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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

The inheritance of awn-length in wheat

Gadallah, G. A., 1892- January 1922 (has links)
No description available.
142

The influence of extracts of Ascophvllum nodosum on plant and soil-borne pathogen interactions

Cunha, Felisberta Maria Jesus January 2002 (has links)
This thesis presents an investigation into the responses to extracts of Ascophyllum nodosum (Maxicrop seaweed extracts - MSE) of two different plants species - wheat and strawberry, and their interactions with two soil-borne pathogens, Gaeumannomyces graminis and Phytophthora fragariae respectively, under various environmental conditions. The responses to MSE using hydroponic, glasshouse and field experiments showed that levels of Take-all infection in wheat were reduced by some of the treatments applied. Repeat experiments showed that consistency of results was poor but a positive trend for disease suppression followed MSE treatments. Studies of strawberry infection by Phytophthora fragariae revealed a significantly reduced level of disease severity in plants grown both in hydroponics and in the growth chamber in response to MSE. In vitro studies of the fungus demonstrated that the seaweed extract treatments severely altered mycelial growth, which drastically reduced formation of sporangia and release of zoo spores. Experiments using β-glucan, β-glucanase and laminarin showed that these could not reproduce the effects observed for MSE treatments suggesting that these components were not responsible for the MSE effect. Applications of potassium salts however, did reproduce the responses observed when applied at concentrations similar to the ones found in the seaweed extract. In these investigations, no significant benefits to non-inoculated strawberry plants could be identified as a response to MSE. Measurement of growth of disease infected plants, however clearly demonstrated that they benefited in terms of growth from the MSE amendments probably as a consequence of the disease suppression obtained.
143

An economic analysis of the white wheat marketing system between the Pacific Northwest and Japan

Townsend, Terry P. 17 June 1980 (has links)
Graduation date: 1981
144

Factors associated with stand establishment and subsequent grain yield of seven wheat cultivars and selected progeny (Triticum aestivum, L em thell) when grown under three diverse environments

Vahabian, Mohammad Ali 28 July 1976 (has links)
Graduation date: 1977
145

Establishment of Kura clover for seed with wheat intercrops

Snelling, John P. 26 March 1991 (has links)
Kura clover (Trifolium ambiguum M. Bieb.) is slow to establish and has low seed yields the year after establishment. Intercropping a cereal grain during clover seed field establishment could provide additional revenue to seed growers, provided that intercropping did not jeopardize future clover seed yields. Factorial combinations of spring- and fall-planted kura clover monocultured, companion-intercropped with wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) at two row widths, and relay-intercropped with wheat at two row widths were compared. Spring-planted clover established better than fall-planted clover as measured by percent ground cover. Both spring- and fall-planted kura clover were better established when relay-intercropped than when companion-intercropped. Spring-planted kura clover relay intercropped with fall wheat established better than any other treatment combinations, comparing favorably with spring-planted kura clover monocultures at 18 months from planting. Kura clover generally did not affect wheat yields. Wide and narrow row spaced wheat generally affected kura clover similarly, with narrow-spaced wheat out yielding wide-spaced wheat. It was concluded that relay-intercropping fall wheat into spring-planted clover does not adversely affect clover establishment and could therefore provide more cash revenue than monocultured clover during the clover establishment period. / Graduation date: 1991
146

Evaluation of correlated genetic advance theory as a framework for analysing genotype by environment interactions in wheat breeding multi-environment trials

Qiao, C. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
147

Inheritance of grain yield, and effect of the 1BI/1RS translocation, in three bi-parental wheat (Triticum aestivum) populations in production environments of north-eastern Australia

Peake, A. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
148

Simulating the impact of marker-assisted selection in a wheat breeding program

Kruger, N. L. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
149

Cytogenetic studies involving a nuclear male-sterility mutant in wheat / M. Azhar Hossain

Hossain, M. Azhar January 1983 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy) / xvi, 141 leaves, [11] leaves of plates : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Agronomy, 1984
150

Penicillium radicum: studies on the mechanisms of growth promotion in wheat.

Anstis, Simon January 2004 (has links)
The aims of this study were to investigate the P solubilising activity of Penicillium radicum and identify other possible mechanisms of plant growth promotion that were not related to P solubilisation. The plant chosen for the studies was wheat, the largest cereal commodity produced by Australian agriculture. Given the large area that is planted annually to wheat, this crop represents a large potential market for P. radicum-based inoculants. However, it is unlikely that P. radicum will be effective in all wheat growing regions and all environmental conditions seen in these areas. Research on the modes of action may help to identify the conditions where P. radicum has a good chance of being effective. The P solubilising activity of P. radicum was assessed by examining the amount of P released from rock phosphate (RP) in-vitro. The effectiveness of P. radicum to solubilise RP was compared to that of another P solubilising fungus, the isolate P. bilaiae RS7B-SD1. Both fungi were cultured in a liquid medium that contained either NO₃⁻ or NH ₄⁺ as the sole source of N. Changes in culture pH, soluble P and gluconic acid concentration were determined for both fungi in a 168 hour incubation in both buffered (100 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.8) and non-buffered medium. For P. radicum, the maximum concentration of soluble P was 6.8 fold higher in the presence of NH₄⁺ compared to NO₃⁻. In contrast, for P. bilaiae RS7B-SD1 the highest concentration of soluble P measured in the fungal culture was not significantly affected by N-source. In buffered medium, P. radicum did not appear to solubilise RP and levels of soluble P were generally <1 mg L⁻¹. In contrast, the RP solubilising activity of P. bilaiae RS7B-SD1 was not affected by buffering. Increased RP solubilisation with NH₄⁺ as the N source and lack of RP solubilisation in buffered medium suggested that acidification was the main mechanism of P solubilisation by P. radicum. RP solubilisation by P. bilaiae RS7B-SD1 was similar over the range of culture conditions tested and mechanisms of RP solubilisation are likely to be a combination of mechanisms that relate to both acidification and the production of organic anions. The effect of inoculation with P. radicum on plant growth and P nutrition was studied under glasshouse conditions using a sand culture assay that supplied defined sources of P. The plant growth and P response to P. radicum inoculation were determined in two separate experiments. In Experiment 1, plants were grown to pre-heading stage and supplied with either dibasic calcium phosphate (Ca-P), crystalline iron phosphate (Fe-P), rock phosphate (RP) or phytate (Pₒ) as the source of P. In Experiment 2, plants were harvested after 8 weeks and supplied with either NO₃⁻ or NH₄⁺ as the sole source of N and the P sources were either Ca-P or RP. In Experiment 1, the plant P response (defined as higher shoot P concentration and P uptake) to inoculation was dependent on the P source. The greatest plant P response to inoculation was observed for Ca-P and no significant P response was measured in plants that were supplied with Fe-P, RP or Pₒ. In pots that supplied Fe-P as the P source, there was an increase in shoot dry matter in response to P. radicum inoculation but this occurred without a concomitant plant P response. In Experiment 2, the plant P response to inoculation was dependent on the N source. In the presence of NH₄⁺, P. radicum significantly increased the availability of P sources RP and Ca-P. While there was no significant plant P response under NO₃⁻ supply, there was a significant increase in dry matter production due to P. radicum inoculation. When the data of Experiments 1 & 2 are taken together, results suggest that P. radicum possesses at least two mechanisms of plant growth promotion, (1) P solubilisation and (2) general growth promotion that is independent of P solubilisation. In agreement with P solubilisation in solution cultures, the P solubilisation mechanism of P. radicum in sand culture required NH₄⁺. The ability of P. radicum to increase plant growth independently of a plant P response gave further evidence of general growth promoting abilities of the fungus. While sand culture is a useful tool to elucidate the fungal mechanisms of plant growth promotion, this approach cannot fully reflect the complexity of the rhizosphere in non-sterile soil. Hence, a subsequent experiment was done to determine the effect of P. radicum on plant growth and P nutrition in a number of field soils. The P solubilising activity of P. radicum was determined in four Australian field soils using isotopic dilution. Three soils were chosen on the basis of their chemistry of P retention: (1) Minnipa soil from South Australia was chosen due to P retention associated with the highly alkaline calcareous nature of this soil; (2) Innisfail Queensland, in this soil P retention was dominated by reaction with Fe oxides; and (3) Mt Schank South Australia, a volcanic soil where P retention was predominantly associated with Al oxides. The fourth soil, from Mingenew Western Australia, was chosen due to previous reports that P. radicum inoculation increased the yield of field grown wheat (Bio-Care Technology, unpublished data). The four field soils were each labelled with KH₂ ³²PO₄ and the specific activity (³²P) of the wheat seedling tissue was measured after four weeks growth. When the data was averaged across all four soil types, inoculation with P. radicum caused a significant 11.7% increase in the shoot dry weight of these seedlings. However, P. radicum did not cause any consistent significant difference in the specific activity (³²P) of plants when compared to uninoculated control plants. These results suggested that P. radicum did not have a strong ability to solubilise P from the test soils, and mechanisms other than P solubilisation were in operation to stimulate plant growth. The production of plant growth regulators (PGR) was considered as a mechanism of plant growth promotion not related to P solubilisation. To further explore the hypothesis that the production of PGR acts as a mechanism of plant growth promotion, the ability of P. radicum to produce the auxin, indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) was investigated. Examination with thin-layer chromatography and the Avena coleoptile straight growth assay indicated that fractions of P. radicum culture medium with chemical characteristics similar to IAA (i.e. similar reaction to the Salkowski reagent and Rf as IAA) also possessed auxin-like activity. Using competitive enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) it was found that in liquid culture amended with the precursor tryptophan, P. radicum produced IAA at concentrations up to 0.406 µM. These studies show that P. radicum can produce IAA under laboratory culture conditions. To determine the significance of IAA as a mechanism of plant growth promotion, further studies need to link effects on plant growth and development to the production of IAA by P. radicum. The ability of P. radicum to antagonise root pathogens and control root disease was considered as a further mechanism of growth promotion. Under in-vitro conditions, P. radicum produced hyphal growth patterns and enzymes (protease, β-1,3- and β-1,4-glucanase activity) that were indicative of hyperparasitism. Hyperparasitic growth was seen as hyphal coiling and branching of P. radicum against host hyphae of Rhizoctonia solani, Fusarium pseudograminearum and Pythium irregulare when these soilborne pathogens were studied in dual culture with P. radicum. The effect of P. radicum on the fungal root disease severity of take-all was studied using a seedling bioassay under glasshouse conditions. The ability of P. radicum to suppress take-all disease appeared to be related to the timing of P. radicum infection of wheat seedling roots and placement of the Ggt inoculum in relation to the roots. Compared to soils where Ggt inoculum was only distributed at distances >1 cm below the seed, uniform mixing of the Ggt inoculum throughout the soil negated the beneficial effect of P. radicum on plant growth and its ability to reduce take-all root lesion size. Conversely, early infection of wheat roots by P. radicum gave wheat seedlings some protection against take-all disease. Where treatment with P. radicum was effective, increasing the inoculum dose significantly reduced take-all lesion size. While P. radicum exhibited antagonism towards F. pseudograminearum, Py. irregulare, Bipolaris sorokiniana and R. solani cereal root pathogens in-vitro, further studies under non-sterile soil conditions are needed to evaluate the potential for P. radicum to reduce root disease caused by these fungi. In conclusion, it is unlikely that one single mechanism explains the beneficial effect of P. radicum on wheat growth. In-vitro studies showed that P. radicum has a number of attributes that could function as mechanisms of plant growth promotion. These attributes were, (1) P solubilisation, (2) production of IAA and (3) the ability to antagonise soilborne pathogens in-vitro and reduce the lesion size of the take-all disease in a seedling bioassay. Sand culture assays revealed that at least two plant growth mechanisms were in operation, (1) P solubilisation and (2) a general growth promotion mechanism that was independent of P solubilisation. In agreement with Whitelaw et al. (1999), the P solubilisation mechanism of P. radicum operates via an acidification mechanism. The effectiveness of this mechanism may be limited by the availability of NH₄⁺ in the rhizosphere. Since NH₄⁺ appears to be required for P solubilisation there may exist an interaction between P. radicum and ammoniacal fertilisers. This will have implications for its effectiveness in the field. In-vitro studies suggest that the general mechanism of growth promotion may be related to the production of PGRs such as IAA. In this aspect the known colonisation of the interior of wheat roots by P. radicum would ensure that IAA produced by the fungus is taken up by the root cell and less subject to chemical degradation and/or degradation by other soil microorganisms. Further studies are required to identify the effect of IAA production on plant growth and the effect of P. radicum inoculation on root disease severity in non-sterile soil. / http://proxy.library.adelaide.edu.au/login?url= http://library.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=1165226 / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 2004.

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