981 resultados para Fertilizers inject
Resumo:
Altas produtividades de milho são dependentes da interação de fatores como clima, solo e manejo. O manejo da adubação nitrogenada é um dos principais condicionantes da produtividade, pela complexa dinâmica do nitrogênio (N) nos sistemas agrícolas. É com base nessa dinâmica que se busca estimar o potencial de suprimento de N pelo solo e o seu aproveitamento pela cultura, o que possibilita definir as recomendações de adubação. Contudo, a maioria das variáveis que influencia a necessidade de N na adubação pode mudar no espaço e no tempo, como é o caso das características edafoclimáticas que interferem no potencial de suprimento do nutriente pelo solo. Assim, para se refinar o manejo da adubação nitrogenada, é preciso considerar a sua variabilidade espacial e temporal, especialmente dos atributos do solo. Isso pode ser obtido pela utilização de técnicas que envolvem sistema de informações geográficas (SIG), sistema de posicionamento global (GPS), geoestatística e uso de sensores. Essas técnicas vêm sendo utilizadas na agricultura de precisão. Em condições de lavoura, tem-se observado instabilidade nas produtividades de milho em resposta às aplicações de fertilizantes nitrogenados baseadas na variabilidade espacial do solo (WELSH et al., 2003). Aliado a esse fato, tem-se, também, um custo elevado e certa demora na obtenção de informações espacializadas do solo para determinação de adubação a taxas variáveis. Nesse cenário, a utilização de medidores de clorofila portáteis constitui uma alternativa que auxilia no reconhecimento do estado nutricional do milho, possibilitando diagnosticar rapidamente zonas deficientes em N e viabilizar intervenções para correção ainda durante a safra. Nesta revisão, são apresentados aspectos sobre manejo da cultura e disponibilidade e recomendação de N para o milho na região do Cerrado, associando o uso de técnicas de agricultura de precisão na busca de maior eficiência da adubação nitrogenada.
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2001
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A pecuária no Cerrado baseou-se, por muitos anos, na exploração de pastagens nativas. Nas três últimas décadas, o crescimento acentuado do rebanho bovino na região e o incremento de até cinco vezes na capacidade de suporte das pastagens deveu-se ao aumento da área com grandes gramíneas forrageiras, provenientes do continente africano, especialmente as do gênero Brachiaria e o Andropogon gayanus cv. Planaltina. Estabelecidas sem adubação ou com o efeito residual de modestas adubações da cultura do arroz, sem adubação de manutenção e submetidas a manejo inadequado, extensas áreas dessas pastagens encontram-se em variados graus de degradação. A ausência de adubação de reposição durante décadas de extração dos nutrientes tornou necessária a recuperação dessas pastagens com correção e adubação adequadas ao sistema de produção de cada propriedade. Para isso, em muitos casos, sao necessárias aplicações de calcário, gesso, macronutrientes (nitrogênio, fósforo, potássio) e micronutrientes (zinco, cobre, boro, molibdenio, manganes). Nesta publicação, são relatadas respostas de pastagens ao gesso, bem como critérios usados no diagnóstico da sua necessidade e na determinação da dose desse insumo a ser aplicada no solo. São apresentadas ainda recomendações resumidas para correção com calcário e adubos.
Manejo da adubacao fosfatada corretiva para as culturas do milho e do feijoeiro irrigado em rotacao.
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2001
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2001
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2006
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Sumário: Os princípios da Agroecologia em 2.600 m²; Histórico da vitrine tecnológica de Agroecologia; Adubos verdes e consórcios; Agrofloresta; Como transformar uma propriedade convencional em agroecológica?; Como controlar pragas e doenças em sistemas agroecológicos?; Controle biológico de pragas; Homeopatia e agroecologia; Manejo de pragas e doenças ? as caldas e repelentes naturais; Armadilha para captura de percevejos em soja; Compostagem e vermicompostagem; Fruticultura ecológica; Fixação Biológica de Nitrogênio (FBN) - uso de inoculantes; Olericultura como alternativa de renda para agricultura familiar ecológica; Plantas alimentares não convencionais (PANC); Plantas medicinais; Bioconstruções; Cultivares de soja para sistemas de base ecológica; Meliponicultura-uma atividade essencialmente agroecológica; Milho QPM (alta qualidade proteica); Sistemas alternativos de irrigação; Irrigação com sistemas adaptados de baixo custo; Aspersor de garrafa PET com conexão de 3/4 de polegada; Irrigação alternativa por gotejamento e microaspersão; Carneiro hidráulico; Pastoreio Racional Voisin (PRV); Manejo nutricional em rebanhos de base agroecológica; Suplementação alimentar proteica de bovinos de leite em períodos de escassez (seca ou frio).
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In the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), the deposition of a high-energy proton beam into the liquid mercury target forms bubbles whose asymmetric collapse cause Cavitation Damage Erosion (CDE) to the container walls, thereby reducing its usable lifetime. One proposed solution for mitigation of this damage is to inject a population of microbubbles into the mercury, yielding a compliant and attenuative medium that will reduce the resulting cavitation damage. This potential solution presents the task of creating a diagnostic tool to monitor bubble population in the mercury flow in order to correlate void fraction and damage. Details of an acoustic waveguide for the eventual measurement of two-phase mercury-helium flow void fraction are discussed. The assembly’s waveguide is a vertically oriented stainless steel cylinder with 5.08cm ID, 1.27cm wall thickness and 40cm length. For water experiments, a 2.54cm thick stainless steel plate at the bottom supports the fluid, provides an acoustically rigid boundary condition, and is the mounting point for a hydrophone. A port near the bottom is the inlet for the fluid of interest. A spillover reservoir welded to the upper portion of the main tube allows for a flow-through design, yielding a pressure release top boundary condition for the waveguide. A cover on the reservoir supports an electrodynamic shaker that is driven by linear frequency sweeps to excite the tube. The hydrophone captures the frequency response of the waveguide. The sound speed of the flowing medium is calculated, assuming a linear dependence of axial mode number on modal frequency (plane wave). Assuming that the medium has an effective-mixture sound speed, and that it contains bubbles which are much smaller than the resonance radii at the highest frequency of interest (Wood’s limit), the void fraction of the flow is calculated. Results for water and bubbly water of varying void fraction are presented, and serve to demonstrate the accuracy and precision of the apparatus.
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Globally, agriculture is being intensified with mechanization and increased use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. There has been a scaling up of production to satisfy the demands of supermarket distribution. Problems associated with intensification of production, trade globalisation and a larger market demand for greater volumes of fresh produce, include consumers' concern about pesticide residues and leaching of nutrients and pesticides into the environment, as well as increases in the transmission of human food-poisoning pathogens on raw vegetables and in fruit juices. The first part of this research was concerned with the evaluation of a biological control strategy for soil-borne pathogens, these are difficult to eliminate and the chemicals of which the most effective fumigants e.g. methyl bromide, are being withdrawn form use. Chitin-containing crustaceans shellfish waste was investigated as a selective growth substrate amendment in the field, in glasshouse and in storage trials against Sclerotinia disease of Helianthus tuberosus, Phytophthora fragariae disease of Fragaria vesca and Fusarium disease of Dianthus. Results showed that addition to shellfish waste stimulated substrate microbial populations and lytic activity and induced plant defense proteins, namely chitinases and cellulases. Protective effects were seen in all crop models but the results indicate that further trials are required to confirm long-term efficacy. The second part of the research investigated the persistence of enteric bacteria in raw salad vegetables using model food poisoning isolates. In clinical investigations plants are sampled for bacterial contamination but no attempt is made to differentiate between epiphytes and endophytes. Results here indicate that the mode isolates persist endophytically thereby escaping conventional chlorine washes and they may also induce host defenses, which results in their suppression and in negative results in conventional plate count screening. Finally a discussion of criteria that should be considered for a HACCP plan for safe raw salad vegetable production is presented.
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In moments of rapid social changes, as has been witnessed in Ireland in the last decade, the conditions through which people engage with their localities though memory, individually and collectively, remains an important cultural issue with key implications for questions of heritage, preservation and civic identity. In recent decades, cultural geographers have argued that landscape is more than just a view or a static text of something symbolic. The emphasis seems to be on landscape as a dynamic cultural process – an ever-evolving process being constructed and re-constructed. Hence, landscape seems to be a highly complex term that carries many different meanings. Material, form, relationships or actions have different meanings in different settings. Drawing upon recent and continuing scholarly debates in cultural landscapes and collective memory, this thesis sets out to examine the generation of collective memory and how it is employed as a cultural tool in the production of memory in the landscape. More specifically, the research considers the relationships between landscape and memory, investigating the ways in which places are produced, appropriated, experienced, sensed, acknowledged, imagined, yearned for, appropriated, re-appropriated, contested and identified with. A polyvocal-bricoleur approach aims to get below the surface of a cultural landscape, inject historical research and temporal depth into cultural landscape studies and instil a genuine sense of inclusivity of a wide variety of voices (role of monuments and rituals and voices of people) from the past and present. The polyvocal-bricoleur approach inspires a mixed method methodology approach to fieldsites through archival research, fieldwork and filmed interviews. Using a mixture of mini-vignettes of place narratives in the River Lee valley in the south of Ireland, the thesis explores a number of questions on the fluid nature of narrative in representing the story and role of the landscape in memory-making. The case studies in the Lee Valley are harnessed to investigate the role of the above questions/ themes/ debates in the act of memory making at sites ranging from an Irish War of Independence memorial to the River Lee’s hydroelectric scheme to the valley’s key religious pilgrimage site. The thesis investigates the idea that that the process of landscape extends not only across space but also across time – that the concept of historical continuity and the individual and collective human engagement and experience of this continuity are central to the processes of remembering on the landscape. In addition the thesis debates the idea that the production of landscape is conditioned by several social frames of memory – that individuals remember according to several social frames that give emphasis to different aspects of the reality of human experience. The thesis also reflects on how the process of landscape is represented by those who re-produce its narratives in various media.
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An analytical model was developed to describe in-canopy vertical distribution of ammonia (NH(3)) sources and sinks and vertical fluxes in a fertilized agricultural setting using measured in-canopy mean NH(3) concentration and wind speed profiles. This model was applied to quantify in-canopy air-surface exchange rates and above-canopy NH(3) fluxes in a fertilized corn (Zea mays) field. Modeled air-canopy NH(3) fluxes agreed well with independent above-canopy flux estimates. Based on the model results, the urea fertilized soil surface was a consistent source of NH(3) one month following the fertilizer application, whereas the vegetation canopy was typically a net NH(3) sink with the lower portion of the canopy being a constant sink. The model results suggested that the canopy was a sink for some 70% of the estimated soil NH(3) emissions. A logical conclusion is that parametrization of within-canopy processes in air quality models are necessary to explore the impact of agricultural field level management practices on regional air quality. Moreover, there are agronomic and environmental benefits to timing liquid fertilizer applications as close to canopy closure as possible. Finally, given the large within-canopy mean NH(3) concentration gradients in such agricultural settings, a discussion about the suitability of the proposed model is also presented.
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p.325-334
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p.41-44
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p.105-110
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p.215-218