955 resultados para Okara, Glycine max
Resumo:
O uso de Brachiaria ruzizienses para a formação de palhada em sistema de plantio direto tem se expandido no Cerrado. Essa cobertura além de proteger o solo contra a erosão, representa uma importante fonte de nutrientes. O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar o potencial da Brachiaria ruzizienses como cicladora de fósforo e potássio e seu efeito sobre a produtividade de soja (Glycine Max). O experimento foi inteiramente casualizado com três tratamentos: Solo sem palhada e sem adubação; com palhada de braquiária e sem adubação mineral; e com palhada de braquiária e adubação mineral (500kg 02-23-10). A brachiária foi semeada em dezembro/2006 e dessecada no inicio de outubro/2007, quando foi plantada a soja. A palhada foi pesada e retirada amostra para análise de fósforo e potássio. A braquiária produziu em média 12,3 t ha-1 de matéria seca, atingindo 19,8 t ha-1. Na palhada foram encontrados em média 25,1 e 33,1 Kg ha-1, de P2O5 e K2O, respectivamente, sendo que em alguns casos, foram encontradas quantidades superiores à extraída pela soja. Mesmo com os altos teores de nutrientes contidos na palhada, observou-se resposta positiva da soja ao uso de fertilizante. Contudo o acréscimo de produtividade é superior ao custo do tratamento.
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2016
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2016
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2016
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2016
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2016
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2016
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2014
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1995
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2013
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2016
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2016
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2016
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N-[2-Naphthyl]-glycine hydrazide has been shown for the first time as a potent inhibitor of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (EC 2.7.7.6) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. At a concentration of 10 to the power -9 M, the compound shows maximum inhibition of the enzyme, the inhibition being less at higher concentrations. It is suggested that the novel type of inhibition pattern may be due to hydrophobic interactions occurring between the molecules of the compound at higher concentrations. The finding that there is a shift in the max of the compound could also account for this phenomenon. The effect of this compound was also tested on DNA-dependent RNA polymerases from an eukaryotic fungus, Microsporum canis. At a concentration of 10 to the power-9 M it inhibits RNA polymerase II (32 percent) but not RNA polymerases I and III.
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This thesis considers Max Dupain (1911-1992) and his contribution to the development of architectural photography in Australia. Through his continuous and prolific output over six decades of professional photography Dupain greatly stimulated awareness of and interest in Australian architecture. Before Dupain began specialising in the field, little consistent professional architectural photography had been practised in Australia. He and some of his close associates subsequently developed architectural photography as both a specialised branch of photography and - perhaps more significantly - as a necessary adjunct to architectural practice. In achieving these dual accomplishments, Dupain and like-minded practitioners succeeded in elevating architectural photography to the status of a discipline in its own right. They also gave Australians generally a deeper understanding of the heritage represented by the nation's built environment. At the same time, some of the photographic images he created became firmly fixed in the public imagination as historical icons within the development of a distinctive Australian tradition in the visual arts. Within his chosen field Dupain was the dominant Australian figure of his time. He was instrumental in breaking the link with Pictorialism by bringing Modernist and Documentary perspectives to Australian architectural photography. He was an innovator in the earlier decades of his professional career, however, his photographic techniques and practice did not develop beyond that. By the end of the 1980s he had largely lost touch with the technology and techniques of contemporary practice. Dupain's reputation, which has continued growing since his death in 1992, therefore arises from reasons other than his photographic images alone. It reflects his accomplishment in raising his fellow citizens' awareness of a worthwhile home-grown artistic tradition.