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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.
1

The Forgotten Fruitway: Folk Perspectives on Fruit Farming on the Providence Bench, 1940-1980

Maxwell, Amy C. 01 May 2014 (has links)
At one time, Providence, Utah, was well-known for its fruit production, especially on the north and south benches, but changes in population growth patterns, technology, and local economy have dramatically reduced reliance on agriculture and have completely eliminated fruit farming on the benches. In order to capture a slice of Providence history which is quickly disappearing from public memory, this thesis relies on a series of interviews I conducted with former workers on the fruit farms in the Providence bench area. Through their memories of their work and childhoods, I set out a folk history which focuses on family and worker relationships, gender roles, and work techniques. Throughout the entire body of work, I pull from a variety of genres and themes within the field of folklore to answer my research question of what fruit farming entailed and the importance it played in the lives of the farmers, their families, the workers, and the community. I begin with sections of historical ethnography in order to transport the reader into a time past and to convey the nature of these farmers’ and workers’ lives and occupations. The voices of my informants have a large role in shaping the history through their commentaries and personal narratives about this period. I continue with further textual analysis of the informants’ personal narratives about work and childhood, using theories of children’s folklore and oral narrative to discuss trickster tales and their role in my informants’ lives and their life histories. This analysis further focuses on power relationships and gender roles, while acting as a collection of occupational and children’s folklore as revealed through my informants’ interviews. I also draw on psychoanalytic interpretations of gender roles within work. I also discuss teenage relationships, flirting, and jokes about sexuality during this time period through this theoretical lens. My analysis concludes where it started: with the stories and their nostalgic themes, drawing the body of this thesis back to a discussion of life, land, and family and the nature of the stories told about these themes now. Throughout, this folk history relies on the present to understand the past, and by way of the nostalgic quality of all of the stories told by my informants, the past defines the present.
2

Development of a fungal biological control agent for potato cyst nematodes in Jersey

Jacobs, Helen January 2000 (has links)
The production of Jersey Royal potatoes is an important industry for the island of Jersey. The crop is grown annually, and sometimes biannually, so there is no opportunity to practise crop rotation in order to control potato cyst nematodes (PCN), Globodera pallida and G. rostochiensis. Control of these pests in Jersey has traditionally relied on the use of nematicides, but with increased public pressure to reduce the use of pesticides and the intention of the Government of Jersey to eventually ban them, there is a desire for an alternative methods of control to be developed. Three nematophagous fungi, Plectosphaerella cucumerina, Paecilomyces lilacinus and Verticillium chZamydosporium, were isolated from PCN cysts taken from potato fields in Jersey. The efficacy of these fungi for the control of PCN was studied to determine their suitability for use in an integrated pest management programme. The radial growth rates of the nematophagolls fungi were reduced when grown on media amended with the fungicides Gambit and Rizolex, commonly used for the control of Rhizoctonia solani, another major pathogen of potatoes. Radial growth of V. chlamydosporium was also inhibited by Monceren and the nematicide Vydate. Growth of R. solani was inhibited by P. lilacinus at 20°C and 10°C in vitro and by V. chlamydosporium at 20°C, but the strain of V. chlamydosporiurn used did not grow at 10°c. Plectosphaerella cucumerina was a poor saprophytic competitor when grown against R. solani, P. lilacinus and V. chlamydosporium, therefore it may not be a suitable soil applied agent as it is out grown by other fungi in the soil. Paecilomyces lilacinus in a pelleted support matrix made from an alginate, gave better control of R. solani than non-formulated P. lilacinus alone. Of the different formulations of nematophagous fungi tested in pots, P. lilacinus incorporated into alginate pellets reduced the numbers of peN by the most (79.5%) and when applied in a field trial, reduced PCN population increase by approximately 60%. Plectosphaerella cucumerina, when incorporated into alginate pellets, also reduced field population increase by approximately 60%. A combination of these two formulated fungi tested in a plunge trial gave a poorer level of control than the fungi added individually. The fungi remained viable in alginate pellets for at least 18 months. The population composition of PCN in Jersey was previously unknown. Using an ELISA technique, this study has shown both PCN species are present, but the proportions were not determined. To ascertain whether the early lifting of Jersey potatoes was selectively reducing levels of one of the species of PCN, DNA was extracted from nematodes stained in situ in the roots of potatoes. The results were inconclusive and further work is required.
3

Amélioration de la croissance et de la production fruitière de ziziphus mauritiana lam par l'inoculation mycorhizienne dans des vergers au Sénégal / Improved growth and fruit production of ziziphus mauritiana lam by mycorrhizal inoculation in orchards in Sénégal

Thioye, Babacar 01 July 2017 (has links)
Le jujubier (ou Ziziphus mauritiana Lam.) est une espèce à usages multiples (fruits, fourrage, bois de service) prioritaire pour le reboisement et l’arboriculture fruitière dans le Sahel. Dans ce contexte où les sols sont souvent dégradés et pauvres en minéraux (P en particulier), la mycorhization et la fertilisation phosphatée pourraient jouer un rôle important dans l’amélioration de la croissance et de la productivité des jujubiers.L’objectif principal de ce travail était d’améliorer la croissance et la production fruitière de Z. mauritiana par l’inoculation mycorhizienne dans deux vergers au Sénégal. Il avait pour objectifs spécifiques (i) d’évaluer les réponses à l’inoculation avec des CMAs de différentes espèces de Ziziphus et de provenances de Z. mauritiana en serre, (ii) d’évaluer l’impact de l’inoculation avec R. irregularis IR27 sur la croissance, la survie et la production fruitière de Z. mauritiana, (iii) d’évaluer l’impact de l’inoculation sur la diversité des communautés de CMAs associés à Z. mauritiana en plantation et (iv) de déterminer la persistance de R. irregularis IR27 dans les racines de Z. mauritiana en plantation. Le champignon R. irregularis IR27 s’est avéré le plus efficace parmi les CMAs testés dans ce travail. Le couple Z. mauritiana /R. irregularis IR27 a donc été choisi comme modèle pour étudier l’impact de l’inoculation sur la production fruitière de deux provenances, Gola (variété indienne sélectionnée pour ses fruits de grosse taille) et Tasset (provenance locale à fruits de petite taille) dans deux sites contrastés (Amally et Keur Mangari). Nos résultats ont montré un effet positif de l’inoculation sur la croissance, la survie et le taux de mycorhization de Z. mauritiana à 13 et 24 mois respectivement à Amally et à Keur Mangari. L’inoculation a également augmenté la production fruitière des jujubiers à 18 et 30 mois de plantation à Keur Mangari. Ces résultats montrent la grande capacité de R. irregularis IR27 à compétir face aux CMAs indigènes. Le séquençage Illumina MiSeq du gène 18S a permis de révéler un impact négatif de l’inoculation sur la diversité et la richesse des communautés de CMAs natifs à Amally contrairement à Keur Mangari où l’inoculation n’a pas eu d’impact ni sur la diversité ni sur la richesse des CMAs. Le gène RPB1 s’est révélé pertinent comme marqueur pour détecter R. irregularis IR27 dans les racines de Z. mauritiana inoculés et évaluer par qPCR l’intensité de la colonisation racinaire des jujubiers par R. irregularis IR27 qui a représenté 11 à 13% à 13 mois de plantation à Amally et 12 à 15% à 24 mois de plantation à Keur Mangari. Cependant, il s’avère important d’évaluer à plus long terme l’impact de R. irregularis IR27 et son devenir dans les racines de Z. mauritiana en plantation dans une large gamme de conditions environnementales. / The jujube (or Ziziphus mauritiana Lam.) is an important multipurpose species (e.g. fruits, fodder, wood) for reforestation and fruit farming in the Sahel. In this context where soils are often degraded and deficient in P, mycorrhization and phosphorus fertilization could play a major role on improvement of jujube growth and productivity. The main objective of this work was to improve growth and fruit production of Z. mauritiana by mycorrhizal inoculation in two orchards at Senegal. This work aims (i) to evaluate the responses of different species of Ziziphus and provenances of Z. mauritiana to inoculation with AMF in greenhouse conditions, (ii) to assess the impact of inoculation with R. irregularis IR27 on growth, survival and fruit production of Z. mauritiana, (iii) to assess the impact of inoculation on diversity of native AMF communities associated to Z. mauritiana after planting and (iv) to determinate the persistence of R. irregularis IR27 in roots of Z. mauritiana after planting.The fungus R. irregularis IR27 proved to be the most effective AMF tested in this work. The pair Z. mauritiana /R. irregularis IR27 has been chosen as model to study the impact of inoculation on fruit production of two provenances, Gola (Indian variety selected for its large size fruits) and Tasset (local cultivar with small-sized fruits) in two sites with contrasting rainfall (Amally and Keur Mangari). Our results showed a positive effect of inoculation on growth, survival and mycorrhizal colonization of Z. mauritiana plants at 13 and 24 months after planting at Amally and Keur Mangari respectively. Inoculation increased also fruit production of jujubes at 18 and 30 months after planting at Keur Mangari. These results indicated the high ability of R. irregularis to compete with indigenous AMF. The MiSeq Illumina sequencing of 18S rRNA gene revealed a negative impact of inoculation on AMF richness and diversity at Amally, unlike at Keur Mangari where inoculation had no impact on AMF richness and diversity. The RPB1 gene proved to be an appropriate marker to detect of R. irregularis IR27 in inoculated Z. mauritiana roots and to evaluate by qPCR the root colonization of R. irregularis IR27 which accounted for 11 to 13% at 13 months after planting at Amally and 12 to 15% at 24 months after planting at Keur Mangari. Therefore, it is important to assess at long-term the impact of R. irregularis IR27 and its persistence in inoculated Z. mauritiana roots in large environmental conditions.

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