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- Experimental Summaries - Plant Research (150)
- Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4 (10)
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- Division of Plant Research : Technical Report Series (2)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 186
Full-Text Articles in Plant Sciences
Factors Affecting Frost Damage To Wheat In Western Australia, S P. Loss
Factors Affecting Frost Damage To Wheat In Western Australia, S P. Loss
Division of Plant Research : Technical Report Series
It may at first seem strange that precious research funds are being channelled into a project concerned with frost damage in a country where high temperatures and moisture stress limit the growth of plants for a large portion of the year. But cereal crops are only grown in the temperate zones of the continent during winter and spring when they may be exposed to low diurnal temperatures. In many areas cold damage is irregular and rare,however it limits yields not only by causing actual damage but also by restricting the most effective period for flowering. For muck of the Australian …
A Review Of Machinery For Cropping With Reduced Water Erosion, K J. Bligh
A Review Of Machinery For Cropping With Reduced Water Erosion, K J. Bligh
Resource management technical reports
No abstract provided.
The Esperance Rotation Trial, Effect Of Rotations On Crop Yields And Soil Fertility, I C. Rowland
The Esperance Rotation Trial, Effect Of Rotations On Crop Yields And Soil Fertility, I C. Rowland
Division of Plant Research : Technical Report Series
This report sets out and summarises data from the Esperance rotation trial.This long-term trial, situated on the Esperance Downs Research Station, looks at various aspects of rotations based on subterranean clover pasture with cereals or sweet lupins as a crop. Data included are yields of the crops both grain and dry matter at anthesis or mid-pod fill also nitrogen content at these two times; pasture production and composition in Spring; clover seed production; weed counts in the crop; soil measurements of total soil nitrogen,organic carbon, mineral nitrogen, pH and extractable potassium are done at thestart of each season.The trial, on …
Direct Seeding Trees On Farmland In The Western Australian Wheatbelt, J P. Piggott, P H. Brown, M M. Williams
Direct Seeding Trees On Farmland In The Western Australian Wheatbelt, J P. Piggott, P H. Brown, M M. Williams
Resource management technical reports
Field and nursery experiments were conducted to determine suitable species, weed control methods, sowing times and seeding techniques. Sowing time was the most significant variable evident in the field experiments. Trees sown in the winter months of June and July out-performed later sowing times. Early sowing of trees in areas of low seasonal rainfall appears to offer considerable advantages for successful establishment over late sowing.
Influence Of Prestress Environment On Annual Bluegrass Heat Tolerance, Dennis L. Martin, David J. Wehner
Influence Of Prestress Environment On Annual Bluegrass Heat Tolerance, Dennis L. Martin, David J. Wehner
Office of the Dean (CAFES) Scholarship
Annual bluegrass (Poa annua L.) turf quality is reduced during periods of high temperature. To predict heat stress injury and develop improved prestress maintenance practices, an understanding of the seasonal variation in annual bluegrass heat tolerance and the influence of soil moisture on heat tolerance is crucial. Annual bluegrass growing in the field on a Drummer silty clay loam (fine silty, mixed, mesic Typic Haplaquolls) was sampled on 23 dates over two growing seasons and brought to a laboratory for exposure to high temperature. Prestress environmental conditions (air and soil temperature, soil matric potential, plant water potential, daylength, rainfall and …
Effects Of Planting Date On Development Of Net Blotch Epidemics In Winter Barley In Pennsylvania, Leslie M. Delserone, H. Cole Jr.
Effects Of Planting Date On Development Of Net Blotch Epidemics In Winter Barley In Pennsylvania, Leslie M. Delserone, H. Cole Jr.
UNL Libraries: Faculty Publications
The influence of planting date on fall and spring net blotch epidemics (caused by Pyrenophora teres) was evaluated with the winter barley cultivar Pennrad. Experiments were conducted in Centre County, Pennsylvania, in 1982 and 1983 and in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, in 1983. The three planting dates evaluated corresponded to the recommended date as well as dates I wk earlier and later than recommended for each specific location. Planting date had a significant influence on fall net blotch epidemics, with the greatest and least disease severities observed in the earliest and latest plantings, respectively. When spring environmental conditions were warm …
The Effect Of Three Tillage Systems On Bulk Density And Porosity Of A Pembroke And A Beasley Soil After Three Years, Kenneth L. Wells, John H. Grove
The Effect Of Three Tillage Systems On Bulk Density And Porosity Of A Pembroke And A Beasley Soil After Three Years, Kenneth L. Wells, John H. Grove
Agronomy Notes
Many grain producers in Kentucky use a 3 crop in 2 year rotation of corn followed by small grain-soybeans, and commonly no-till the soybeans and corn in order to intensively use sloping land for continuous grain production. Because of the intensity of machinery traffic in this system, growers are concerned that continuous no-till management may cause compaction, and that such fields may need occasional primary tillage. In order to obtain' information regarding things situation, we conducted a test for 3 years on the farm of' Philip Lyvers, in Marion County, Kentucky, in a field which was being used in a …
Molecular-Marker-Facilitated Investigations Of Quantitative-Trait Loci In Maize. I. Numbers, Genomic Distribution And Types Of Gene Action, Jonathan F. Wendel, M. D. Edwards, Charles W. Stuber
Molecular-Marker-Facilitated Investigations Of Quantitative-Trait Loci In Maize. I. Numbers, Genomic Distribution And Types Of Gene Action, Jonathan F. Wendel, M. D. Edwards, Charles W. Stuber
Jonathan F. Wendel
Individual genetic factors which underlie variation in quantitative traits of maize were investigated in each of two F 2 populations by examining the mean trait expressions of genotypic classes at each of 17-20 segregating marker loci. It was demonstrated that the trait expression of marker locus classes could be interpreted in terms of genetic behavior at linked quantitative trait loci (QTLs). For each of 82 traits evaluated, QTLs were detected and located to genomic sites. The numbers of detected factors varied according to trait, with the average trait significantly influenced by almost two-thirds of the marked genomic sites. Most of …
Effects Of Phosphorus On No-Till, Minimum-Till, And Conventional Till Irrigated Field Corn, John A. Mckay
Effects Of Phosphorus On No-Till, Minimum-Till, And Conventional Till Irrigated Field Corn, John A. Mckay
All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
This investigation involved three tillage treatments, fall plowed (conventional) (moldboard IS-centimeter depth), fall chiseled (ripped) (25-centimeter depth), and no-tillage (zero tillage) replicated four times on an established alfalfa field. Rye was planted in the fall and harvested prior to planting the corn. Soil samples contained an average of 5.9 ppm phosphorus in the 0-30 centimeter soil layer, indicating the need for additional phosphorus. Within each tillage treatment, six rows received 11 kilograms/hectare phosphorus with the seed and 34 kilograms/hectare phosphorus side-dressed. Six rows received 45 kilograms/hectare phosphorus side-dressed, and four rows received 0 phosphorus. All 16 rows received 64 kilograms/hectare …
Evaluation Of Three Coverings For The Overwintering Of Container Grown Herbaceous Perennials In Kentucky, Richard Beckort
Evaluation Of Three Coverings For The Overwintering Of Container Grown Herbaceous Perennials In Kentucky, Richard Beckort
Masters Theses & Specialist Projects
The purpose of this study was to evaluate three coverings for overwintering twelve varieties of container grown herbaceous perennials under Kentucky conditions. The twelve perennial varieties were started from seed in the spring and had been moved to one gallon containers by fall. In the first week of December, three blocks of containers were covered with one of the following: one layer of 4 mil, milky copolymer; one layer of quarter inch microfoam and one layer of milky copolymer; a sandwich of two layers of milky copolymer with 6 inches of wheat straw between them; the remaining block was left …
1987 Update Of Agronomic Performance Of Tall Fescue Varieties, Paul B. Burrus Ii, Garry D. Lacefield, J. Kenneth Evans
1987 Update Of Agronomic Performance Of Tall Fescue Varieties, Paul B. Burrus Ii, Garry D. Lacefield, J. Kenneth Evans
Agronomy Notes
Tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea, Schreb.) is a well adapted, widely used pasture species occupying approximately 5.5 million acres in Kentucky and 35 million acres in the south central United States.
Commercial tall fescue varieties have been developed from plant materials of either northern European or Mediterranean origin. Varieties developed at the University of Kentucky -- Kentucky 31, Kenmont, Kenwell, Kenhy, and Johnstone -- trace to plant materials of northern European origin. The Kentucky varieties have later maturity dates and have greater resistance to certain foliar diseases during summer than varieties that are of Mediterranean origin (i.e., Alta, Fawn, Goar, and …
Effect Of Fertilizer Rates And Placement Practices On Yield Of Burley Tobacco, Kenneth L. Wells, G. D. Cantrill, J. L. Sims
Effect Of Fertilizer Rates And Placement Practices On Yield Of Burley Tobacco, Kenneth L. Wells, G. D. Cantrill, J. L. Sims
Agronomy Notes
Management of fertilizer practices in production of burley tobacco is very important in control of manganese (Mn) toxicity of the crop. In addition to the use of agricultural limestone, the use of fertilizers in the appropriate amounts, the appropriate kinds, and in the appropriate manner can strongly influence acidity in the rooting zone during the growth of burley. Studies of these effects have made up a major thrust of the University of Kentucky's research programs on fertility of burley, and have largely been conducted by J.L. Sims and his students during the past 15 years.
Adjusting Soil Ph On Heavy Textured Soils Of The Eden Hills, Kenneth L. Wells, R. M. Jones
Adjusting Soil Ph On Heavy Textured Soils Of The Eden Hills, Kenneth L. Wells, R. M. Jones
Agronomy Notes
The Eden Hills Area (also known as The Hills of the Bluegrass) of Kentucky lies adjacent to the Inner Bluegrass Area in a crescent shape within which a large area of several counties occur. Carroll, Owen, Grant, Gallatin, Pendleton, and Robertson Counties occur almost entirely within this physiographic region and several other counties have sizable acreages within it. Soils of the area have formed largely on Ordovician aged calcareous siltstones of the Garrard Formation and interbedded calcareous shales, thin limestones, and siltstones of the Eden Formation. Soils developed from these formations occur on strongly sloping to steep landscapes and have …
Intsormil Annual Report 1987, John M. Yohe, Timothy T. Schilling
Intsormil Annual Report 1987, John M. Yohe, Timothy T. Schilling
INTSORMIL Impacts and Bulletins
The Sorghum/Millet CRSP was initiated on July 1, 1979. This annual report covers the activities for program Year 8. Eight years of experience have reaffirmed the need for this type of research program aimed at relieving the constraints to improved sustainable sorghum/millet production in developing countries. The emphasis by the CRSP on development of collaborative linkages with national sorghum/millet research programs has been unique. Significant contributions have been made toward resolving constraint problems and enhancing the national program capability by strengthening its human resource base as well as the national institutional capability to conduct collaborative research. Thus, the CRSPs present …
Soil Science Research Report - 1987
Soil Science Research Report - 1987
Soil Science Research Reports
Tillage Experiments
Economic and resource analysis of deep tillage to residue soil compaction for soybean production .......... 1
Increasing nitrogen use efficiency by dry land sorghum under conventional disk and no-tillage systems .......... 6
The effect of tillage, residue, precipitation intervals and soil properties on soil crust characteristics .......... 11
Tillage influence on soybean production and soil properties .......... 15
Tillage, rotation and N rate effects on dry land corn production and nitrogen uptake in northeastern Nebraska .......... 18
Soybean Experiments
Effect of potassium salts on chlorosis and yield of soybeans .......... 23
The effect of Fe-EDDHA on soil and …
Rhizoctonia Bare Patch Of Cereals And Lupins, G C. Macnish, M W. Sweetingham
Rhizoctonia Bare Patch Of Cereals And Lupins, G C. Macnish, M W. Sweetingham
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To determine the stimuli for the formation of rhizoctonia patches in cereals and lupins.
Depth-Controlled Modified Combine For Direct Drilling And Lupin Row Spacing., R. Belford, G Reithmuller
Depth-Controlled Modified Combine For Direct Drilling And Lupin Row Spacing., R. Belford, G Reithmuller
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
Trial 87WH52, (86M56)
Depth-controlled modified combine for direct drilling.
To compare soil penetration resistance, crop growth, water use, nutrient uptake and root development of wheat 1) sown after scarifying; 2) direct drilled with a combine; 3) direct drilled with the depth-controlled modified combine with loosening ties at 5, 9 or 13 cm; or 4) sown after deep ripping with an Agrowplow to 13 or 30 cm.
Trial 87M82
Location: Merredin Research Station paddock T6 south.
Lupin row spacing
Rapeseed, Tillage., J. D. Warren, Brenda Shackley
Rapeseed, Tillage., J. D. Warren, Brenda Shackley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
1. Rapeseed. Assessment of Early Maturing Brassica napus Lines 87KA74, 87LG42, Assessment of Early Flowering Brassica juncea Lines 87KA44, 87E41, 87LG38, 87KA44, 87LG38, Yield Performance of Traizine Resistant Rapeseed 87AL25, 87E40, 87KA42, 87KA42, 87LG37, 87MA32, Assessment of Short Statured B. napus lines 87AL26, 87KA43, 87MA33, Rapeseed Extension: Demonstration Trials 87ERS39, 87JE29, 87KA41, 87NA78. 2. Tillage. The effect of Gypsum, tillage and nitrogen on cereal yields in a continuous crop system 84KA28 The effect of Gypsum, tillage and nitrogen on cereal yields farm system with a medic component 87KA47 Pasture regeneration counts for tillage trials 77MT51, 77M56, 77WH88, 82M35, 85M67A, 86M56.
Evaluation Of New Pasture Legume Species In Terms Of Summer Feeding Value And Effects On Wool Production., S E. Flecker, C W. Thorn, J. B. Rowe, Tess Casson
Evaluation Of New Pasture Legume Species In Terms Of Summer Feeding Value And Effects On Wool Production., S E. Flecker, C W. Thorn, J. B. Rowe, Tess Casson
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
86KA71, Pasture legumes improve the feeding value of summer pastures in a mediterranean-type environment by maintaining the protein intake of grazing animals over the dry summer period, much of which comes from the ingestion of legume burr (A.D. Wilson and N.L. Hindley, 1968). Some of the most important species of pasture legumes to have been released commercially are Trifolium subterraneum (sub.clover), Medicago truncatula (barrel medic) and Medicago polymorpha (burr medic) (D.B. Purser, G.B. Taylor and W.J. Collins, 1987). What little information is available on the feeding value of these species suggests that barrel medic pod (H. Brownlee, 1973) and dry …
Intraspecific Variation In Barley To Boron Toxicity, M M. Riley
Intraspecific Variation In Barley To Boron Toxicity, M M. Riley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To investigate the intraspecific variation in tolerance to boron toxicity in a range of barley varieties. 87SG1, 4/4864 and 87SG4.
Effect Of Plant Density On Boron Toxicity In Barley, M M. Riley
Effect Of Plant Density On Boron Toxicity In Barley, M M. Riley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To examine the effect of seeding density on the degree of boron toxicity in barley.
87SG7/4864, 87SG6
Effect Of Zinc On Boron Toxicity In Barley, M M. Riley
Effect Of Zinc On Boron Toxicity In Barley, M M. Riley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To examine the suggestion that adding zinc to the soil will lessen the severity of boron toxicity in barley. 87SG6/4864
Trial 65sg5, I Rowland., W Hawkins
Trial 65sg5, I Rowland., W Hawkins
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
Trial 65SG5. Location - Paddock H5 on Salmon Gum Research Station
Cleared in 1962, then cropped until the start of the trial in 1968. Two of the four blocks were sown to Cyprus Barrel medic which is topdressed with superphosphate. The other two blocks regenerate volunteer pasture which is not topdressed. In 1984 all pasture plots were sown to SERENA medic. This grew exceptionally well in 1984 and set a lot of seed. In 1987 field peas were introduced into 4 reps of an existing medic: crop rotation.
Rates, Times And Sources Of Nitrogen On Wheat, J W. Bowden
Rates, Times And Sources Of Nitrogen On Wheat, J W. Bowden
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
Trial 87WH51
Location: Wongan Hills Research Station.
This trial was put onto a site adjacent to Mel Mason's source of nitrogen trial and the CSIRO, 15 N plots to provide some explanation of the results from the limited treatments in those trials. They were designed to monitor soil/fertiliser nitrogen transformations with time. Unfortunately the site of this trial was variable. The end most similar to the other trials was deeper and sandier and stored less water than the other and where crop growth was far better.
87WH51
The Effect Of Rates Of Nitrogen On The Copper And Zinc Concentration And Grain Yield Of Wheat Plants, R F. Brennan
The Effect Of Rates Of Nitrogen On The Copper And Zinc Concentration And Grain Yield Of Wheat Plants, R F. Brennan
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To examine the possibility of rates of nitrogen inducing copper and zinc deficiency in wheat.
87JE21
Radish Control In Lupins - Comparison Of Options, D J. Gilbey
Radish Control In Lupins - Comparison Of Options, D J. Gilbey
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To study the effect of several herbicide options on wild radish and lupins.
87GE82, 87TS34, 87MO54, 87NO87.
Radish Control In Lupins - "Topping Up" With Simazine, D. J. Gilbey
Radish Control In Lupins - "Topping Up" With Simazine, D. J. Gilbey
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
To study the effect of post-emergence applied Simazine on wild radish and lupins.
87GE83, 87TS36, 87MO53, 87NO90
Isoproturon Evaluation - Timing Of Application On Efficacy And Crop Damage., R. Madin, J. Buckley
Isoproturon Evaluation - Timing Of Application On Efficacy And Crop Damage., R. Madin, J. Buckley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
The trial was effectively a tolerance trial. Best overall weed control was achieved with Glean and the higher rates of Isoproturon which in turn gave best control as a pre-plant, incorporated treatment.
87A23, 87WH54
Post Emergence Weed Control In Lupins., R. Madin, J. Buckley
Post Emergence Weed Control In Lupins., R. Madin, J. Buckley
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
As a general assessment in can be said that Tigrex is a safe and efficient herbicide for control of radish in wheat. Brodal alone was generally unsatisfactory for radish control. While Diuron + Brodal was safe and efficient, Ally and Brodal should not be used together. Diuron + MCPA gave poorer control than one would normally expect.
87WH67
Control Of Peas And Lupins In Wheat, J. R. Peirce, B. J. Rayner
Control Of Peas And Lupins In Wheat, J. R. Peirce, B. J. Rayner
Experimental Summaries - Plant Research
Trial 87A29
Lupins were easier to kill than peas.
Glean applied pre-sowing gave very poor control of both peas and lupins.
The treatment using higher rates of 2,4-D amine in diuron mix also caused lower yields.
The Tordon 242 treatment appeared to cause some yield depression.