Horticultural in a sentence as an adjective

Lettuce with state of the art horticultural leds probably can be grown optimally with as little as 10 watts per square foot.

Stopping say thrips or aphids eating a horticultural crop somehow removes a species, which then usually has a chain effect?

An area I'd suggest looking at is the agricultural/horticultural sector.

Using a scientific horticultural definition it is not.

They are a horticultural variety that was produced through traditional breeding practices to increase the sugar content, reduce tartness, and add the hint of vanilla flavor.

Slightly tangential, but I want to point out that there's a way forward without pesticides and without economic disaster: We can switch to a "horticultural" mode of civilization.

In its non-horticultural sense, "graft" is a particularly tricky word, because it's familiar to most native English speakers, but can mean almost opposing things in England and America.

Depends what you visualise as urban, I'd expect that small and medium towns surrounded by agricultural and horticultural production that serve the town, and large enough to have public transport links are most efficient.

One additional benefit of taking a camera to a horticultural garden is that you can photograph plant tags to record botanical information about the cultivars on display.

Again, from the article:"As Latin scholar Maria S. Marsilio points out, “carpe diem” is a horticultural metaphor that, particularly seen in the context of the poem, is more accurately translated as “plucking the day,” evoking the plucking and gathering of ripening fruits or flowers, enjoying a moment that is rooted in the sensory experience of nature.

Horticultural definitions

adjective

of or relating to the cultivation of plants