805 research outputs found
Surface modification of polyester using chicken feather keratin hydrolysate to improve water absorbency and dye uptake
PET fiber has an intrinsic low hydrophilic character and an inactive surface which make it
uncomfortable for wearing purpose. Moreover, it is difficult to colour polyester fabric other
than disperse dyes. Therefore, surface modification of PET is very important to improve its
absorbency and bring the possibility to dye polyester with anionic dyes by altering its surface
characteristics. This research was focused on surface modification of polyester using chicken
feather which involves serine as the most abundant amino acid with hydroxyl groups. The
treated polyester fabric using 20ml/L concentration of chicken feather extract showed
improved water drop absorbency from 45 into 3 seconds and the reactive dye uptake by 36
folds from 0.15 to 5.37 K/S values
Feed marketing in Ethiopia: results of rapid market appraisal
Despite the large livestock population in Ethiopia, the sector’s contribution at the micro or macro level is well below its potential due to various reasons, notably feed shortage and diseases, compounded by inefficiencies in the livestock input and output markets. Feed marketing studies are scarce in Ethiopia. This study is aimed at assessing the feed marketing system in Ethiopia to generate a general understanding of the feed supply and demand characteristics, feed marketing, feed prices, market places, market actors, and market institutions. The types of fodder supplied in the country differ from place to place depending on the type of crops grown as conditioned by the agro-climatic conditions. Buyers and sellers have various perceptions about the quality of the fodder supplied to the market. There are competing uses of crop residues and hay in Ethiopia. Crop residues and hay are transported in a variety of ways. Most of the crop residues are retailed in the open market. Hay is mostly sold in situ. Agro-industrial by-products from flour and edible oil mills, grind mills and local brewery are sold in all of the study areas. There are about 15 feed mixers and millers in the country as observed during the study period. However, only five of them are manufacturing purely for sale; others produce for own consumption and to sell surpluses. Feed prices are rising sharply. Available price data indicated that there are significant price differences between farm gate and wholesale prices of crop residues and hay. Among the crop residues teff straw is most expensive. Among agroindustrial by-products, linseed cake is most expensive, followed by cotton seed cake. Most of the feed trading is informal. Implications to improve the feed marketing system are drawn
Revisiting resistance in Italian-occupied Ethiopia: the Patriots' Movement (1936-1941) and the redefinition of post-war Ethiopia
During the Italian occupation of Ethiopia (1936-1941) a significant indigenous resistance movement, the Patriots' Movement, emerged. The nature and impact of this resistance is reconsidered by highlighting aspects of its role in 'redefining Ethiopia', its internal policy and its position in the global community after the start of the Second World War. The resistance movement was based on the ideals of restoring national independence and preserving cultural identity. There is also discussion of the reasons for the abrupt end to the resistance - mainly due to an external intervening factor (the British army) and the defeat of Italy - which prevented the challenge posed by the resistance movement and its incipient ideas of political reform being taken up seriously by the postwar imperial regime. Notes, ref., sum. [Book abstract
Commercialization of vegetable production in Alamata Woreda, Northern Ethiopia: processes and impact
The Raya valley in Tigray where Alamata Woreda is located, has fertile soil,
suitable climate and rich water resources to grow various crops including
vegetables. Surface water from seasonal rivers/streams and small dams and
ground water extracted from deep and shallow wells with various water lifting
devices are the two main sources of water for irrigation in the Woreda. A
participatory rural appraisal (PRA) study conducted by the Woreda stakeholders
and facilitated by IPMS identified (irrigated) vegetables as a potential marketable commodity in 2005. Using the commodity value chain approach, production,
input supply and marketing problems and opportunities were identified. Major
problems were lack of interest partly as a result of market failure in the past, lack
of agronomic and irrigation knowledge and skills resulting in lack of use of
advanced agronomic inputs (e.g. seeds) and underutilization of modern irrigation
facilitates (most of the deep wells established were not used and/or
underutilized).
Different extension approaches were used including study tours to change the
mind-set and to acquire knowledge for experts and farmers. Following various
production interventions, market linkages were created which resulted in better
prices (from 0.70Birr/kg before 2005 to 3-5Birr/kg in the following years). Farmer
to farmer communications, trainings, workshops and media coverage facilitated
the further dissemination of knowledge and skills between PAs in Alamata and
neighboring Woredas. As a result of these interventions, the area of irrigated
onion, pepper and tomato tripled in size from 351 ha in 2004/05 to 1113 ha in
2008/09. The lion share of this increase was due to a ten fold increase in onion
area from 84 ha in 2004/05 to 824 ha in 2008/09. Most of this increase took place
in the spate irrigated areas where plots previously used for cereal crops
(sorghum and teff) were converted to vegetables. Both women and men farmers
benefited from the intervention. Many farmers managed to construct houses in
town and were able to own different assets. The further expansion of the
(irrigated) vegetable production in Alamata is feasible. However, more attention
needs to be paid to improving productivity, especially in the spate irrigated areas
since no clear evidence was found that area increase was accompanied by
productivity increase, indicating lack of adequate institutional and farmers’
knowledge and skills. Also adverse weather conditions during the 2008
harvesting season, resulted in considerable crop spoilage and lower prices –
indicating the risk associated with this commodity under rain-fed conditions.
Finally, potential salinity problems should also be taken into account
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Quantifying Uncertainties in Sequential Chemical Extraction of Soil Phosphorus Using XANES Spectroscopy.
Sequential chemical extraction has been widely used to study soil phosphorus (P) dynamics and inform nutrient management, but its efficacy for assigning P into biologically meaningful pools remains unknown. Here, we evaluated the accuracy of the modified Hedley extraction scheme using P K-edge X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy for nine carbonate-free soil samples with diverse chemical and mineralogical properties resulting from different degrees of soil development. For most samples, the extraction markedly overestimated the pool size of calcium-bound P (Ca-P, extracted by 1 M HCl) due to (1) P redistribution during the alkaline extractions (0.5 M NaHCO3 and then 0.1 M NaOH), creating new Ca-P via formation of Ca phosphates between NaOH-desorbed phosphate and exchangeable Ca2+ and/or (2) dissolution of poorly crystalline Fe and Al oxides by 1 M HCl, releasing P occluded by these oxides into solution. The first mechanism may occur in soils rich in well-crystallized minerals and exchangeable Ca2+ regardless of the presence or absence of CaCO3, whereas the second mechanism likely operates in soils rich in poorly crystalline Fe and Al minerals. The overestimation of Ca-P simultaneously caused underestimation of the pools extracted by the alkaline solutions. Our findings identify key edaphic parameters that remarkably influenced the extractions, which will strengthen our understanding of soil P dynamics using this widely accepted procedure
Hydrometallurgical removal of uranium and thorium from Ethiopian tantalite ore
This study focused on the leaching of uranium and thorium from a high grade Ethiopian
tantalite ore using sulfuric acid. The effects of variables such as acid concentration, temperature and
leaching time were studied. In general, the leaching efficiency of uranium increases with increasing
temperature from 100 to 300 °C whereas the opposite trend was observed for thorium. The amount of
uranium leached increased from 69.1% at contact time of 1 hr to 88.6% when the tantalite ore was
leached for 3 hrs. On the other hand, for the experiments conditions considered in this study, the
leaching behavior of uranium and thorium did not change significantly with varying sulphuric acid
concentration from 70 to 90 wt%. Overall, the highest dissolution of uranium and thorium were
achieved at 100 °C, 70 wt% H2SO4 concentration and 1 hr contact time
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