275 research outputs found

    On-farm Experiments with Millet in Niger: Crop Establishment, Yield Loss Factors and Economic Analysis

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    Results of farm-level experiments with pearl millet are reported from four villages in semi-arid Niger in 1982 and 1983. Crop establishment, yield loss factors (insects, diseases, striga) and economics of new practices were studied in a randomized design which included density, fertility, cultivar, and intercropping with cowpea as treatments. Improved cultivars did not establish significantly better than local ones, but fertilizer occasionally improved establishment. Incidence of yield loss factors was low, and only small effects of cultivar and fertilizer were seen. Fertilizer increased grain yields of the local cultivar by as much as 153%. The use of fertilizer and improved cultivars increased grain yields by as much as 171% over an unfertilized local millet. Even without government subsidies, fertilizer use was profitable for 56% of farmers on all cultivars. In general, fertilizers and improved cultivars had a small positive impact on profitability, with little adverse impact on grain yield variability, so that they could be recommended to farmers with some prospect of success. The intercropping treatment failed in both years, and would have to be modified before extensio

    Nutrient and structural carbohydrate partitioning in pearl millet

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    Pennisetum glaucum cv. CIVT grown on a Labucheri soil at Sadoré, Niger in 1989-90 was given 15 or 45 kg N and 4.4 or 17.4 kg P/ha. Increased N rate increased total DM by 13%, N uptake by 63% and P uptake by 29%. Increased P rate increased total DM by 100%, N uptake by 80% and P uptake by 140%. In 1989, with adequate rainfall, grain yield was 0.6 t/ha with 15 kg N/ha and 0.9 t with 45 kg N, whereas in 1990, with low rainfall, grain yield was lower and unaffected by N rate. Grain yield was higher with the higher P rate in both years. N concentration in the stover was increased by increased N rate and decreased by the higher P rate. Plant P concentration was higher at the higher P rate. Mean total DM yield was 2.75 t/ha, partitioned into grain (18%); animal feed consisting of chaff, immature panicles, upper stover and tillers (41%); and middle and lower stover components for soil conservation (41%). Partitioning was not affected by fertilizer rate. Of the total N (33.4 kg/ha) and P (5.2 kg/ha) uptake, 32 and 40% were contained in grain, 41 and 40% in animal feed, and 27 and 20% in components for soil conservation, respectivel

    Quantification of temporal fault trees based on fuzzy set theory

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    © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2014. Fault tree analysis (FTA) has been modified in different ways to make it capable of performing quantitative and qualitative safety analysis with temporal gates, thereby overcoming its limitation in capturing sequential failure behaviour. However, for many systems, it is often very difficult to have exact failure rates of components due to increased complexity of systems, scarcity of necessary statistical data etc. To overcome this problem, this paper presents a methodology based on fuzzy set theory to quantify temporal fault trees. This makes the imprecision in available failure data more explicit and helps to obtain a range of most probable values for the top event probability

    Grain growth of Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R.Br. under well-watered and drought-stressed conditions

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    The objective of this study was to investigate the possibility of relationships between grain growth parameters and drought response. Grain growth parameters of more than 70 millet lines were assessed under well-watered and postflowering drought-stress conditions in two field trials at the ICRISAT Sahelian Center, Sadoré, Niger. All the grain growth parameters based on thermal time varied more than two-fold between lines in both moisture environments. Single grain mass of the lines ranged from 4.3–10.9 mg under well-watered conditions and 3.4–9.4 mg under drought stress. When averaged across trials, 51% of the accounted variance of final grain mass could be explained by differences in the grain growth rate under well-watered conditions, while differences in the duration of the linear grain growth phase accounted for 37% of the variation in final grain mass. Drought stress reduced the linear grain growth phase and, as a consequence, reduced final grain mass by up to 25%. Lines with long grain filling periods under well-watered conditions had larger reductions in the grain filling period and in final grain mass under stress. In general, there was little effect of drought stress on the grain growth rate. However, because of the negative correlation of grain growth rate and linear grain growth phase, lines with higher grain growth rates in well-watered conditions had smaller reductions in grain filling period under stress. Grain growth rate accounted with 38% for the major part of the variation in grain mass under stress conditions. Grain growth parameters in well-watered and drought-stress conditions were unrelated to drought tolerance as expressed by a drought response index, and were indicators of neither susceptibility nor tolerance to stress. However final grain mass was highly correlated to yield under stress. A feasible risk-reducing strategy in the likelihood of postflowering stress is to select pearl millet lines for drought escape with a high grain growth rate combined with a relatively short grain filling period

    Crop physiology and breeding for drought tolerance: research and development

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    This paper presents an example of the research and development function of a physiology group within a cereal breeding program: an evaluation of the possibility of incorporating selection for tolerance to drought stress during the flowering and grain-filling period in pearl millet. It includes a review of the problem and possible solutions, and a report of two experiments conducted to identify phenotypic characteristics associated with yield differences under stress which could be used as selection criteria in breeding for tolerance. Differences among genotypes in yield under stress during flowering and grain-filling were partitioned into differences in yield potential, drought escape, and droughttolerance; the drought response accounted for more than 40% of the observed yield differences. Phenotypic traits related to yield under stress were divided into those reflecting drought escape and those reflecting droughttolerance. Droughttolerance was found to be primarily expressed in traits relating to the ability to maintain grain numbers under stress (grain number per panicle and per unit area, and grain yield per panicle). Drought escape, in contrast, was expressed in terms of greater grain biomass and higher harvest index. However, the field data also indicated that considerable progress in yield under stress should be possible by selection for earlier flowering and improved yield potential alon

    Management Practices to Increase Yield and Yield Stability of Pearl Millet in Africa

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    Fertility, soil, and crop management practices that could have an impact on improving millet production in the major millet growing areas of Africa are described. These factors are examined in terms of their potential impact on production and their availability to the resource-poor farmer. Important practices that optimize the use of available water are discussed. If farmers of the semi-arid tropics of West Africa1190improve the fertility of their soils and move from hand tools to using animal traction, increased and stable yields are possible in this drought-prone region

    Robust plasmon waveguides in strongly-interacting nanowire arrays

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    Arrays of parallel metallic nanowires are shown to provide a tunable, robust, and versatile platform for plasmon interconnects, including high-curvature turns with minimum signal loss. The proposed guiding mechanism relies on gap plasmons existing in the region between adjacent nanowires of dimers and multi-wire arrays. We focus on square and circular silver nanowires in silica, for which excellent agreement between both boundary element method and multiple multipolar expansion calculations is obtained. Our work provides the tools for designing plasmon-based interconnects and achieving high degree of integration with minimum cross talk between adjacent plasmon guides.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Lyapunov exponent of the random Schr\"{o}dinger operator with short-range correlated noise potential

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    We study the influence of disorder on propagation of waves in one-dimensional structures. Transmission properties of the process governed by the Schr\"{o}dinger equation with the white noise potential can be expressed through the Lyapunov exponent γ\gamma which we determine explicitly as a function of the noise intensity \sigma and the frequency \omega. We find uniform two-parameter asymptotic expressions for γ\gamma which allow us to evaluate γ\gamma for different relations between \sigma and \omega. The value of the Lyapunov exponent is also obtained in the case of a short-range correlated noise, which is shown to be less than its white noise counterpart.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure

    What are the living conditions and health status of those who don't report their migration status? a population-based study in Chile

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    BACKGROUND: Undocumented immigrants are likely to be missing from population databases, making it impossible to identify an accurate sampling frame in migration research. No population-based data has been collected in Chile regarding the living conditions and health status of undocumented immigrants. However, the CASEN survey (Caracterizacion Socio- Economica Nacional) asked about migration status in Chile for the first time in 2006 and provides an opportunity to set the base for future analysis of available migration data. We explored the living conditions and health of self-reported immigrants and respondents who preferred not to report their migration status in this survey. METHODS: Cross-sectional secondary analysis of CASEN survey in Chile in 2006. Outcomes: any disability, illness/accident, hospitalization/surgery, cancer/chronic condition (all binary variables); and the number of medical/emergency attentions received (count variables). Covariates: Demographics (age, sex, marital status, urban/rural, ethnicity), socioeconomic status (education level, employment status and household income), and material standard of living (overcrowding, sanitation, housing quality). Weighted regression models were estimated for each health outcome, crude and adjusted by sets of covariates, in STATA 10.0. RESULTS: About 1% of the total sample reported being immigrants and 0.7% preferred not to report their migration status (Migration Status - Missing Values; MS-MV). The MS-MV lived in more deprived conditions and reported a higher rate of health problems than immigrants. Some gender differences were observed by health status among immigrants and the MS-MV but they were not statistically significant. Regressions indicated that age, sex, SES and material factors consistently affected MS-MVs’ chance of presenting poor health and these patterns were different to those found among immigrants. Great heterogeneity in both the MS-MV and the immigrants, as indicated by wide confidence intervals, prevented the identification of other significantly associated covariates. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to look at the living conditions and health of those that preferred not to respond their migration status in Chile. Respondents that do not report their migration status are vulnerable to poor health and may represent undocumented immigrants. Surveys that fail to identify these people are likely to misrepresent the experiences of immigrants and further quantitative and qualitative research is urgently required
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