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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

Building Threads of Inquiry in a Bluegrass Emergent Curriculum Project

Broderick, Jane Tingle 01 April 2014 (has links)
No description available.
142

The Effect of Fe-sulfate on Annual Bluegrass, Silvery Thread Moss, and Dollar Spot Populations Colonizing Creeping Bentgrass Putting Greens

Reams, Nathaniel Frederick 05 June 2013 (has links)
Annual bluegrass (Poa annua L.) is the most problematic weed to control in creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera L.) putting greens.  The objective of this study was to transition a mixed putting green stand of annual bluegrass and creeping bentgrass to a monoculture by using fertilizers and plant growth regulators that selectively inhibit annual bluegrass.  A 25 year old loamy sand rootzone research green, planted with \'Penn-Eagle\' creeping bentgrass, with roughly 45% initial annual bluegrass coverage was utilized.  The biweekly application of ammonium sulfate (4.8 kg ha-1) with treatments of ferrous sulfate at rates of 0, 12.2, 24.4, and 48.8 kg ha-1 and in combination with seaweed extract (12.8 L ha-1) or paclobutrazol (0.37 L ai ha-1 spring and fall; 0.18 L ai ha-1 summer) were applied March to October, 2011 and 2012.  Plots receiving the highest rate of ferrous sulfate resulted in annual bluegrass infestation declines from an early trial amount of 45% to a final average of 20% but also resulted in unacceptable late-summer events of annual bluegrass collapse.  The ferrous sulfate medium rate resulted in a smooth transition from early-trial annual bluegrass infestation of 45% to an end of trial infestation of 20% and had the highest putting green quality.  Previous research has reported that consistent use of paclobutrazol can effectively and safely reduce annual bluegrass infestations.  In this trial annual bluegrass was reduced to 9% infestation after three months of application.  Two unexpected observations from this trial were that ferrous sulfate, applied at medium to high rates, significantly reduced silvery thread moss (Bryum argentum Hedw.) populations and occurrences of dollar spot (Sclerotinia homoeocarpa F. T. Bennett) disease.  Dollar spot control with ferrous sulfate has not previously been reported in the literature, so additional studies were designed to investigate this phenomenon further.  A creeping bentgrass putting green study was conducted to determine if sulfur, iron, or the two combined as ferrous sulfate decreases dollar spot activity.  Ferrous sulfate resulted in the highest turf quality and suppressed S. homoeocarpa infection, even during high disease pressure.  Fe-EDTA suppressed dollar spot infection as well as ferrous sulfate but quality declined to unacceptable levels during the summer, due to Fe-EDTA only.  Sulfur did not affect or increased S. homoeocarpa infection, indicating that a high and frequent foliar rate of iron is responsible for dollar spot control.  An in-vitro study was conducted to determine if agar pH in combination with iron concentrations affects mycelial growth of S. homoeocarpa.  Results from this trial indicated that 5.4 agar pH is an optimal pH for mycelial growth.  The 10 to 100 mg iron kg-1 concentration had little effect on mycelial growth at 5.0 and 5.5 pH, but increased growth at 4.5 and 6.5 pH.  As the iron concentration was increased from 10 to 100 to 1000 mg kg-1, mycelial growth decreased or stopped.  Our final conclusions are that seasonal biweekly foliar applications of the medium rate of ferrous sulfate (24.4 kg ha-1) safely and effectively reduced annual bluegrass infestation out of a creeping bentgrass putting green, while also effectively suppressing silvery thread moss and dollar spot incidence. / Master of Science
143

Banjo Romantika American Bluegrass Music & the Czech Imagination

Bidgood, Lee, Lange, Shara K. 01 January 2013 (has links)
This documentary was filmed primarily in the Czech Republic in 2011 and highlights Czech bluegrass musicians and Lee Bidgood's performance of original Czech bluegrass songs filmed at the Down Home in Johnson City, TN. Post-production work was done at ETSU, and the film was completed in 2013. KLRU in Austin, Texas, is the presenting station for the documentary. / https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu_books/1106/thumbnail.jpg
144

Investigating Early Bluegrass Recording Techniques

Hensley, Lincoln 01 May 2020 (has links) (PDF)
This paper is about my investigation of early bluegrass recording techniques and the processes they used. After doing some extensive research, and compiling a database of black and white photographs from the time period, I felt I had enough information to assemble a team to try and produce the sounds, tonal qualities, and energy those recordings have. So John Kornhauser, Joshua Gooding, Hunter Berry, Sarah Griffin, along with myself, went to BigTone studios and tracked for two four hour sessions. BigTone studios has all of the vintage microphones, tape recorders, echo chambers, and out board equipment I need to replicate the same signal chain that was used on the early recordings. After the recording process, I mixed and mastered the songs to match the early recordings as closely as possible. We also recorded one song at ETSU’s studio that was all digital with new equipment to show the differences in the sound of analog versus digital recording. I have included both so that you can listen to each and determine for yourself if there is an audible difference, and if that difference is worth pursuing.
145

Exploring Authenticity in Old-Time Music

Langley, Mikaela 01 December 2020 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis focuses on the question of authenticity in old-time music, and the ways in which it is studied in ETSU’s Bluegrass, Old-Time, and Country Music Studies program. In an academic setting, old-time is often studied in more of a historical or anthropological context and less as a specific style of music. Arguments for authenticity in this music have been made since the popularity of such films as “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” and “Cold Mountain”, which brought a lot of outside attention to the genres of bluegrass and old-time music, as well as defining the aesthetics associated with them. Contemporary composition and performance of old-time music exists, but is not typically studied in an academic setting, or evaluated for how it adds to the musical tradition. The intention of this thesis is to validate the existence of contemporary composition in old-time music, and its authenticity within the genre.
146

Bluegrass and Old-Time in Catalonia: An Ethnographic Case Study of Aesthetic Communitas

Luchtan, Michael J 01 December 2018 (has links) (PDF)
This is an ethnographic case study of a musical community in Catalonia centered around the performance of bluegrass and old-time music. By using Victor and Edith Turners’ ideas of normative communitas, this paper identifies an aesthetic communitas model which describes a community centered around a performative genre. Through participant observation in the 16th Annual Al Ras Bluegrass and Old Time Music Festival and interviews with local musicians, fans, venue owners, and luthiers, the ethnographic narrative details the characteristics of the aesthetic communitas in Catalonia and searches for associations of Appalachia that accompany the cross-cultural manifestation of bluegrass and old-time music in Catalonia. The conclusion examines the significance of the aesthetic communitas model and suggests further lines of research for this model.
147

Responses of two grass species to plant growth regulators, fertilizer N, chelated Fe, salinity and water stress

Nabati, Daryoosh A. 12 October 2005 (has links)
A series of studies were initiated to investigate growth responses of Kentucky bluegrass (Poa praetensis L.) and creeping bentgrass (Agrostis palustris Huds.) to foliar applications of two plant growth regulators (PGR) and/or chelated Fe (Na Fe diethylene triamine pentaacetate). Environmental variables considered were N levels, soil moisture regimes, and saline irrigations. The two materials investigated for PGR properties were a commercial product called Roots (a cold-water extract of seaweed and peat humus fortified with "intermediate metabolites" and thiamine) and the systemic fungicide propiconazole, trade name: (Banner) and chemical name: [1- {(2-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-4-propyl-l,3-dioxolan-2yl}methyl-l H-1,2,4-triazole]. Fortified seaweed extract (FSE) was applied at 9.3 L/ha, and propiconazole (PPC) was applied at 0.93 L a.i/ha. Each was applied alone or in conjunction with chelated Fe at 0.11 kg a.i/ha. Kentucky bluegrass foliage height, root and shoot dry weight, and several foliar nutrients increased following PGR treatments when grown under either limited soil moisture or saline irrigation. Foliar applications of PGR and/or chelated Fe to creeping bentgrass reduced wilting and evapotranspiration, and increased leaf water status, root strength, and shoot dry matter at two levels of N during and after drought stress. / Ph. D.
148

GERMINATION AND GROWTH RATE DIFFERENCES AMONG KENTUCKY BLUEGRASS CULTIVARS

Amanda Jo Folck (14205311) 02 December 2022 (has links)
<p>Germination testing and seedling vigor for Kentucky bluegrass germination. Analyzing growth from Kentucky bluegrass cultivars. </p>
149

Developing remote sensing approaches for integrated pest and pollinator management in turfgrass

Bradley, Shannon Grace 06 September 2023 (has links)
Golf courses can expand hundreds of acres, making scouting for both pests and beneficial insect populations a time-consuming task. Scouting for insects is labor-intensive, potentially damaging, but is an integral part of an integrated pest and pollinator management (IPPM) plan. Virginia golf courses are currently using remote sensing and light reflectance to detect non-insect pests in turfgrass. This thesis aims to develop remote sensing and light reflectance methods to aid in a turfgrass IPPM plan, to document the phenology of ABW weevil (Listronotus maculicollis Kirby, Coleoptera: Curculionidae, ABW), and to catalogue pollinator-friendly out-of-play areas. Light reflectance, the measurement of the amount of light reflected, of plants can be used as a proxy for the health of a plant. The light reflectance of turfgrass affected by ABW stress and plants in the out-of-play areas of golf courses was collected proximally and remotely, using a backpack spectrometer and an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), respectively. Mathematical light reflectance indices were applied and compared to insect populations in both areas to determine the correlation. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), which uses red and near-infrared wavelengths to indicate stress, was found to highlight ABW stressed turfgrass. The Structure Intensive Vegetation Pigment Index (SIPI), which uses red and green wavelengths to highlight flowering plants, was found to highlight potential pollinator- friendly habitats in out-of-play areas. When applied to flights, NDVI could help in the targeted application of insecticides to combat the annual bluegrass weevil, therefore reducing their presence in the environment. The use of SIPI could highlight potential pollinator friendly habitats and therefore assist superintendents in the development of their IPPM plan. / Master of Science in Life Sciences / Scouting, such as completing visual monitoring or taking soil core samples, is an important part in the development of an integrated pest and pollinator management (IPPM) plan for Virginia golf courses; an IPPM plan focuses on control of a pest, while considering the needs of pollinators. The size of golf courses makes scouting for insect pests and beneficial insects a time-consuming task. Golf courses are currently using remote sensing, the use of drones in combination with other technology, to scout for other pests or disease. Light reflectance, the measurement of the amount of light reflected, is often used in combination with remote sensing as a proxy for the health of plants. This thesis developed remote sensing and light reflectance techniques not only to detect a common turfgrass pest, the annual bluegrass weevil (Listronotus maculicollis Kirby, Coleoptera: Curculionidae, ABW), but to also predict the presence of potential pollinator habitats in the out-of-play areas of Virginia golf courses. Instruments such as a spectrometer and a drone were used to collect light reflectance at the ground level and aerially, respectively. Ground data was collected through soap water flushes to detect adult ABW, and visual monitoring of potentially pollinating bees, beetles, butterflies, and flies. The light reflectance and ground data were compared using mathematical indices to determine if there was a relationship between the presence of insects and a particular index. Indices could be applied to drone flights that golf course superintendents are already performing, and they can use this information to highlight potential areas of insect presence. This will help them to take care not to apply insecticides in areas with pollinators or to only apply necessary insecticides where there is likely a presence of ABW. This will reduce the labor, other costs, and the environmental impact of insecticides.
150

Sounds Like Home: Bluegrass Music and Appalachian Migration in American Cities, 1945-1980

McGee, Nathan January 2016 (has links)
No description available.

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