4,700,889 research outputs found

    Effects of plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) on yield,growth and nutrient contents in organically growing raspberry

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    During 2003 and 2005, plant growth promoting effects of two Bacillus strains OSU-142 (N2-fixing) and M3 (N2-fixing and phosphate solubilizing) were tested alone or in combinations on organically grown primocane fruiting raspberry (cv. Heritage) plants in terms of yield, growth, nutrient composition of leaves and variation of soil nutrient element composition in the province of Erzurum, Turkey. The results showed that Bacillus M3 treatment stimulated plant growth and resulted in significant yield increase. Inoculation of raspberry plant roots and rhizosphere with M3 and/or OSU-142 + M3, significantly increased yield (33.9% and 74.9%), cane length (13.6% and 15.0%), number of cluster per cane (25.4% and 28.7%) and number of berries per cane (25.1% and 36.0%) compared with the control, respectively. In addition, N, P and Ca contents of raspberry leaves with OSU-142 + M3 treatment, and Fe and Mn contents of the leaves of raspberry with M3 and OSU-142 + M3 applications significantly improved under organic growing conditions. Bacterial applications also significantly effected soil total N, available P, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Mn, Zn contents and pH. Available P contents in soil was determined to be increased from 1.55 kg P2O5/da at the beginning of the study to 2.83 kg P2O5/da by OSU-142, to 5.36 kg P2O5/da by M3 and to 4.71 kg P2O5/da by OSU-142 + M3 treatments. The results of this study suggest that Bacillus M3 alone or in combination with Bacillus OSU-142 have the potential to increase the yield, growth and nutrition of raspberry plant under organic growing conditions

    Effects of plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) on yield, growth and nutrient contents of organically grown strawberry

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    The effects of plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) on the fruit yield, growth and nutrient element content of strawberry cv. Fern were investigated under organic growing conditions between 2006 and 2008. The experimental plot was a completely randomized design with 3 replicates. Three PGPB strains (Pseudomonas BA-8, Bacillus OSU-142 and Bacillus M-3) were used alone or in combination as biofertilizer agent in the experiment. Data through 3 years showed that the use of PGPB significantly increased fruit yield, plant growth and leaf P and Zn contents. Root inoculation of M3 and floral and foliar spraying of OSU-142 and BA-8 bacteria stimulated plant growth resulting in significant yield increases. M3 + BA-8, BA-8 + OSU-142, M3, M3 + OSU-142 and BA-8 applications increased cumulative yield by 33.2%, 18.4%, 18.2%, 15.3% and 10.5%, respectively. Number of fruits per plant significantly increased by the applications of M3 + BA-8 (91.73) and M3 (81.58) compared with the control (68.66). In addition, P and Zn contents of strawberry leaves with bacterial inoculation significantly increased under organic growing conditions. Available P contents in soil were increased from 0.35 kg P2O5/da at the beginning of the study to 2.00, 1.97 and 1.82 kg P2O5/da by M3 + OSU-142, M3 + BA-8 and M3 + BA-8 + OSU-142 applications, respectively. Overall, the results of this study suggest that root inoculation of Bacillus M3 alone or in combination with spraying Bacillus OSU-142 or Pseudomonas BA-8 have the potential to increase the yield, growth and nutrition content of strawberry plant under organic growing conditions

    Search for Oscillation of the Electron-Capture Decay Probability of 142^{142}Pm

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    We have searched for time modulation of the electron capture decay probability of 142^{142}Pm in an attempt to confirm a recent claim from a group at the Gesellschaft f\"{u}r Schwerionenforschung (GSI). We produced 142^{142}Pm via the 124^{124}Sn(23^{23}Na, 5n)142^{142}Pm reaction at the Berkeley 88-Inch Cyclotron with a bombardment time short compared to the reported modulation period. Isotope selection by the Berkeley Gas-filled Separator is followed by implantation and a long period of monitoring the 142^{142}Nd Kα_{\alpha} x-rays from the daughter. The decay time spectrum of the x-rays is well-described by a simple exponential and the measured half-life of 40.68(53) seconds is consistent with the accepted value. We observed no oscillatory modulation at the proposed frequency at a level 31 times smaller than that reported by Litvinov {\it et al.} (Phys. Lett. B 664 (2008) 162; arXiv:0801.2079 [nucl-ex]). A literature search for previous experiments that might have been sensitive to the reported modulation uncovered another example in 142^{142}Eu electron-capture decay. A reanalysis of the published data shows no oscillatory behavior.Comment: 12 pages (double-spaced), 6 figure

    Chandra Detects the Rare Oxygen-type Wolf-Rayet Star WR 142 and OB Stars in Berkeley 87

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    We present first results of a Chandra X-ray observation of the rare oxygen-type Wolf-Rayet star WR 142 (= Sand 5 = St 3) harbored in the young, heavily-obscured cluster Berkeley 87. Oxygen type WO stars are thought to be the most evolved of the WRs and progenitors of supernovae or gamma ray bursts. As part of an X-ray survey of supposedly single Wolf-Rayet stars, we observed WR 142 and the surrounding Berkeley 87 region with Chandra ACIS-I. We detect WR 142 as a faint, yet extremely hard X-ray source. Due to weak emission, its nature as a thermal or nonthermal emitter is unclear and thus we discuss several emission mechanisms. Additionally, we report seven detections and eight non-detections by Chandra of massive OB stars in Berkeley 87, two of which are bright yet soft X-ray sources whose spectra provide a dramatic contrast to the hard emission from WR 142.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journa

    Minimizing sum of completion times on a single machine with sequence-dependent family setup times

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    This paper presents a branch-and-bound (B&B) algorithm for minimizing the sum of completion times in a singlemachine scheduling setting with sequence-dependent family setup times. The main feature of the B&B algorithm is a new lower bounding scheme that is based on a networkformulation of the problem. With extensive computational tests, we demonstrate that the B&B algorithm can solve problems with up to 60 jobs and 12 families, where setup and processing times are uniformly distributed in various combinations of the [1,50] and [1,100] ranges

    Elevated cystatin-C concentration is associated with progression to prediabetes: the Western New York Study

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    OBJECTIVE – We conducted a nested case-control investigation to examine if elevated baseline concentrations of cystatin-C predicted progression from normoglycaemia to prediabetes over 6 years of follow-up from the Western New York Health Study. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS – 1,455 participants from the Western New York Health Study, free of type 2 diabetes and known cardiovascular disease at baseline (1996-2001), were reexamined in 2002-2004. An incident case of prediabetes was defined as one with fasting glucose below 100 mg/dl at the baseline examination and ≥ 100 mg/dl and ≤ 125 mg/dl at the follow-up examination. All cases (n=91) were matched 1:3 to control participants based upon sex, race/ethnicity and year of study enrollment. All controls had fasting glucose levels < 100 mg/dl at both baseline and follow-up examinations. Cystatin-C concentrations and the urinary albumin to creatinine ratio were measured from frozen (-196 Cº) baseline blood and urine samples. Serum creatinine concentrations were available from the baseline examination. RESULTS –Multivariate conditional logistic regression analyses adjusted for age, baseline glucose level, HOMA-IR, body mass index, hypertension, eGFR, cigarette smoking, and alcohol use revealed a significantly increased risk of progression to prediabetes among those with elevated baseline concentrations of cystatin-C (Odds Ratio, 95% CI: 3.04, 1.34, 6.89) (upper quintile vs. the remainder). Results of secondary analyses that considered hs-CRP, IL-6, E-selectin, or sICAM did not alter these results. CONCLUSIONS - These results suggest that early renal impairment indexed with cystatin-C imparted a three-fold excess risk of progression to prediabetes in this study population. Recent evidence from randomized clinical trials (1,2) among people with prediabetes have provided convincing evidence that early intervention can significantly delay or prevent the progression to type 2 diabetes. The identification of those with prediabetes is assuming greater importance (3) especially in light of the fact that approximately 35 million adults aged 40-74 years old in the United States have prediabetes defined as impaired fasting glucose (4). Microalbuminuria occurs frequently in nondiabetic subjects and places them at increased risk for cardiovascular disease (5-7). The mechanisms behind this observation are poorly understood, however. Albuminuria may reflect underlying vascular damage (8), hypertension (9, 10) endothelial dysfunction (11, 12) and/or low-grade inflammation (13). A large percentage of type 2 individuals pass through a period of prediabetes (14) and may experience early renal dysfunction e.g., a glomerular filtration rate (GFR) above 60 ml/minute per 1.73m2. Currently used estimating equations are poor at identifying early renal impairment and better indices are of great interest (15, 16). Recently, several studies have suggested that cystatin-C levels may be a more sensitive marker of early renal impairment than either albuminuria or serum creatinine concentration (17-20). Therefore, a better understanding of a putative role for cystatin-C in the etiology of prediabetes could shed light on the renal/heart disease connection (21). Given the reported superiority of cystatin C over conventional measures of renal function, we hypothesized that cystatin-C would predict progression to prediabetes independent of serum creatinine or estimated GFR. We also investigated the role of intervening mechanisms including hypertension, insulin resistance, endothelial dysfunction and inflammation

    Gaps in second language sentence processing

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    Observations on the relationship between verbal explicit and implicit memory and neuronal density in the left and right hippocampus in temporal lobectomy patients.

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    The relationship between neuronal density and verbal memory in left and right hippocampal subfields was investigated in patients who underwent surgery for alleviation of temporal lobe epilepsy. The surgery consisted of unilateral partial removal of the hippocampus along with the anterior temporal lobe and amygdala. Study 1 looked at post-surgical explicit versus implicit verbal memory for lists of words while Study 2 looked at pre- and post-surgical explicit memory for word pairs. Left subfield CA1 appeared to be the most consistently involved in explicit and implicit memory. The results of the two studies confirm presence of hemispheric asymmetry in verbal memory. The notion that hippocampal control of memory is most apparent in post-surgical performance is discussed
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