3 resultados para Need evaluation

em Digital Repository at Iowa State University


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Black polyethylene plastic mulch provides many benefits to fruit and vegetable producers. It increases earliness by increasing spring soil temperatures, conserves soil moisture, and reduces pesticide usage by decreasing weed and disease pressure. Furthermore, during seasons of high precipitation, it protects fertilizer from leaching below the root zone. Unfortunately, polyethylene mulches do not degrade and must be removed from the field and discarded each season. This is a labor-intensive process whether it is done mechanically or by hand. Several degradable plastic mulches have been developed that are designed to be incorporated into the soil profile, eliminating the need for removal, with no negative impact on soil quality or health. However, these degradable plastics often do not meet degradation expectations (either degrade too quickly or degrade incompletely and require manual removal). The objective of this project was to evaluate several degradable mulches for storage life, ease of use, and influence on tomato production.

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A long-term experiment was established in 2009 to study continuous corn responses to potassium (K), nitrogen (N), and hybrid rootworm resistance. Previous research suggested a need for this study. A long-term trial conducted until 2001 at the ISU Northern Research Farm showed that the maximum corn yield level and the N rate that maximized yield was higher when K was optimal or greater. In contrast, the relative yield response to N and the N rate that maximized yield were similar for soil-test phosphorus (P) levels ranging from very low to very high. Other studies have shown that rootworm resistance often increases yield compared with untreated susceptible hybrids. Also, that rootworm resistance does not consistently affect the K rate that maximizes yield, but increases K removal because of the higher yield levels. Therefore, this new study evaluates possible interactions between rootworm resistance and N and K fertilization in corn.

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A substantial need exists to reduce costs and develop more nutritionally adequate diets for established as well as emerging aquaculture species in the North Central Region (NCR). The study evaluated a diet for juvenile northern bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus) that is significantly less costly than currently available diets for sunfish, while yielding a growth rate that is at least equal to an industry standard sunfish diet. Such a diet formulation is now available to the NCR as the result of a recently funded North Central Regional Aquaculture Center (NCRAC) project.