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Integrated system for the management of meloidogyne javanica in potato productionSeshweni, Mosima Dorcus January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M. Agricultural Management (Animal Production)) -- University of Limpopo, 2016 / Cultivated potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) cultigens do not have resistant genotypes
to root-knot (Meloidogyne species) nematodes. Currently, efforts are underway to
introgress nematode resistance in potato breeding programmes, whereas other
environment-friendly nematode management strategies are being assessed in
various cultigens. Nemafric-BL and Nemarioc-AL phytonematicides have being
researched and developed for managing the root-knot nematode whereas Biocult
Mycorrhizae are intended to enhance crop productivity through improved absorption
of P, which is inherently low in most South African soils. The objectives of the study,
therefore, were: (1) to determine the interactive effects of Nemacur (N), Biocult
Mycorrhizae (B) and Nemarioc-AL or Nemafric-BL phytonematicide (P) on population
densities of M. javanica and growth of potato plants, (2) to investigate the effects of
Nemacur (N), Velum (V), Biocult Mycorhizae (B) and Nemarioc-AL or Nemafric-BL
phytonematicide (P) on population densities of M. javanica and growth of potato
plants. For the microplot experiment, potato cv. ‘Mondial G3’ seeds were sown in 25
cm-diameter plastic pots with 5 000 ml steam-pasteurised river sand and Hygromix-T
at 3:1 (v/v) growing mixture in autumn (March-May) 2015. Pots were buried 80%
deep into the soil in with 0.5 m inter-row and 0.5 m intra-row spacing. Potato cv.
‘Mondial G3’ seeds were dipped in a mixture of Mancozeb with a wettener for
disease management prior to sowing. Appropriate treatments were applied soon
after emergence of leaves. Each plant was inoculated by dispensing a mixture of 5
000 eggs and M. javanica J2. Eight treatments, control (N0B0P0), Nemacur (N1B0P0),
Biocult (N0B1P0), phytonematicide (N0B0P1), Nemacur × Biocult (N1B1P0), Nemacur ×
phytonematicide (N1B0P1), Biocult × phytonematicide (N0B1P1) and Nemacur ×
Biocult × phytonematicide (N1B1P1), were arranged in a randomised complete block
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design (RCBD) with 8 replications (n= 64). Under field conditions the study was
conducted in summer (October 2015 - January 2016), with 30-cm furrows dug and
potato seeds placed in the soil with 30 cm inter-row and 40 cm intra-row spacing.
The four treatments, namely, (1) untreated control, (2) Nemacur or Velum (3) Biocult
Mycorrhizae and (4) Nemarioc-AL or Nemafric-BL phytonematicide, were arranged
in RCBD, replicated three times for the Velum experiment and five times for the
Nemacur experiment. At 56 days after inoculation, the second order interaction
(N1B1P1) was highly significant (P ≤ 0.01) for eggs in root and total nematodes,
contributing 13 and 12% to total treatment variation (TTV) of the two variables,
respectively, in the Nemarioc-AL phytonematicide study. Relative to untreated
control, the second order interaction (N1B1P1) reduced eggs in root and total
nematodes by 42 and 36%, respectively. In both Nemarioc-AL and Nemafric-BL
phytonematicide experiments, the combination of phytonematicide and Biocult
Mycorrhizae reduced gall rating. Nemacur, Biocult and Nemarioc-AL
phytonematicide, the treatment effects were highly significant on eggs, J2 in root and
total nematodes, contributing 53, 68 and 57% to TTV of the three variables,
respectively. Nemacur, Biocult and Nemafric-BL phytonematicide treatments each
was not significant (P ≤ 0.05) for nematodes variables. Both treatments for Nemacur,
Biocult and Nemarioc-AL or Nemafric-BL phytonematicides were significant for gall
rating, contributing 92 and 70% to TTV of the variable, respectively. In Nemarioc-AL
phytonematicide, relative to the untreated control, gall rating was reduced by 48 to
56%, whereas in Nemafric-BL phytonematicide the variable was reduced by 33 to
56%. In the Velum study, Biocult and Nemarioc-AL or Nemafric-BL phytonematicide,
the treatment effects in both experiments were highly significant (P ≤ 0.01) on eggs
in root, contributing 88% to TTV of the variable. Both treatments from Nemarioc-AL
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and Nemafric-BL phytonematicides had no significant effects on all plant variables
measured. In microplot, the second order interaction (Nemacur × Biocult ×
Nemarioc-AL phytonematicide) was highly significant for nematode eggs in root and
total nematode. In a three-way matrix, the N1B1P1 interaction had the highest effects
on eggs, followed by Biocult alone, then Nemacur alone and then the
phytonematicide. The same trend was observed in the three-way matrix for total
nematodes. However, in two-way matrix for eggs, Biocult outperformed Nemacur, as
was the phytonematicide on J2. In another microplot study, the second order
interaction (Nemacur × Biocult × Nemafric-BL phytonematicide) was significant for J2
in soil and roots, with the three-way matrix showing, that Biocult alone had higher
effects than the N1B1P1 interaction on J2 in root. A three-way matrix also showed that
Nemacur was outperformed by the phytonematicide alone, Biocult alone and the
interactions on J2 in soil. In conclusion, Nemarioc-AL and Nemafric-BL
phytonematicides could each be used with Biocult Mycorrhizae in the management
of population densities of M. javanica in potato production since the impact from
Nemacur which is a synthetic nematicide does not have that much difference from
that of phytonematicides interacted with Biocult Mycorrhizae. / Agricultural Research Council
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On MIMO Systems and Adaptive Arrays for Wireless Communication : Analysis and Practical AspectsWennström, Mattias January 2002 (has links)
<p>This thesis is concerned with the use of multiple antenna elements in wireless communication over frequency non-selective radio channels. Both measurement results and theoretical analysis are presented. New transmit strategies are derived and compared to existing transmit strategies, such as beamforming and space-time block coding (STBC). It is found that the best transmission algorithm is largely dependent on the channel characteristics, such as the number of transmit and receive antennas and the existence of a line of sight component. Rayleigh fading multiple input multiple output (MIMO) channels are studied using an eigenvalue analysis and exact expressions for the bit error rates and outage capacities for beamforming and STBC is found. In general are MIMO fading channels correlated and there exists a mutual coupling between antenna elements. These findings are supported by indoor MIMO measurements. It is found that the mutual coupling can, in some scenarios, increase the outage capacity. An adaptive antenna testbed is used to obtain measurement results for the single input multiple output (SIMO) channel. The results are analyzed and design guidelines are obtained for how a beamformer implemented in hardware shall be constructed. The effects of nonlinear transmit amplifiers in array antennas are also analyzed, and it is shown that an array reduces the effective intermodulation distortion (IMD) transmitted by the array antenna by a spatial filtering of the IMD. A novel frequency allocation algorithm is proposed that reduces IMD even further. The use of a low cost antenna with switchable directional properties, the switched parasitic antenna, is studied in a MIMO context and compared to array techniques. It is found that it has comparable performance, at a fraction of the cost for an array antenna.</p>
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On MIMO Systems and Adaptive Arrays for Wireless Communication : Analysis and Practical AspectsWennström, Mattias January 2002 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with the use of multiple antenna elements in wireless communication over frequency non-selective radio channels. Both measurement results and theoretical analysis are presented. New transmit strategies are derived and compared to existing transmit strategies, such as beamforming and space-time block coding (STBC). It is found that the best transmission algorithm is largely dependent on the channel characteristics, such as the number of transmit and receive antennas and the existence of a line of sight component. Rayleigh fading multiple input multiple output (MIMO) channels are studied using an eigenvalue analysis and exact expressions for the bit error rates and outage capacities for beamforming and STBC is found. In general are MIMO fading channels correlated and there exists a mutual coupling between antenna elements. These findings are supported by indoor MIMO measurements. It is found that the mutual coupling can, in some scenarios, increase the outage capacity. An adaptive antenna testbed is used to obtain measurement results for the single input multiple output (SIMO) channel. The results are analyzed and design guidelines are obtained for how a beamformer implemented in hardware shall be constructed. The effects of nonlinear transmit amplifiers in array antennas are also analyzed, and it is shown that an array reduces the effective intermodulation distortion (IMD) transmitted by the array antenna by a spatial filtering of the IMD. A novel frequency allocation algorithm is proposed that reduces IMD even further. The use of a low cost antenna with switchable directional properties, the switched parasitic antenna, is studied in a MIMO context and compared to array techniques. It is found that it has comparable performance, at a fraction of the cost for an array antenna.
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Non-target Effects of Genetically Modified TreesBlomberg, Patrik January 2007 (has links)
To date, few studies have focused on the effects of genetically modified trees (GM trees) on the environment. One concern with GM trees is that they may have unanticipated effects on non-target organisms, i.e. effects on organisms that are not direct targets of the genetically modified trait. The main objective of this thesis was to study potential non-target effects from the interaction between GM trees and natural enemies, including phytopathogens and herbivorous insects. To study this I used a system consisting of GM trees featuring changes in growth-related characteristics, and naturally occurring enemies. The GM trees used were the aspen hybrids Populus tremula x tremuloides: one unmodified wild type clone T89 (control) and transgenic lines with altered expression of gibberellin (GA 20-oxidase), sucrose (SPS) or pectin (PME); and Populus tremula x alba: one unmodified wild type clone INRA 717-1-B4 (control) and lines modified to suppress the activity of the enzymes in the lignin biosynthetic pathway, i.e. CAD, COMT, CCR or CCoAOMT. The natural enemies used were the parasitic phytopathogens Melampsora pinitorqua, M. populnea and Venturia tremulae, and the herbivorous leaf-beetle Phratora vitellinae. To address this question inoculation experiments, feeding preference experiments, analyses of secondary chemistry and field inventories were performed. The results of the studies showed that the GM trees significantly affected the interaction with the natural enemies, both in the laboratory as well as in the field. For instance, both M. pinitorqua and V. tremulae showed an altered disease incidence on the GM trees of P. tremula x tremuloides compared to the unmodified wild type T89, where all tested transgenic lines exhibited altered susceptibility to the pathogens. However, there were also differences in aggressiveness to the aspens depending on pathogen population. The results from the field inventory showed that lines within all tested transgenic construct, COMT, CAD, CCoAOMT and CCR of P. tremula x alba differed significantly from the wild type INRA 717-1-B4 in susceptibility to M. populnea. In addition, the susceptibility to the rust also differed significantly between lines carrying the same transgenic constructs. Furthermore, we found that overexpression of SPS in P. tremula x tremuloides, unintentionally induced changes in plant secondary chemistry, where the GM-line SPS33A exhibited the largest deviation from the wild type T89 in contents of plant phenolics and nitrogen, and that these changes coincide with a concurrent decrease in herbivory by P. vitellinae on this line. I argue that the altered interactions are the result of physiological changes in the trees. They can originate from direct effects i.e. altered expression of the modified trait, indirect effects of the genetic modification process e.g. pleiotropy, or effects from the transformation process e.g. position effects, to which the tested natural enemies respond. The result stresses the importance of further research on the causes and mechanisms responsible for the altered interaction between GM trees and non-target organisms, as well as evaluating the potential environmental effects of cultivation of GM trees in the field. Such research will require collaboration between researchers from different disciplines, such as plant ecology and physiology, functional genomics, proteomics and metabolomics.
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A PLL Design Based on a Standing Wave Resonant OscillatorKarkala, Vinay 2010 August 1900 (has links)
In this thesis, we present a new continuously variable high frequency standing wave oscillator
and demonstrate its use in generating the phase locked clock signal of a digital IC.
The ring based standing wave resonant oscillator is implemented with a plurality of wires
connected in a mobius configuration, with a cross coupled inverter pair connected across
the wires. The oscillation frequency can be modulated by coarse and fine tuning. Coarse
modification is achieved by altering the number of wires in the ring that participate in the
oscillation, by driving a digital word to a set of passgates which are connected to each wire
in the ring. Fine tuning of the oscillation frequency is achieved by varying the body bias
voltage of both the PMOS transistors in the cross coupled inverter pair which sustains the
oscillations in the resonant ring. We validated our PLL design in a 90nm process technology.
3D parasitic RLCs for our oscillator ring were extracted with skin effect accounted for.
Our PLL provides a frequency locking range from 6 GHz to 9 GHz, with a center frequency
of 7.5 GHz. The oscillator alone consumes about 25 mW of power, and the complete PLL
consumes a power of 28.5 mW. The observed jitter of the PLL is 2.56 percent. These numbers
are significant improvements over the prior art in standing wave based PLLs.
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Analysis And Design Of A Cuk Switching RegulatorGunaydin, Zekiye 01 June 2009 (has links) (PDF)
This theses analyzes Cuk converter, that is one of the dc to dc switching converters. For continuous inductor current mode and discontinuous inductor current mode, stedy state operation is analysied. Characteristic parameters are determined. Through State Space Averge Models, Small Signal Models are obtained. Parasitic Resistance effects on steady state and small signal models are determined. Efficency of the switching converter is derived. Open loop transfer functions for continous and discontinuous inductor curret mode are obtained. Parmeters for small signal behaviour is determined and stability is analysied. Parasitic resistance effects on transfer functions is determined. Therotecial analysis are verified with a simulations of designed converter.
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Internal Dual-/Multi-Network Antennas for Laptop ComputersChou, Liang-che 28 April 2008 (has links)
For laptop computers, the conventional internal antennas are usually used to operate in the WLAN system only, which can not provide sufficient and seamless services for wireless users. In order to overcome this problem, we propose some internal antennas having dual-/multi-network operation capability in this dissertation. Firstly, we present a combo antenna, which combines two shorted monopole antennas for operating in the WWAN/WLAN dual-network system. Secondly, we introduce a shorted monopole antenna through adding a parasitic element to enhance the impedance bandwidth for operating in the WLAN/WiMAX dual-network system. Thirdly, for achieving the compact-size antenna, we present a composite antenna which is composed of a ceramic chip and a printed radiating portion. Fourthly, we introduce a wideband shorted monopole antenna which can provide a wide bandwidth to cover the WPAN, WLAN, and WiMAX operations, and apply it to the MIMO system. Finally, we propose a coupling-type monopole antenna having multi-network operation capability and a compact size, which is about the smallest antenna for wideband operation in the laptop computer so far.
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Physical design automation for large scale field programmable analog arraysBaskaya, Ismail Faik 19 August 2009 (has links)
Field-programmable analog arrays (FPAA) are integrated circuits with a collection of analog building blocks connected through a wire and switch fabric to achieve reconfigurability similar to the FPGAs of the digital domain. Like FPGAs, FPAAs can help reduce the time and money costs of the integrated circuit design cycle and make analog design much easier. In recent years, several types of FPAAs have been developed. Among these, FPAAs that use floating-gate transistors as programming elements have shown great potential in scalability because of the simplicity they provide in configuring the chip. Existing tools for programming FPAAs tend to be device specific and aimed at specific tasks such as filter design. To move FPAAs to the next step, more powerful and generic placement and routing tools are necessary.
This thesis presents a placement and routing tool for large-scale floating-gate-based FPAAs. A topology independent routing resource graph (RRG) was used to model the FPAA routing topology, which enables generic description of any FPAA architecture with arbitrary connectivity including possible FPGA support in the future as well. So far, different FPAA architectures have been specified and routed successfully. The tool is already in use in classes and workshops for analog circuit and system design. Efficient ways to describe circuits and user constraints were developed to allow easy integration with other tools. Analog circuit performance was optimized by taking into account the routing parasitic effects on interconnects under various device-related constraints. Parasitic modeling allows simulation and evaluation of circuits routed on FPAA. Finally, a methodology was developed to explore the optimum architecture for a set of circuit
classes by evaluating the efficiency of different architectures for each circuit class.
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Effects of iron deficiency on the cognitive functioning of primary school children in southern KwaZulu-Natal.Rangongo, Mamoloko Florah. January 1998 (has links)
The aim of this study was to assess the performance of the children in the study on some psychometric tests and to find out whether iron deficiency had any effect on cognitive skills as measured by the selected psychometric tests. The study also wanted to find out if there would be any gender differences on the psychometric tests. A sample of 810 children was selected from eleven schools from the rural Southern part of KwaZulu-Natal. The children were of ages eight to ten years old, were all Zulu speaking and in standard one. Blood samples were taken from all the children to determine iron levels. Psychometric tests viz., the Symbol Digit Modalities Test, Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices, Rey's Auditory Verbal Learning Test and Young's Group Mathematics Test, were all administered to measure cognitive performance. The results showed no significant iron level effects on most of the measured cognitive skills.
There were some significant gender effects on all the psychometric tests except for the Maths test. There was general low performance on all the psychometric tests. Therefore, the results highlighted the importance of designing more tests that can be standardized and thus be applicable to Zulu speaking children and other children with similar backgrounds. The tests should also be able to tap into the cognitive skills that may be affected by iron levels. There is also a great need for studies looking at the lower end of iron deficiency. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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The ecology of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) and interactions with seabirds, seals, and whales in the Canadian ArcticMatley, Jordan January 2012 (has links)
This thesis investigates the foraging of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) and its predators during the summer in the Canadian Arctic. Findings included the identification of Arctic cod, ringed seal (Pusa hispida), beluga (Delphinapterus leucas), and narwhal (Monodon monoceros) diet shifts in response to seasonal prey availability; calculation of isotopic diet-tissue discrimination factors for Arctic cod, ringed seals, and whales based on local tissue and stomach content sampling; and determination of predatory cues to optimize foraging, such as the presence of schools. Additionally, I quantified seabird feeding and interspecific interactions such kleptoparasitism and found that black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) and northern fulmars (Fulmarus glacialis) captured cod directly but lost many to parasitic jaegers (Stercorarius parasiticus) and glaucous gulls (Larus hyperboreus). Finally, I determined that schools of cod were important prey sources for northern fulmars, glaucous gulls, and whales however non-schooling cod were a significant source for black-legged kittiwakes and ringed seals.
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