208 research outputs found

    Total Cell Wall and Fiber Concentrations of Perennial Glandular-Haired and Eglandular Medicago Populations

    Get PDF
    Host-plant resistance in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) is insufficient for control of the alfalfa weevil (Hypera postica) or the potato leafhopper (Empoasca fabae), two of the most important insect pests of alfalfa. Some wild Medicago species, which have erect glandular hairs, possess adequate host-plant resistance for control of both pests. We established a field trial (Wymore silty clay loam) in 1985 to determine the effects of erect glandular hairs on forage quality of several perennial Medicago species. Glandular and eglandular (without erect glandular hairs) plant populations were selected from the diploids, M. prostrata Jacq. and M. glandulosa David, and the tetraploids, M. glutinosa Bieb., M. sativa × M. glutinosa, and M. sativa × M. prostrata. Eglandular M. sativa ’Riley’ and M. sativa subsp. caerulea (Less, ex Ledeb.) Schmalh. were included as controls. Foliar diseases and insects were controlled. Leaves and stems were separated for three harvests in 1985 and one in 1986. The presence of erect glandular hairs did not significantly affect concentrations of neutral or acid detergent fibers, hemicellulose, lignin, or cellulose of leaves or stems within the species or hybrids tested. Neutral and acid detergent fibers and cellulose concentrations were generally lower in stems and higher in leaves of diploids than in corresponding parts of the tetraploid alfalfa cultivar Riley

    Limiting nutrients for bean production on contrasting soil types of Lake Victoria Crescent of Uganda

    Get PDF
    Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is one of the most important grain legumes in East Africa, but its yield has remained below the genetic potential. Declining soil fertility is among the primary constraints to bean production in most East African bean producing regions. Often existing recommendations are generic and inept to guide farm level decision making on nutrient replenishment. A greenhouse nutrient omission study was conducted to determine the limiting nutrients in three soils of Masaka District, commonly cropped to beans: “Liddugavu” a Phaeozem, “Limyufumyufu” a Cambisol and “Luyinjayinga” an Umbrisol soil. Nine treatments; (i) complete nutrient treatment, (ii) N omitted, (iii) P omitted, (iv) K omitted, (v) Mg omitted, (vi) S omitted, (vii) Ca omitted, (viii) Micronutrients omitted and (ix) control without nutrients. Each treatment was randomly assigned to the three soils and replicated three times using a completely randomised design. Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium were limiting nutrients for bean production in Umbrisol (Luyinjayinja) while in Cambisol (‘Limyufumyufu), common bean production was most limited by soil acidity. The performance varied with soil types, with beans grown on the Phaeozem registering greater leaf number and growth, confirming both scientist’s and local farmer’s knowledge that this soil has greater potential than the other two soils

    Time Interval Between Cover Crop Termination and Planting Influences Corn Seedling Disease, Plant Growth, and Yield

    Get PDF
    Experiments were established in a controlled-growth chamber and in the field to evaluate the effect of the length of time intervals between winter rye cover crop termination and corn planting on corn seedling disease, corn growth, and grain yield in 2014 and 2015. Rye termination dates ranged from 25 days before planting (DBP) to 2 days after planting (DAP) corn in the field and from 21 DBP to 1 DAP in controlled studies. Results were similar in both environments. In general, shorter intervals increased seedling disease and reduced corn emergence, shoot growth, and grain yield of corn following winter rye compared with corn planted 10 or more days after rye termination or without rye. Incidence of Pythium spp. increased with shorter intervals (less than 8 DBP); incidence of Fusarium spp. was not consistent between runs and experiments. In 2014, in the 1-DAP treatment, number of ears and grain yield were reduced (P = 0.05 and 0.02, respectively). In 2015, all termination intervals reduced plant population, number of ears, and yield (P = 0.01), with the 2-DBP treatment causing the biggest decrease. A 10- to 14-day interval between rye termination and corn planting should be followed to improve corn yield following a rye cover crop

    Adiabatic Dynamics of Superconducting Quantum Point Contacts

    Full text link
    Starting from the quasiclassical equations for non-equilibrium Green's functions we derive a simple kinetic equation that governs ac Josephson effect in a superconducting quantum point contact at small bias voltages. In contrast to existing approaches the kinetic equation is valid for voltages with arbitrary time dependence. We use this equation to calculate frequency-dependent linear conductance, and dc I ⁣ ⁣VI\!-\!V characteristics with and without microwave radiation for resistively shunted quantum point contacts. A novel feature of the I ⁣ ⁣VI\!-\!V characteristics is the excess current 2Ic/π2I_c/\pi appearing at small voltages. An important by-product of our derivation is the analytical proof that the microscopic expression for the current coincides at arbitrary voltages with the expression that follows from the Bogolyubov-de Gennes equations, if one uses appropriate amplitudes of Andreev reflection which contain information about microscopic structure of the superconductors.Comment: 12 Pages, REVTEX 3.0, 3 figures available upon reques

    Acute human defibrillation performance of a subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator with an additional coil electrode

    Get PDF
    Background: The subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (S-ICD) delivers 80 J shocks from an 8 cm left-parasternal coil to a 59 cm3 left lateral pulse generator (PG). A system that defibrillates with lower energy could significantly reduce PG size. Computer modeling and animal studies suggested that a second shock coil either parallel to the left-parasternal coil or transverse from the xiphoid to the PG pocket would significantly reduce the defibrillation threshold. Objective: The purpose of this study was to acutely assess the defibrillation efficacy of parallel and transverse configurations in patients receiving an S-ICD. Methods: Testing was performed in patients receiving a conventional S-ICD system. Success at 65 J was required before investigational testing. A second electrode was temporarily inserted from the xiphoid incision connected to the PG with an investigational Y-adapter. Phase 1 (n = 11) tested the parallel configuration. Phase 2 (n = 21) tested both parallel and transverse configurations in random order.Results: This study enrolled 35 patients (28 males (80%); mean age 51 ± 17 years; left ventricular ejection fraction 40% ± 15%; body mass index 26 ± 4 kg/m2; prior myocardial infarction 46%; congestive heart failure 49%; cardiomyopathy 63%). Compared to the conventional S-ICD system, mean shock impedance decreased for both parallel (69 ± 15 Ω vs 86 ± 20 Ω; n = 33; P &lt; .001) and transverse (56 ± 14 Ω vs 81 ± 21 Ω; n = 20; P &lt; .001) configurations. Shock success rates at 20, 30, and 40 J were 55%, 79%, 97%, and 25%, 70%, 90% for parallel and transverse configurations, respectively. Defibrillation threshold testing was well tolerated with no serious adverse events. Conclusion: Adding a second shock coil, particularly in the parallel configuration, significantly reduced the impedance and had a high likelihood of defibrillation success at energies ≤40 J. This may enable the development of a smaller S-ICD.</p
    corecore