous chromosomes, whereas most plants have only two).
Dahlias are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Angle Shades, Common Swift, Ghost Moth and Large Yellow Underwing.
The dahlia is named after Swedish 18th-century botanist Anders Dahl. In Germany they were known as georgines until recently. They were named by the botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow after the naturalist Johann Gottlieb Georgi of St. Petersburg, Russia.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Dahlia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.