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Agricultural Science

2010

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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Arkansas Soybean Performance Tests 2010, R. D. Bond, D. G. Dombek, J. A. Still, R. M. Pryor Dec 2010

Arkansas Soybean Performance Tests 2010, R. D. Bond, D. G. Dombek, J. A. Still, R. M. Pryor

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

Soybean variety and strain performance tests are conducted each year in Arkansas by the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Arkansas Crop Variety Improvement Program.


A Characterization Of Maine Blueberry Growers In 2010, Anya Rose Dec 2010

A Characterization Of Maine Blueberry Growers In 2010, Anya Rose

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

A survey was sent to 343 lowbush blueberry growers in Maine with a response rate of 29%. Growers were asked questions about their management practices, pesticide use, priorities, decision-making influences, and beliefs about pesticide safety. Respondents categorized themselves into one of four categories: Integrated Pest Management (IPM), Conventional, Organic, and No-Spray. Analyses were conducted to examine factors that were linked to these four categories. A major goal of this study was to determine differences and similarities between growers of different management styles, and to define each category by the practices and beliefs of its members. Toxicity ratings were also calculated …


Farmers' Markets In Kentucky: A Geospatial, Statistical, And Cultural Analysis, Elizabeth Ann Schmitz Dec 2010

Farmers' Markets In Kentucky: A Geospatial, Statistical, And Cultural Analysis, Elizabeth Ann Schmitz

Masters Theses & Specialist Projects

To assess what factors are driving the exponential growth of farmers’ markets in Kentucky, geospatial and statistical analysis of a database of 121 farmers’ markets was conducted. A statewide survey of market leaders and a case study of a single farmers’ market both identified reasons for growing support of farmers’ markets in Kentucky.

Market distribution, vendor levels, and gross sales were mapped against a backdrop of county urban classification, median household income, and education levels. Kruskal-Wallace analysis was used to identify if Kentucky’s rural, micropolitan, and metropolitan markets differ significantly in terms of their age, number of vendors, and market …


Selecting And Propagating Clones Of Bigtooth Maple (Acer Grandidentatum Nutt.), Melody Reed Richards Dec 2010

Selecting And Propagating Clones Of Bigtooth Maple (Acer Grandidentatum Nutt.), Melody Reed Richards

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

Numerous wild bigtooth maple (Acer grandidentatum Nutt.) specimens in northern Utah have potential for use in landscapes, but improvements in selection and propagation need to be developed before these specimens can be introduced to the green industry. Criteria-based evaluations centered on aesthetics, function, and fall color were performed to objectively select superior bigtooth maple specimens. Out of 56 trees initially selected for red fall color, six were selected for propagation based on all three criteria. Five of the six selected trees yielded viable bud take via chip budding. Optimum time for chip budding propagation was determined by four experiments. …


Enhancing Out-Of-Season Production Of Tomatoes And Lettuce Using High Tunnels, Britney L. Hunter Dec 2010

Enhancing Out-Of-Season Production Of Tomatoes And Lettuce Using High Tunnels, Britney L. Hunter

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

The growing season for vegetable crops is limited by freezing temperatures in arid high elevation climates such as northern Utah. Logan, Utah (41.73 N, 111.83 W, 1382 m elevation) has a short, variable growing season with an average frost-free period of 135 days. Extending the growing season provides growers with an opportunity to extend revenue into a normally unproductive period and benefit from out-of-season price premiums. High tunnels have been used to effectively extend the growing season for numerous crops by providing cold temperature protection. However, limited high tunnel research has been performed in arid high elevation regions that experience …


Effect Of Mica Content On Surface Infiltration Of Soils In Northwestern Kern County, California, Steven Keyes Stakland Dec 2010

Effect Of Mica Content On Surface Infiltration Of Soils In Northwestern Kern County, California, Steven Keyes Stakland

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

A soils infiltration rate (IR) is the measured rate that soil is able to absorb water, either from precipitation or irrigation. A low IR can cause damage to crops if the necessary amount of water cannot penetrate to the plant roots in the time needed. The damage can be common in permanent plantings such as almond and pistachio orchards where regular tillage is avoided. This indicates a physical aspect to the problem because tillage increases IR. However, there is also an electrochemical side to infiltration problems because certain calcium surfactant treatments can increase IR. Various other methods have been used …


Control Of Glyphosate Resistant Horseweed (Conyza Canadensis) With Saflufenacil And Tank-Mixture Partners., Brock Steven Waggoner Dec 2010

Control Of Glyphosate Resistant Horseweed (Conyza Canadensis) With Saflufenacil And Tank-Mixture Partners., Brock Steven Waggoner

Masters Theses

Field and labratory studies were conducted to determine the efficacy of saflufenacil alone and with mixture partners for burndown. Field studies were conducted in 2009 and 2010 to evaluate saflufenacil in mixtures with glyphosate, glufosinate, or paraquat for control of glyphosate-resistant (GR) horseweed prior to planting cotton. Saflufenacil and saflufenacil mixtures were applied 7 days before planting (DBP). Saflufenacil at 25 and 50 g ai ha-1 in mixture with all three non-selective herbicides provided similar GR horseweed control when compared to the current standard of glyphosate plus dicamba. Control of GR horseweed was also not different at the 25 and …


Estimating Maize Grain Yield From Crop Biophysical Parameters Using Remote Sensing, Noemi Guindin-Garcia Dec 2010

Estimating Maize Grain Yield From Crop Biophysical Parameters Using Remote Sensing, Noemi Guindin-Garcia

Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

The overall objective of this investigation was to develop a robust technique to predict maize (Zea mays L.) grain yield that could be applied at a regional level using remote sensing with or without a simple crop growth simulation model. This study evaluated capabilities and limitations of the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Vegetation Index 250-m and MODIS surface reflectance 500-m products to track and retrieve information over maize fields. Results demonstrated the feasibility of using MODIS data to estimate maize green leaf area index (LAIg). Estimates of maize LAIg obtained from Wide Dynamic Range Vegetation …


Arkansas Corn And Grain Sorghum Performance Tests 2010, R. D. Bond, D. G. Dombek, J. A. Still, R. M. Pryor Nov 2010

Arkansas Corn And Grain Sorghum Performance Tests 2010, R. D. Bond, D. G. Dombek, J. A. Still, R. M. Pryor

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

Corn and grain sorghum performance tests are conducted each year in Arkansas by the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture. The tests provide information to companies marketing seed within the state and aid the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service in formulating recommendations for producers.


Dryland Soil Carbon And Nitrogen Influenced By Sheep Grazing In The Wheat–Fallow System, Upendra M. Sainju, Andrew W. Lenssen, Hayes B. Goosey, Erin Snyder, Patrick G. Hatfield Nov 2010

Dryland Soil Carbon And Nitrogen Influenced By Sheep Grazing In The Wheat–Fallow System, Upendra M. Sainju, Andrew W. Lenssen, Hayes B. Goosey, Erin Snyder, Patrick G. Hatfield

Andrew W. Lenssen

Sheep (Ovis aries) grazing during fallow for weed control in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)–fallow systems may influence soil C and N levels and grain yields by returning part of consumed crop residue to the soil through feces and urine. We evaluated the effects of fallow management (sheep grazing [grazing], herbicide application [chemical], and tillage [mechanical]) for weed control and soil water conservation and cropping sequence (continuous spring wheat [CSW], spring wheat–fallow [SW-F], and winter wheat–fallow [WW-F]) on soil organic carbon (SOC), inorganic carbon (SIC), total nitrogen (STN), NH4–N, and NO3–N levels at the 0- to 120-cm depth and wheat yield. …


Soybean Seed Protein, Oil, Fatty Acids, And Mineral Composition As Influenced By Soybean-Corn Rotation, N. Bellaloui, H. A. Bruns, A. M. Gillen, H. K. Abbas, R. M. Zablotowicz, Robert L. Paris Nov 2010

Soybean Seed Protein, Oil, Fatty Acids, And Mineral Composition As Influenced By Soybean-Corn Rotation, N. Bellaloui, H. A. Bruns, A. M. Gillen, H. K. Abbas, R. M. Zablotowicz, Robert L. Paris

Science and Mathematics Faculty Publications

Effects of crop rotation on soybean (Glycine max (L) Merr.) seed composition have not been well investigated. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate the effects of soybean-corn (Zea mays L.) rotations on seed protein, oil, and fatty acids composition on soybean. Soybeans were grown at Stoneville, MS, from 2005 to 2008 in five different scheduled cropping sequences. In 2007, following three years of rotation with corn, seed oleic acid percentage was significantly higher in any crop rotation than continuous soybean. The increase of oleic fatty acid ranged from 61 to 68% in 2007, and from 27 to …


Genetic Diversity Of Selected Sea Oats (Uniola Paniculata L.) Lines Using Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (Aflp), Sarah E. Bertrand Nov 2010

Genetic Diversity Of Selected Sea Oats (Uniola Paniculata L.) Lines Using Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (Aflp), Sarah E. Bertrand

Honors Theses

No abstract provided.


Arkansas Wheat Cultivar Performance Tests 2009-2010, J. T. Kelly, R. G. Miller, R. D. Bond, E. A. Milus, R. K. Bacon Oct 2010

Arkansas Wheat Cultivar Performance Tests 2009-2010, J. T. Kelly, R. G. Miller, R. D. Bond, E. A. Milus, R. K. Bacon

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

Wheat cultivar performance tests are conducted each year in Arkansas by the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Department of Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences. The tests provide information to companies developing cultivars and/or marketing seed within the state and aid the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service in formulating cultivar recommendations for small-grain producers.


Guano Exploitation In Madagascar, Christina Buliga Oct 2010

Guano Exploitation In Madagascar, Christina Buliga

Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection

Agriculture in Madagascar continues to remain largely undeveloped. Out of the eighty percent of Malagasy individuals that live in rural areas an overwhelming sixty five percent practice subsistence agriculture. With respect to the country as a whole this means that out of Madagascar's 58.2 million hectares of available land only 5.2 percent (3 million hectares) are farmed. And out of these 3 million hectares only 67% are cultivated permanently and only 11% are fertilized.

While there are several reasons for why Madagascar’s agriculture has remained largely undeveloped and for why Madagascar continues to rely on imported crops to meet its …


Intsormil-Centa Generan Nuevas Variedades De Sorgo Para Grano Y Forraje Tipo “Bmr”, René Clará Valencia Sep 2010

Intsormil-Centa Generan Nuevas Variedades De Sorgo Para Grano Y Forraje Tipo “Bmr”, René Clará Valencia

INTSORMIL Impacts and Bulletins

Científicos del proyecto INTSORMIL-CENTA con base en el Centro Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria y Forestal (CENTA) de El Salvador, han trabajado cinco años para formar variedades de sorgo para grano y forraje de libre polinización que puedan ser mas nutritivas a los animales bovinos. En este sentido se ha incorporado el gen “bmr-12”, enviado por el Dr. Gebisa Ejeta de la Universidad de Purdue, U.S.A., a las variedades comerciales CENTA S-2, CENTA S-3, CENTA RCV y VG 146, al mismo tiempo se han formado nuevas variedades con este mismo gen. El la primera generación, se obtuvieron 76 nuevas …


Susceptibility Of Isofamilies Of Spodoptera Frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) To Cry1ac And Cry1fa Proteins Of Bacillus Thuringiensis, Carlos A. Blanco, Maribel Portilla, Juan Luis Jurat-Fuentes, Jaime F. Sanchez, Diego Viteri, Paulina Vega-Aquino, Antonio P. Teran-Vargas, Ausencio Azuara-Dominguez, Juan D. Lopez Jr., R. S. Arias, Yu-Cheng Zhu, David Lugo-Barreras, Ryan Jackson Sep 2010

Susceptibility Of Isofamilies Of Spodoptera Frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) To Cry1ac And Cry1fa Proteins Of Bacillus Thuringiensis, Carlos A. Blanco, Maribel Portilla, Juan Luis Jurat-Fuentes, Jaime F. Sanchez, Diego Viteri, Paulina Vega-Aquino, Antonio P. Teran-Vargas, Ausencio Azuara-Dominguez, Juan D. Lopez Jr., R. S. Arias, Yu-Cheng Zhu, David Lugo-Barreras, Ryan Jackson

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

The fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith), is one of the most important insect pests on the American continent. Its control has relied primarily on multiple applications of insecticides that can amount to 1,000 g of active ingredient per hectare on some of approximately 30 crops the insect damages. The use of genetically engineered crops that express Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Berliner toxins, Bt-corn, Zea mays L.; and Bt-cotton, Gossypium hirsutum L.; are other ways to control this insect. However, fall armyworm is one of the Lepidoptera species least susceptible to Bt proteins, and a case of high tolerance to …


Summaries Of Arkansas Cotton Research 2009, Derrick M. Oosterhuis Sep 2010

Summaries Of Arkansas Cotton Research 2009, Derrick M. Oosterhuis

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

No abstract provided.


B. R. Wells Rice Research Studies 2009, R. J. Norman, K. A. K. Moldenhauer Aug 2010

B. R. Wells Rice Research Studies 2009, R. J. Norman, K. A. K. Moldenhauer

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

No abstract provided.


Volume 7, Number 2 (Spring/Summer 2010), Ut Institute Of Agriculture Jul 2010

Volume 7, Number 2 (Spring/Summer 2010), Ut Institute Of Agriculture

Tennessee Land, Life and Science Magazine

Issue Highlights:

  • Celebrating UT Extension and 4-H's Centennial
  • A Veterinarian Alum Blogs on His Life, Work
  • Workshops and Tours Promote Direct Farm Marketing


Soybean Diseases: A Pictorial Guide For South Dakota, Lawrence E. Osborne, Darrel Deneke Jul 2010

Soybean Diseases: A Pictorial Guide For South Dakota, Lawrence E. Osborne, Darrel Deneke

SDSU Extension Circulars

This publication was assembled to provide growers and crop managers in South Dakota and nearby states with easy-to-use and handy diagnostic information for a number of major or potentially problematic soybean diseases. It is intended to provide a starting point for management decisions.


Yield, Quality, And Water And Nitrogen Use Of Durum And Annual Forages In Two-Year Rotations, Andrew W. Lenssen, S. D. Cash, P. G. Hatfield, Upendra M. Sainju, W. R. Grey, Sue L. Blodgett, H. B. Goosey, D. A. Griffith, G. D. Johnson Jul 2010

Yield, Quality, And Water And Nitrogen Use Of Durum And Annual Forages In Two-Year Rotations, Andrew W. Lenssen, S. D. Cash, P. G. Hatfield, Upendra M. Sainju, W. R. Grey, Sue L. Blodgett, H. B. Goosey, D. A. Griffith, G. D. Johnson

Andrew W. Lenssen

Annual spring-seeded forage crops use less water than cereal grains, including durum (Triticum turgidum L. var. durum), and may be suitable to replace summer fallow. We conducted an experiment from 2002 through 2006 comparing yield, quality, and water and N use of durum and three annual forages, barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), barley interseeded with pea [Pisum sativum L. ssp. arvense (L.) Poir.], and foxtail millet [Setaria italica (L.) Beauv.] in 2-yr rotations. Durum in rotation with summer fallow and alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) were included. Averaged over 5 yr, alfalfa had higher forage yield and quality, water use, and N …


Growing Biserrula To Improve Grain And Livestock Production, Angelo Loi, Natalie Hogg, Clinton Revell, Diana Fedorenko Jul 2010

Growing Biserrula To Improve Grain And Livestock Production, Angelo Loi, Natalie Hogg, Clinton Revell, Diana Fedorenko

Bulletins 4000 -

Biserrula pelecinus is a new genus of pasture legume which was developed for commercial agriculture by a team of Perth-based legume pasture scientists in the early 1990s. Biserrula is an annual pasture legume that is found in natural grasslands of the Mediterranean Basin, frequently on acidic soils derived from granite. It was this feature that first caught the eye of researchers who were attempting to develop species that could tolerate the soil stresses of acidity and low moisture-holding capacity. These stresses are common in WA and when they occur together they are problematical for the survival of annual medics and …


Following Tetraploidy In Maize, A Short Deletion Mechanism Removed Genes Preferentially From One Of The Two Homeologs, Margaret R. Woodhouse, James C. Schnable, Brent S. Pedersen, Eric Lyons, Damon Lisch, Shabarinath Subramaniam, Michael Freeling Jun 2010

Following Tetraploidy In Maize, A Short Deletion Mechanism Removed Genes Preferentially From One Of The Two Homeologs, Margaret R. Woodhouse, James C. Schnable, Brent S. Pedersen, Eric Lyons, Damon Lisch, Shabarinath Subramaniam, Michael Freeling

Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications

Previous work in Arabidopsis showed that after an ancient tetraploidy event, genes were preferentially removed from one of the two homeologs, a process known as fractionation. The mechanism of fractionation is unknown. We sought to determine whether such preferential, or biased, fractionation exists in maize and, if so, whether a specific mechanism could be implicated in this process. We studied the process of fractionation using two recently sequenced grass species: sorghum and maize. The maize lineage has experienced a tetraploidy since its divergence from sorghum approximately 12 million years ago, and fragments of many knocked-out genes retain enough sequence similarity …


Capacitan A Panificadores Para Utilizar Sorgo, Roxana Ortiz Jun 2010

Capacitan A Panificadores Para Utilizar Sorgo, Roxana Ortiz

INTSORMIL Impacts and Bulletins

Cerca de 300 pequeños empresarios del pan serán capacitados sobre elaboración de harina de sorgo, usos en preparación de alimentos y bebidas étnicas por el Centro Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria y Forestal (CENTA) Enrique Álvarez Córdova, a través del Laboratorio de Tecnología y Alimentos.


Poisonous Rangeland Plants In San Luis Obispo County, Sara Litten, Amanda Ou Jun 2010

Poisonous Rangeland Plants In San Luis Obispo County, Sara Litten, Amanda Ou

Animal Science

Poisonous Rangeland Plants in San Luis Obispo County is a comprehensive educational guide to rangeland plants that are toxic to domestic livestock. This guide begins with an exploration of how the biological systems are affected by the poisonous plant toxins. The biochemistry behind these toxins is included in the discussion. Next, reference material for fourteen plants that inhabit San Luis Obispo County is provided. This information includes specific toxins found in poisonous plants, affected animals, symptoms of poisoning, stages of growth, lethal dose, and distribution of the plant in California. This section of the guide is filled with helpful photos …


Good Agricultural Practices For Food Safety Of Fresh Produce, Laurie Hodges Jun 2010

Good Agricultural Practices For Food Safety Of Fresh Produce, Laurie Hodges

Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications

What are the guiding principles of food safety for fresh produce?

• Once contaminated, removing or killing pathogens on produce is very difficult.

• Preventing microbial contamination at all steps, from production to distribution, is strongly favored over treatments to eliminate contamination that may have occurred.

• Document the implementation of prevention programs, and educate workers at all levels of the agricultural and packing environments on food safety.

Key Signatures of a Credible Food Safety Program

The following is a condensed checklist of practices and conditions that reduce the potential for fresh produce to be exposed to pathogenic microbes. Review …


Direct Polymerase Chain Reaction-Based Detection Of Cercospora Beticola In Field Soils, R. T. Lartey, T.C. Caesar-Tonthat, Andrew W. Lenssen, J. Eckhoff, S. L. Hanson, R. G. Evans May 2010

Direct Polymerase Chain Reaction-Based Detection Of Cercospora Beticola In Field Soils, R. T. Lartey, T.C. Caesar-Tonthat, Andrew W. Lenssen, J. Eckhoff, S. L. Hanson, R. G. Evans

Andrew W. Lenssen

Cercospora beticola, the causal agent of Cercospora leaf spot of sugar beet, survives as pseudostromata in infected sugar beet residues in the soil. Under optimal conditions, overwintering propagules germinate and produce conidia that are dispersed as primary inoculum to initiate infection in sugar beet. We developed a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique for rapid detection of C. beticola in field soils. Total DNA was first isolated from soil amended with C. beticola culture using the PowerSoil DNA Kit. The purified DNA was subjected to PCR in Extract-N-Amp PCR mix with CBACTIN primers over 35 cycles. The amplified products were resolved …


Arkansas Turfgrass Report 2009, Douglas Karcher, Aaron Patton, Michael Richardson May 2010

Arkansas Turfgrass Report 2009, Douglas Karcher, Aaron Patton, Michael Richardson

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

No abstract provided.


Departments Of Defense And Agriculture Team Up To Develop New Insecticides For Mosquito Control, David Hoel, Julia Pridgeon, Ulrich R. Bernier, Kamal Chauhan, Kumudini Meepagala, Charles Cantrell Apr 2010

Departments Of Defense And Agriculture Team Up To Develop New Insecticides For Mosquito Control, David Hoel, Julia Pridgeon, Ulrich R. Bernier, Kamal Chauhan, Kumudini Meepagala, Charles Cantrell

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

Mosquito-borne pathogens are among the most important sources of human disease that cause morbidity and mortality worldwide. They include the viruses responsible for deadly outbreaks of yellow fever, Rift Valley fever, eastern equine encephalitis, Japanese encephalitis and dengue, and an assortment of other serious illnesses caused by the etiological agents of West Nile fever, St Louis encephalitis, Murray Valley encephalitis, Venezuelan equine encephalitis and chikungunya disease. Dengue viruses, of which there are 4 serotypes, cause an estimated 50-100 million new illnesses each year (and 25,000 deaths) while the latest chikungunya epidemic has lasted longer, affected more people, and occurred over …


Effects Of Fully Developed Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Hyphae On Seed Germination Of Lolium Perenne, G Keith Bartley Jr, Richard J. Gualandi Jr, Robert M. Augé Apr 2010

Effects Of Fully Developed Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Hyphae On Seed Germination Of Lolium Perenne, G Keith Bartley Jr, Richard J. Gualandi Jr, Robert M. Augé

Gregory Keith Bartley Jr.

Previous studies demonstrate that the inoculation of mycorrhizal spores in seeds can improve speed of germi- nation and establishment in grass seedlings. The universally positive effects of arbuscular mycorrhiza on plants suggest that fully developed mycorrhizal hyphae could potentially induce faster germination in seeds. This study presents data indicating that the inoculation of full grown hyphae in seeds of Lolium perenne inhibits speed of germination, independent of level of available soil nutrients. Daily measurements of seedling height between in- fected and non-infected plants at different starter fertilization rates in a sand profile showed that abuscular mycor- hiza influenced seeds emerged …