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Comparison Of Canopy Temperature-Based Water Stress Indices Formaize, Kendall C. Dejonge, Saleh Taghvaeian, Thomas J. Trout, Lousie H. Thomas Jan 2015

Comparison Of Canopy Temperature-Based Water Stress Indices Formaize, Kendall C. Dejonge, Saleh Taghvaeian, Thomas J. Trout, Lousie H. Thomas

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Infrared thermal radiometers (IRTs) are an affordable tool for researchers to monitor canopy tempera-ture. In this maize experiment, six treatments of regulated deficit irrigation levels were evaluated. Themain objective was to evaluate these six treatments in terms of six indices (three previously proposedand three introduced in this study) used to quantify water stress. Three are point-in-time indices whereone daily reading is assumed representative of the day (Crop Water Stress Index – CWSI, Degrees AboveNon-Stressed – DANS, Degrees Above Canopy Threshold – DACT) and three integrate the cumulativeimpact of water stress over time (Time Temperature Threshold – TTT, Integrated Degrees Above …


Fitness Costs Of Resistance To Cry3bb1 Maize By Western Corn Rootworm, A M. Hoffmann, B W. French, R L. Hellmich, N Lauter, A J. Gassmann Jan 2015

Fitness Costs Of Resistance To Cry3bb1 Maize By Western Corn Rootworm, A M. Hoffmann, B W. French, R L. Hellmich, N Lauter, A J. Gassmann

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Crops producing toxins derived from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) are widely planted to manage insect pests including western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), which is a significant pest of maize in the United States and Europe. However, the widespread use of Bt maize places intense selection pressure on pest populations to evolve resistance, and field-evolved resistance to Bt maize by western corn rootworm has been documented in the United States. In conjunction with non-Bt refuges, fitness costs of Bt resistance can delay resistance evolution. Fitness costs arise in the absence of Bt toxin when individuals with …


Clonal Integration In Ludwigia Hexapetala Under Different Light Regimes, Rachael Glover, Rebecca E. Drenovsky, Caryn J. Futrell, Brenda J. Grewell Jan 2015

Clonal Integration In Ludwigia Hexapetala Under Different Light Regimes, Rachael Glover, Rebecca E. Drenovsky, Caryn J. Futrell, Brenda J. Grewell

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Physiological integration among ramets of invasive plant species may support their colonization and spread in novel aquatic environments where growth-limiting resources are spatially heterogeneous. Under contrasting light conditions, we investigated how clonal integration influences growth, biomass allocation and morphology of Ludwigia hexapetala, an emergent floating-leaved macrophyte that is highly invasive in a range of wetland habitat types. In aquatic mesocosms, stolons of offspring ramets were either connected or severed from parent plants, with the pairs exposed to homogenous or heterogeneous combinations of sun or 85% shade. Morphological traits of all ramets were strongly influenced by light environment, and low light …


The Importance Of Olfactory And Visual Cues In Developing Better Monitoring Tools For Sirex Noctilio (Hymenoptera: Siricidae), Mark A. Sarvary, Miriam F. Cooperband, Ann E. Hajek Jan 2015

The Importance Of Olfactory And Visual Cues In Developing Better Monitoring Tools For Sirex Noctilio (Hymenoptera: Siricidae), Mark A. Sarvary, Miriam F. Cooperband, Ann E. Hajek

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

1. To improve the monitoring of the invasive European woodwasp, both sexes of Sirex noctilio were studied in a walk-in wind tunnel.We evaluated three trap types: unbaited traps, traps baited with a three-component pheromone lure and traps baited with a commercial Sirex kairomone lure and ultraviolet light.

2. When no lure was present, the black intercept trap caught more females than the clear jar trap. The increase in pheromone concentration from 0.1 to 1mg increased the capture of females, and not males, in the black intercept panel trap. Both of these findings suggest that the visual cues provided by the …


Nutrient Composition Of Selected Traditional United States Northern Plains Native American Plant Foods, Katherine M. Phillips, Pamela R. Pehrsson, Wanda W. Agnew, Angela J. Scheett, Jennifer R. Follett, Henry C. Lukaski, Kristine Y. Patterson Jan 2014

Nutrient Composition Of Selected Traditional United States Northern Plains Native American Plant Foods, Katherine M. Phillips, Pamela R. Pehrsson, Wanda W. Agnew, Angela J. Scheett, Jennifer R. Follett, Henry C. Lukaski, Kristine Y. Patterson

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Ten wild plants (cattail broad leaf shoots, chokecherries, beaked hazelnuts, lambsquarters, plains prickly pear, prairie turnips, stinging nettles, wild plums, raspberries, and rose hips) from three Native American reservations in North Dakota were analyzed to expand composition information of traditional foraged plants. Proximates, dietary fiber (DF), vitamins, minerals, carotenoids, and folate vitamers were assayed using standard methods and reference materials. Per serving, all were rich in Mn (100–2808 mg). Several provided >10% DRI of Fe (cattail shoots, steamed lambsquarters, and prairie turnips), Ca (steamed lambsquarters, prickly pear, and prairie turnips), Mg (cattail shoots, lambsquarters, prickly pear, and prairie turnips), vitamins …


Larval Mortality And Development For Rotation-Resistant And Rotation-Susceptible Populations Of Western Corn Rootworm On Bt Corn, N A. Tinsley, J L. Spencer, R E. Estes, J. R. Prasifka, P M. Schrader, B. W. French, M E. Gray Jan 2014

Larval Mortality And Development For Rotation-Resistant And Rotation-Susceptible Populations Of Western Corn Rootworm On Bt Corn, N A. Tinsley, J L. Spencer, R E. Estes, J. R. Prasifka, P M. Schrader, B. W. French, M E. Gray

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

The western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte, is one of the most economically important insect pests threatening the production of corn, Zea mays (L.), in the United States. Throughout its history, this insect has displayed considerable adaptability by overcoming a variety of pest management tactics, including the cultural practice of annual crop rotation. Since first reported in Illinois in the late 1980s, populations of the rotation-resistant western corn rootworm have spread over a wide area of the eastern Corn Belt. Currently, little information is available concerning the interaction of rotation resistance with the use of genetically modified corn expressing …


Effects Of Including Saponins (Micro-Aid®) On Intake, Rumenfermentation And Digestibility In Steers Fed Low-Qualityprairie Hay, C P. Mcmurphy, A J. Sexten, G L. Mourer, E D. Sharman, S J. Trojan, M J. Rincker, W K. Coblentz, D L. Lalman Jan 2014

Effects Of Including Saponins (Micro-Aid®) On Intake, Rumenfermentation And Digestibility In Steers Fed Low-Qualityprairie Hay, C P. Mcmurphy, A J. Sexten, G L. Mourer, E D. Sharman, S J. Trojan, M J. Rincker, W K. Coblentz, D L. Lalman

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Sixteen ruminally cannulated crossbred steers (529 ± 45 kg initial body weight, BW) wereused to evaluate in situ dry matter (DM), neutral detergent fiber (aNDF), and N degrada-tion characteristics of low-quality prairie hay, blood urea-N (BUN) and rumen fermentationparameters in steers provided a protein supplement with or without Micro-Aid®(MA; plantderived saponin). Steers were allowed ad libitum access to chopped prairie hay (49 g crudeprotein (CP)/kg DM and 738 g aNDF/kg DM) and randomly assigned to one of four treat-ments: (1) no supplement (C), (2) cottonseed meal and wheat middlings: 920 g DM/d (PC;positive control), (3) MA added to PC to …