Resultados de búsqueda - "Punjab"

  1. Seed priming with potassium nitrate and gibberellic acid enhances the performance of dry direct seeded rice (Oryza sativa L.) in north-western India por Dhillon, Buta Singh, Kumar, Virender, Sagwal, Pardeep, Kaur, Navjyot, Singh Mangat, Gurjit, Singh, Sudhanshu

    Publicado 2021
    “…Therefore, laboratory and field studies were conducted at Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, India, during kharif/wet-season 2018 and 2019 to evaluate the effect of different priming techniques on germination, establishment, growth, and grain yield of rice under DSR conditions. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  2. Integrated weed management using planting pattern, cultivar, and herbicide in dry-seeded rice in northwest India por Mahajan, Gulshan, Poonia, Vikas, Chauhan, Bhagirath S.

    Publicado 2014
    “…Field experiments were conducted in Punjab, India, in 2011 and 2012 to study the integrated effect of planting pattern [uniform rows (20-cm spacing) and paired rows (15-, 25-, and 15-cm spacing)], cultivars (PR-115 and IET-21214), and weed control treatments (nontreated control, pendimethalin 750 g ai ha−1, bispyribac-sodium 25 g ai ha−1, and pendimethalin 750 g ha−1 followed by bispyribac-sodium 25 g ha−1) on weed suppression and rice grain yield in dry-seeded rice. …”
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    Journal Article
  3. The Happy Seeder enables direct drilling of wheat into rice stubble por Sidhu, H.S., Manpreet-Singh, Humphreys, E., Yadvinder-Singh, Balwinder-Singh, Dhillon, S.S., Blackwell, J., Bector, V., Malkeet-Singh, Sarbjeet-Singh

    Publicado 2007
    “…Evaluation of the technology over 3 years in replicated experiments and farmers’ fields in Punjab, India, showed that establishment of wheat sown into rice residues with the Happy Seeder was comparable with establishment using conventional methods (straw burnt followed by direct drilling or cultivation before sowing) for sowings around the optimum time into stubbles up to 7.5 t/ha. …”
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    Journal Article
  4. Optimization of sowing time to mitigate heat stress in spring maize (Zea mays) in Indo-Gangetic plains of India por Bamboriya, Shanti Devi, Sepat, Seema, Kumar, Ramesh, Jat, Shankar Lal, Rakshit, Sujay, Zaidi, Pervez H.

    Publicado 2025
    “…An experiment was conducted during 2020 and 2021 at the Research farm of ICAR-Indian Institute of Maize Research, Ludhiana, Punjab to study the effect of sowing time and genotype interactions on yield and heat stress in spring maize. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  5. Surface runoff estimation over heterogeneous canal commands applying medium resolution remote sensing data with the SCS-CN method por Jayakody, Priyantha, Gamage, M.S.D.Nilantha

    Publicado 2010
    “…The widely accepted SCS curve number method was employed to calculate surface runoff, using a combination of remotely-sensed land use/land cover and hydrometrological data in the Punjab canal command areas. Land use/Land cover maps for four cropping seasons, Rabi 2004-05, Kharif 2005, Rabi 2006-07 and Kharif 2007 were derived using red and near infrared bands of MODIS 8 day products. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Conference Paper
  6. Introduction and management of vetch/barley forage mixtures in the rainfed areas of Pakistan 3. Residual effects on following cereal crops por Qamar, I.A., Keatinge, J.D.H., Mohammad, N., Ali, A., Khan, M.A.

    Publicado 1999
    “…The residual effects of winter-sown forage mixtures grown in the northern rainfed parts of Punjab province and south-eastern North West Frontier Province in Pakistan were examined. …”
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    Journal Article
  7. Multi-location testing of a global collection of elite chickpea genotypes to identify stable sources of resistance to Ascochyta blight por Istanbuli, Tawffiq, Can, Canan, Talapov, T., Kharrat, Mohamed, Bouhadida, Mariem, Omri, Noura, Fikre, A., Zewdie, Asrat, Singh, Sarvjeet, Rani, Upasana, Tawkaz, Sawsan, Kemal, Seid Ahmed, Hamwieh, Aladdin

    Publicado 2022
    “…The testing sites were Kafarshakhna (Lebanon), Merchouch (Morocco), Alem Tena (Ethiopia), Punjab University (India), Beja (Tunisia), and Gaziantep University (Turkey). …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Conference Paper
  8. Water-energy-food-environment nexus in action: global review of precepts and practice por Shah, Tushaar

    Publicado 2023
    “…Global groundwater economy comprises three sub-economies: (a) diesel-powered unregulated, as in Nepal terai, eastern India, Bangladesh, Pakistan Punjab and Sind, and much of Sub-Saharan Africa, where use-specific energy subsidies are impractical; (b) electricity-powered regulated, as in North America and Europe, where tubewells are authorized, metered and subject to consumption-linked energy charges; and (c) electricity-powered unregulated, as in geographies covered by our review – barring China, Bengal and Bangladesh – where unmeasured electricity subsidies have created a bloated groundwater economy. …”
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    Journal Article
  9. Chromium contamination in paddy soil-rice systems and associated human health risks in Pakistan por Ali, W., Zhang, H., Mao, K., Shafeeque, Muhammad, Aslam, M. W., Yang, X., Zhong, L., Feng, X., Podgorski, J.

    Publicado 2022
    “…This study used a new dataset of 500 paddy soil and plant tissue samples collected in the rice-growing regions of Sindh and Punjab Provinces of Pakistan. Overall, 97.4% of grain samples exceeded the Cr threshold values of 1.0 mg kg-1, determined by the China National Food Standard (CNFS). …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  10. Sources of income inequality and poverty in rural Pakistan por Adams, Richard H., Jr., He, Jane J.

    Publicado 1995
    “…He address these issues by analyzing longitudinal data from 727 households in four districts in rural Pakistan (Faisalabad and Attock in Punjab Province, Badin in Sind Province, and Dir in North-West Frontier Province). …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Informe técnico
  11. Water, climate and adaptation: a conversation with Dr Aditi Mukherji por Mukherji, Aditi, Development Policy Talks

    Publicado 2025
    “…Working in West Bengal, a region receiving three to four times more rainfall than water-scarce areas like Punjab, she discovered that the fundamental problem wasn't water scarcity but restrictive policies. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Audiom

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