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Early Postemergence Herbicide Weed Control in OnionsUmeda, K., Fredman, C. 08 1900 (has links)
Oxyfluorfen (Goal®) herbicide at 0.25 lb. ai./A and bromoxynil (Buctril®) at 0.38 lb.a.i. /A applied early postemergence (POST) to onions at the 1- to 2-leaf stage of growth gave near complete control ( >98 %) of lambsquarters, knotweed, cheeseweed, London rocket, and good control ( -90 %) of shepherd's purse. Buctril® did not control annual bluegrass and Goal® only slightly reduced some of the heavy population. Both herbicides caused marginally unacceptable onion injury at 17-20 %. Buctril® plus pendimethalin (Prowl®) tank-mix combination applied POST also gave very good broadleaaved weed control but annual bluegrass was reduced only 50 %. Similar onion injury was observed for the combination treatment as Buctril® alone. Buctril® caused onion injury when it was applied during cloudy weather. Buctril® and Goal® were effective for broadspectrum broadleaved weed control but onions were sensitive when treated before reaching the full 2-leaf stage of growth. Cloudy weather during applications also intensified the onion injury by Buctril® treatments.
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Evaluation of Nortron® Herbicide for Preemergence Weed Control in OnionsUmeda, K., Gal, G. 10 1900 (has links)
An exploratory field study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Nortron® (ethofumesate) herbicide for potential use in an onion weed control program. A rate range of 1.0 to 2.5 lb AI/A applied preemergence (PREE) demonstrated good safety on onions and no injury or crop stand reduction was observed. Sowthistle was the most numerous weed present and Nortron did not reduce it relative to the untreated check. Dacthal® (DCPA) significantly reduced the number of sowthistle relative to the untreated and to Nortron treatments. Onion height was reduced by Dacthal about 40 %.
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Evaluation of Preemergence Herbicides for Onion Weed ControlUmeda, K., Gal, G., Strickland, B. 02 1900 (has links)
At three test sites, ethofumesate (Nortron®) at 1.0 and 2.0 lb AI /A was safe on onions. Nortron appeared to provide marginal control of light to moderate weed infestations of London rocket (Sisymbrium irio) at two sites. Pendimethalin (Prowl®) at 0.50 and 0.75 lb Al/A was safe on onions at two sites with furrow irrigation. At three sites with sprinkler irrigation, Prowl treatments caused as high as 62 to 88% stand reduction when sprinklers were used to incorporate the herbicide. Bensulide (Prefar0) injured onions at early rating dates and height measurements indicated that the plants were shortened relative to the untreated check. End of the season visual observations showed that onions had grown out of the initial injury and the crop did not appear to be damaged. Prefar combined with Prowl or Nortron was more injurious to onions with sprinkler irrigation than with furrow irrigated incorporation. Prefar gave marginal weed control in the tests under conditions with low weed infestations. Lactofen (Cobra®) was injurious to onions at all five test sites and caused significant crop stand reduction. Combination treatments of Prowl with DCPA (Dacthal®) or Prefar were damaging to onions under sprinklers but injury was minimal with furrow irrigations. Metolachlor (Dual®) and dimethenamid (Frontier®) caused minimal injury and no stand reduction of onions under sprinklers but with furrow irrigation, the stand was reduced and height reduction was substantial. The series of field tests demonstrated that herbicide performance was significantly influenced by irrigation practices. Prowl herbicide was extremely injurious and caused substantial crop stand reduction with sprinkler irrigation. Dual and Frontier exhibited less injury on onions under sprinklers than with furrow irrigation. Cobra at 0.25 lb AI /A was damaging to onions regardless of irrigation practice.
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Preemergence Herbicide Combinations for Onion Weed Control StudyUmeda, K., Gal, G., Strickland, B. 02 1900 (has links)
DCPA (Dacthal®) at 9.0 lb AI /A, the commercial standard herbicide, slightly reduced the number of plants and shortened the plant height compared to the untreated check. Preemergence (PREE) herbicide treatments that caused injury as height reduction similar to Dacthal included pendimethalin (Prowl®), propachlor (Ramrod®), metolachlor (Dual®), dimethenamid (Frontier®), ethofumesate (Nortron®), and benefin (Balan®). Visual observations did not indicate significant stand reduction or crop injury compared to plant counts. Treatments that caused minimal visible crop injury (<10 %) were Ramrod, Balan and lower rates of Frontier and Nortron. Moderate to acceptable injury (15 %) was observed on onions treated by Prowl, Dual, Frontier, and Nortron. Treatments that significantly reduced crop stand were Prefar at 6.0 lb AI /A, lactofen (Cobra®), thiazopyr (Visor®), and some combinations of the three herbicides. Combination treatments that caused marginally acceptable injury included Prowl plus Dual, Nortron plus Prowl, Prefar plus Nortron, Nortron plus Frontier, Ramrod plus Frontier, Ramrod plus Nortron, and Ramrod plus Balan. Early weed control ratings showed that Prowl at 0.5 and 0.75 lb Al/A, Nortron, Cobra, Visor applied alone gave acceptable control (>85 %) of London rocket (Sisvmbrium irio), sowthistle (Sonchus oleraceus), and sweetclover (Melilotus officinalis). Prowl at 0.75 lb AI/A and Cobra gave season -long control of all weeds. Early weed control ratings of combination herbicide treatments demonstrated that Prowl or Nortron combined with other herbicides gave acceptable weed control. Prowl at 0.50 lb AI /A plus Ramrod, Nortron, or Dual at the lower rates slightly improved weed control compared to each of the herbicides applied alone.
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The effect of moisture content, oxygen availability and temperature on survival of lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) and onion (Allium cepa L.) seedIbrahim, A. E. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Seuil économique et programme d'échantillonnage séquentiel pour le thrips de l'oignon (Thrips tabaci Lindeman) sur l'oignonFournier, François January 1993 (has links)
Very high infestation levels of Thrips tabaci Lindeman were observed on onions at Ste-Clotilde (Quebec) with seasonal means of 149 and 161 thrips/plant for 1988 and 1989 respectively. No significant differences in thrips densities were detected among six yellow onion cultivars (Capable, Flame, Norstar, Progress, Rocket, Taurus) through weekly comparisons in 1988 and biweekly comparisons in 1989. / A new variable, the cumulative number of thrips-days/plant, was used to model the impact of T. tabaci on onion yields. This variable allowed for better-fitted models, especially in 1989 where greater variability of the onion yields was observed. A modified Gompertz equation gave the best fit for 1988. No yield reduction due to T. tabaci was observed up to the 1000 cumulative thrips-days/plant point, beyond which the thrips impact first increased with the feeding pressure and then gradually decreased to a minimal level corresponding to a yield loss of 43%. In 1989, thrips impact was immediate and best described by an exponential model with a maximal yield loss of 34,5%. / Economic thresholds of 964 and 251 cumulative thrips-days/plant were calculated for 1988 and 1989 respectively. Converted to thrips/leaf these correspond to 2,2 and 0,9 thrips/leaf. This conversion could facilitate their use in a field situation. / Spatial distribution of T. tabaci was analyzed in ten commercial onion fields. Within field, density was homogeneous in the majority of cases. In some fields, higher thrips densities were temporary (two consecutive weeks at most) in one or two field margins. / The Iwao method was used to calculate the acceptance boundaries of sequential sampling plans for the economic thresholds of 0,9 and 2,2 thrips/leaf and onion growth stages of 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 green leaves. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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Seuil économique et programme d'échantillonnage séquentiel pour le thrips de l'oignon (Thrips tabaci Lindeman) sur l'oignonFournier, François January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Onion Fertility Evaluation Under Different Levels of Salt Stress, Safford Agricultural Center 1986Clark, L. J., Stroehlein, J. L., Thatcher, L. M. 05 1900 (has links)
Yield data were taken with a long -day onion variety, using different levels of nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium and at two different levels of soluble salts in the soil. Yields of the plots with additional fertilizer applied did not vary statistically from the check plot, which had 79 lbs/ac of nitrogen and 66 lbs/ac of P205. A correlation was found, however, between the electrical conductivity of a saturated paste extract from the soil and the yield of onions. A loss of 205 sacks (50 lbs /sack) of onions per acre are lost for each unit increase in soil conductivity.
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An Improved Algorithm for Tor Circuit SchedulingTang, Can January 2010 (has links)
Tor is a popular anonymity-preserving network, consisting of routers run by volunteers all around the world. It protects Internet users’ privacy by relaying their network traffic through a series of routers, thus concealing the linkage between the sender and the recipient. Despite the advantage of Tor’s anonymizing capabilities, it also brings extra latency, which discourages more users from joining the network.
One of the factors that causes the latency lies in Tor’s circuit scheduling algorithm, which allows busy circuits to crowd out bursty circuits. In this work, we propose and implement a more advanced scheduling algorithm which treats circuits differently, based on their recent activity. In this way, bursty circuits such as those used for web browsing can gain higher priority over busy ones such as used for bulk transfer; the performance for most activities over Tor is improved, while minimal overhead is incurred. Our algorithm has been incorporated into the latest build of Tor.
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Evaluation of short-day onion doubled haploid linesWalker, Ryan Lee 15 May 2009 (has links)
Molecular marker analysis of seven putative onion (Allium cepa) doubled
haploid (DH) lines developed at Texas A&M University was conducted to verify genetic
homozygosity. Analysis was also conducted on five equivalent conventional inbred
lines, breeding lines developed from the same parental crosses as the DH lines, and the
original parent lines. The markers have revealed polymorphisms within the parental lines
and the conventional inbreds, but not in the DH lines. We can conclude therefore that
these seven lines are true DH lines. Performance of these DH lines was tested in two
field locations and compared to commercial check lines. Bulbs from the various crosses
were evaluated for eight bulb traits: diameter, height, centers/bulb, ring thickness,
number of rings/bulb, bulb weight, soluble solids content, and pungency. Some crosses
were detected that yielded significantly greater bulb weight than the check lines.
However, these lines also had significantly greater numbers of centers per bulb. To test
how these lines would perform in a breeding program, two full diallel analyses were
conducted according to Griffing’s Model I, Method 1. The first consisted of a four
parent diallel cross using two red DH lines and two yellow DH lines. Bulbs from the various crosses were evaluated for the same eight bulb traits mentioned above.
Significant variation was detected for genotypic, general combining ability (GCA),
specific combining ability (SCA), reciprocal (REC), maternal (MAT), and nonmaternal
(NMAT) effects for all traits except number of rings/bulb, soluble solids content, and
pungency. Significant environmental effects were only detected with number of centers
per bulb. The second diallel analysis, a four parent diallel with two DH lines and two
inbred lines from the breeding program, showed significant variation for the same effects
for all traits except soluble solids content. Generally, GCA effects were more important
than SCA effects in explaining the variation observed between crosses. For all traits
GCA and SCA were always larger than the reciprocal effects (divided into maternal and
nonmaternal components).
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