scholarly journals Individual plant examination program: Perspectives on reactor safety and plant performance. Part 1: Final summary report; Volume 1

1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
2005 ◽  
Vol 56 (11) ◽  
pp. 1211 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Harris ◽  
W. A. Breese ◽  
J. V. D. K. Kumar Rao

On-farm seed priming with water is a low-cost, low-risk technology that is easily adopted by resource-poor farmers. It increases the yield of tropical and subtropical annual crops in marginal areas by a combination of better crop establishment and improved individual plant performance. The effects of seed priming, i.e. soaking seeds overnight in water before sowing, on plant growth and development are consequences of faster germination, emergence, and more vigorous early growth. Results from in-vitro, on-station and on-farm experiments are discussed. Recent work has tested opportunities for resource-poor farmers to use seed priming as a vehicle for applying biofertilisers (Rhizobia). Preliminary results from field experiments suggest that these interventions are very effective over and above the already demonstrated benefits of priming with water alone. In a pot experiment using chickpea, combining a Rhizobium inoculation with seed priming significantly increased nodulation but had little effect on yield. Nevertheless, the results confirmed that Rhizobium inoculation is compatible with on-farm seed priming. Observations in the field have shown that some primed crops show enhanced resistance to disease, either as a consequence of increased vigour, altered phenology, or due to some more fundamental mechanism associated with exposure of seeds to anaerobic conditions during priming. Priming seeds of a highly susceptible cultivar of pearl millet in water for 8 h before sowing significantly reduced the incidence of downy mildew in artificially infected seedlings from 80% to less than 60%.


Oecologia ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 164 (3) ◽  
pp. 665-677 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Schmidtke ◽  
Tanja Rottstock ◽  
Ursula Gaedke ◽  
Markus Fischer

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (21) ◽  
pp. 8958-8965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharina Herz ◽  
Sophie Dietz ◽  
Sylvia Haider ◽  
Ute Jandt ◽  
Dierk Scheel ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
D. R. R. Fair ◽  
E. W. Maxwell

The various influences exerted by management at different levels of an organization to secure reliable and continuing operation of electricity generating plant are dealt with. Consideration is given to the requirement at the top executive level for the strategic planning and scheduling of plant outages for maintenance and overhaul, to ensure the minimum cost of production from an integrated supply system consistent with obtaining long-term reliable operation of individual plants. Also considered is the requirement for various management levels at those plants to provide detailed planning of work content, resources, and logistics associated with maintenance of individual plant items. The collection and analysis of plant performance data, to determine correct work content and frequency of routine maintenance to provide an economic balance between outages due to maintenance and outages due to failure, are studied together with the constraints imposed by statutory inspections. Diagnostic testing of electrical and mechanical plant to help reduce plant outage time, and the influence of non-destructive testing techniques on reducing expensive cascading failures, are examined. The influence of correct utilization of tools, maintenance equipment, and methods of working on minimizing plant down time and the use of special equipment to facilitate inspection of inaccessible plant in both the conventional and nuclear fields are also considered.


1969 ◽  
Vol 83 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 153-167
Author(s):  
Fausto Camacho-Chacón ◽  
Silvia R. Cianzio ◽  
James S. Beaver

In tropical regions of the Western Hemisphere, consumption of high-protein soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] could improve the human diet. It would be necessary however, to develop adapted cultivars of appropriate seed size. The objectives of this study were to estimate heritabitity and phenotypic and genotypic correlations of agronomic traits, and to compare agronomic and reproductive traits of soybeans grown at different planting dates in Puerto Rico. Eighty-nine F4:5  individual plants from the cross of IAC-8 [Maturity Group (MG) IX, not adapted for human consumption, and intermediate seed size] x Kanto-101 (MG IX, large-seeded cultivar developed for human consumption), the parents, and checks were planted in December 1992.  F4:5 lines were evaluated in replicated tests in June and August 1993. Dates of full bloom (R2), of full seed (R6), and of full maturity (R8), plant height, pod width, and 100-seed weight were recorded. On an entry-mean basis, neritability values of all traits were moderately high (0.56) to high (0.96). Phenotypic and genotypic correlations ranged from zero to high (0.96). Rank correlations were moderately high, positive and significant, ranging from 0.41 to 0.79. In general for all traits, genotypes selected in the top 10% in the plantings of June and August, on the basis of entry means, would also have been selected as individual plants in the December planting. These results suggest that in the tropics genotypes may be selected in different planting seasons within the year, initially on the basis of individual plant performance, and later in replicated experiments.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 1204-1211 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. W. Archibold ◽  
B. J. Weichel

Variations in wild rice (Zizania palustris L.) morphology and stand productivity have been evaluated for 20 sites across northern Saskatchewan. Although considerable within-stand variation occurred, significant between-site differences were also detected, and regional trends were clearly evident. Plant development was more rapid in the eastern part of the province, and harvest began about 1 week earlier here. However, in the west, individual plants were typically more robust, tillering was more common, and the number of florets borne on the panicle was generally larger. Consequently, potential seed production from an individual plant was highest in these western districts, although differences in stem density and seed weight at the various sites offset individual plant performance to some extent. Differences in water temperature and water depth occurred across the province in July, while in August, water depth, pH, and conductivity were significantly correlated with longitude. Water depth and pH were most strongly related to plant performance, shallower water and higher pH being characteristic of the western sites.


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