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Root Growth And Development Of Float Tobacco Transplants Before And After Transplanting, L. V. Caruso, Robert C. Pearce, Lowell P. Bush Jan 2000

Root Growth And Development Of Float Tobacco Transplants Before And After Transplanting, L. V. Caruso, Robert C. Pearce, Lowell P. Bush

Agronomy Notes

In the production of float tobacco transplants, the seedling produces at least two different kinds of roots. The “media” roots are those that grow in the soilless medium within the float tray cell. They have a normal branched appearance similar to roots produced on soil-bed grown transplants. The “water” roots grow through the soilless medium in tray cells and into the nutrient solution below the float tray. They tend to be very fragile and less branched than roots growing in the soilless medium. In removal of seedlings from tray cells during transplanting, “water” roots are usually badly damaged or destroyed, …


Escherichia Coli Pathogen O157:H7 Does Not Survive Longer In Soil Than A Nonpathogenic Fecal Coliform, D. N. Mubiru, Mark S. Coyne, John H. Grove Jan 2000

Escherichia Coli Pathogen O157:H7 Does Not Survive Longer In Soil Than A Nonpathogenic Fecal Coliform, D. N. Mubiru, Mark S. Coyne, John H. Grove

Agronomy Notes

Survival rates for individual types of fecal organisms are quite different. Although some pathogens may persist as long as 5 years in soil, most fecal pathogens from human and animal waste usually die very quickly. Two to three months is sufficient in most cases to reduce pathogens to negligible numbers once they have been excreted or land-applied in animal wastes.

It is expensive and time- consuming to test for individual pathogens. Consequently, nonpathogenic fecal indicator bacteria, which are easily and inexpensively detected, are often used to study pathogen survival in soil and water. Current methods for rapidly detecting fecal indicator …


Trends In Alfalfa Production And The Beef And Dairy Industries In Kentucky During 1989-98, Dennis Hancock, Michael Collins Jan 2000

Trends In Alfalfa Production And The Beef And Dairy Industries In Kentucky During 1989-98, Dennis Hancock, Michael Collins

Agronomy Notes

On suitable soils, alfalfa produces the highest yield of nutrients possible from a perennial forage crop. However, high production costs and restrictive soil requirements have limited the production of alfalfa in Kentucky. High producing dairy cows respond well to premium quality forage, so alfalfa is a preferred forage crop in dairy production. Thus, alfalfa production is primarily contingent on the producer’s method of marketing the crop.


The Effect Of Drying Soil Samples On Soil Test Potassium Values, Kenneth L. Wells, James E. Dollarhide Jan 2000

The Effect Of Drying Soil Samples On Soil Test Potassium Values, Kenneth L. Wells, James E. Dollarhide

Agronomy Notes

Extreme temporal and spatial variability of soil test potassium values (STK) was measured on small plots (12-ft x 40-ft) being used for a STK correlation and calibration study on a Crider soil in Larue County, Kentucky. Twelve periodic samplings of the 20 small plots in this study over a period of 18 months showed as much as two-fold temporal differences in STK within individual plots, many of which had received no potassium (K) fertilizer during the study. Spatial variability of STK also varied as much as two-fold among the individual small plots at any given sampling time for similar treatments. …


Comparison Of Weed Management Strategies With Roundup Ready® Corn, J. A. Ferrell, William W. Witt Jan 2000

Comparison Of Weed Management Strategies With Roundup Ready® Corn, J. A. Ferrell, William W. Witt

Agronomy Notes

Corn weed management during the past several years in Kentucky has centered around two herbicide families, the chloroacetamides (Dual, Frontier, Harness, Micro-Tech, Surpass) and the s-triazines (AAtrex, Bladex, Princep). These products have been used widely because they offer acceptable, full season control of many common warm season annual weeds at a reasonable price. This combination has been so popular that several premixtures that contain these types of herbicides (Bicep II, Bullet, Guardsman, Harness Xtra, Surpass 100, FulTime) are used commonly used in Kentucky. The key to this efficacious and economic program is atrazine because it controls most annual broadleaf …


Small Scale Temporal And Spatial Variability Of Potassium Soil Test Values On A Crider Soil, Kenneth L. Wells, James E. Dollarhide, Frank J. Sikora Jan 2000

Small Scale Temporal And Spatial Variability Of Potassium Soil Test Values On A Crider Soil, Kenneth L. Wells, James E. Dollarhide, Frank J. Sikora

Agronomy Notes

An on-farm, small plot study conducted in 1996, on a Crider soil in Larue County, Kentucky, resulted in unanticipated wide variability of soil test potassium (STK) values between spring and fall sampling. Because of this, the small plots were sampled monthly over a period of time with the objective of determining if such variability in STK values was real.