950 resultados para carnauba straw s powder
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Soil pollution with hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) has caused serious environmental problems. Here we describe the targeted degradation of all HCH isomers by applying the aerobic bacterium Sphingobium indicum B90A. In particular, we examined possibilities for large-scale cultivation of strain B90A, tested immobilization, storage and inoculation procedures, and determined the survival and HCH-degradation activity of inoculated cells in soil. Optimal growth of strain B90A was achieved in glucose-containing mineral medium and up to 65% culturability could be maintained after 60 days storage at 30 degrees C by mixing cells with sterile dry corncob powder. B90A biomass produced in water supplemented with sugarcane molasses and immobilized on corncob powder retained 15-20% culturability after 30 days storage at 30 degrees C, whereas full culturability was maintained when cells were stored frozen at -20 degrees C. On the contrary, cells stored on corncob degraded gamma-HCH faster than those that had been stored frozen, with between 15 and 85% of gamma-HCH disappearance in microcosms within 20 h at 30 degrees C. Soil microcosm tests at 25 degrees C confirmed complete mineralization of [(14)C]-gamma-HCH by corncob-immobilized strain B90A. Experiments conducted in small pits and at an HCH-contaminated agricultural site resulted in between 85 and 95% HCH degradation by strain B90A applied via corncob, depending on the type of HCH isomer and even at residual HCH concentrations. Up to 20% of the inoculated B90A cells survived under field conditions after 8 days and could be traced among other soil microorganisms by a combination of natural antibiotic resistance properties, unique pigmentation and PCR amplification of the linA genes. Neither the addition of corncob nor of corncob immobilized B90A did measurably change the microbial community structure as determined by T-RFLP analysis. Overall, these results indicate that on-site aerobic bioremediation of HCH exploiting the biodegradation activity of S. indicum B90A cells stored on corncob powder is a promising technology.
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Research project HR-155 was initiated to study soil erosion problems along the secondary road system in Iowa and to find a substitute for straw for the control of soil erosion during the period of seed establishment. Accordingly, six field research sites were established to test the ability of commercial soil conditioners to control soil erosion. The six field research sites were selected on the basis of terrain and type of soil material exposed on the cut-slope areas.
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A lysimeter experiment was carried out with sugarcane aiming to evaluate the leaching of nitrogen derived from either urea (15N) or the soil/sugarcane crop residues. The leaching of K+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ was also evaluated. The experiment was a factorial 2x4. The influencing factors were: firstly, the differential addition of two kinds of sugarcane remains to the soil, simulating conditions of cane- plantation renewal after the cane crop harvest, with and without previous straw removal by burning; secondly, four doses of N: 0, 30, 60, and 90 kg ha-1. During the experimental period the total volume of water received by the sugarcane-soil system was 2,015 mm, with 1,255 mm as precipitation and 760 mm as irrigation. The loss of N by leaching from the fertilizer (15N) was not detected. In the first three weeks the largest losses of N by leaching occurred, originating from the soil/sugarcane remains-N. The mean of leached N during the experimental period of 11 months was of 4.5 kg ha-1. The mean losses of K+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ were of 13, 320 and 80 kg ha-1, respectively.
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The formation of silicon particles in rf glow discharges has attracted attention due to their effect as a contaminant during film deposition or etching. However, silicon and silicon alloy powders produced by plasma¿enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) are promising new materials for sintering ceramics, for making nanoscale filters, or for supporting catalytic surfaces. Common characteristics of these powders are their high purity and the easy control of their stoichiometry through the composition of the precursor gas mixture. Plasma parameters also influence their structure. Nanometric powders of silicon¿carbon alloys exhibiting microstructural properties such as large hydrogen content and high surface/volume ratio have been produced in a PECVD reactor using mixtures of silane and methane at low pressure (-1 Torr) and low frequency square¿wave modulated rf power (13.56 MHz). The a¿Si1¿xCx:H powders were obtained from different precursor gas mixtures, from R=0.05 to R=9, where R=[SiH4]/([SiH4]+[CH4]). The structure of the a¿Si1¿xCx:H powder was analyzed by several techniques. The particles appeared agglomerated, with a wide size distribution between 5 and 100 nm. The silane/methane gas mixture determined the vibrational features of these powders in the infrared. Silicon-hydrogen groups were present for every gas composition, whereas carbon¿hydrogen and silicon¿carbon bonds appeared in methane¿rich mixtures (R-0.6). The thermal desorption of hydrogen revealed two main evolutions at about 375 and 660¿°C that were ascribed to hydrogen bonded to silicon and carbon, respectively. The estimated hydrogen atom concentration in the sample was about 50%.
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Background and objective: Asthma is one of the most frequent chronic diseases affecting children and adolescents. Good compliance is indispensable for effective treatment since a suboptimal use of inhalation devices can result in decreased therapeutic efficacy and increased morbidity. The objective of this work was to evaluate the inhalation technique of paediatric patients visiting a specialized consultation clinic of a university hospital. Design: Observational prospective study during a 3-month period. Setting Specialized consultation clinic of a university hospital. Main outcome measures: This study involved 40 outpatient infants, children and adolescents visiting alone or with their parent(s). Patients' data (age, sex, weight, diagnostic, reason for consulting, previous consultations) and their medicines were compiled using an ad hoc form. Filmed sequences of the inhalation procedure used by each child were reviewed independently by members of an interdisciplinary team consisting in a physician, a pharmacist, a nurse and a physiotherapist. A score of 1 was assigned to each correct step in the procedure, and a score of 0 to an incorrect step. A perfect procedure implied 12 correct steps. Results: Thirty patients were treated with a metered-dose inhaler and an inhalation chamber (Babyhaler or AeroChamber Plus); ten other patients were treated with a dry powder inhaler (Diskus or Turbuhaler). The agreement between the members of the interdisciplinary team was considered satisfactory. Nine patients (22.5%) reached an average score lower than 7, 18 patients (45%) a score between 7 and 10 and 13 (32.5%) a score equal to or better than 10. No patient reached the maximum score of 12. Users of the metered-dose inhalers (average score = 9.2) showed a better technique than users of the dry powder inhalers (average score = 7.4). Disappointingly, the score was not improved during a second consultation or following regular consultations. Conclusions: Video recording is a simple method to evaluate the degree of mastery of an inhalation procedure in paediatric patients. The method allows a convenient and efficient identification of suboptimal procedure steps by the hospital staff, and opens the way to patient-specific teaching. In two-thirds of juvenile patients, their inhalation technique was suboptimal despite initial training. This study shows conclusively that the inhalation technique in paediatric patients must be monitored during each examination, and teaching measures taken to improve it when necessary.
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The aphid Aphis gossypii Glover (Hemiptera: Aphididae), a harmful pest on cotton, causes direct damage, reducing plant vigor, and indirect damage by honeydew secretion and transmission of several viruses. Due to the problem of pesticide resistance, alternative techniques for chemical control, such as the use of natural insecticides, have been object of research. The effects of aqueous extracts of neem (Azadirachta indica A. Juss) seed powder on the development, survival and fecundity of A. gossypii were evaluated. Treatments consisted of neem seed powder in the concentrations of 23.8, 122.0, 410.0 and 1,410.0 mg/100 mL of distilled water. Mortality rate during the nymphal development for aphids maintained on cotton leaf discs treated with the two highest concentrations were, respectively, 60.0% and 100.0%. With the exception of the highest concentration (1,410.0 mg/100 mL), neem concentrations did not extend the aphids' development period. The net reproductive rate (R0) was of 35.0 nymphs/female for control aphids and of 0.0 nymph/female when the group of females was exposed to neem seed powder at 1,410.0 mg/100 mL since birth. The aqueous extract of neem seeds is efficient against the aphid A. gossypii, causing nymph mortality and reducing their survival period and fecundity.
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The objective of this work was to evaluate arrestant and stimulant feeding effects on Diabrotica speciosa (Ger.), using cucurbitacin-content starch-based formulations prepared with varying starch sources, and adding potassium lignate. In a glass slide assay, the wash off resistance of formulations was compared. Potassium lignate did not improve wash off resistance. Lagenaria vulgaris L. powder, in which cucurbitacin B concentration was determined as 0.28%, was added to the most adhesive formulation. The resultant material was used in a two-choice assay in which leaves of common bean, Phaseolus vulgaris L., treated with concentrations of 2.5%, 5%, 10%, 15% and 20% were offered to insects together with untreated control leaves. Greater number of insects and leaves consumed were found on leaves treated with cucurbitacin-content formulation (2.5%, 5% - greatest response -, 10% and 15% concentrations) than on untreated control leaves. The concentration, in which responses were higher, was sprayed in a bean field at 1,000, 1,900 and 3,000 g ha-1. Greater number of beetles was found in plots treated with the highest dosage, 3 and 6 days after spraying. Ten days after spraying, no significant differences were found among dosages, probably due to washoff of the bait.
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Recent studies show that the composition of fingerprint residue varies significantly from the same donor as well as between donors. This variability is a major drawback in latent print dating issues. This study aimed, therefore, at the definition of a parameter that is less variable from print to print, using a ratio of peak area of a target compound degrading over time divided by the summed area of peaks of more stable compounds also found in latent print residues.Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis of the initial lipid composition of latent prints identifies four main classes of compounds that can be used in the definition of an aging parameter: fatty acids, sterols, sterol precursors, and wax esters (WEs). Although the entities composing the first three groups are quite well known, those composing WEs are poorly reported. Therefore, the first step of the present work was to identify WE compounds present in latent print residues deposited by different donors. Of 29 WEs recorded in the chromatograms, seven were observed in the majority of samples.The identified WE compounds were subsequently used in the definition of ratios in combination with squalene and cholesterol to reduce the variability of the initial composition between latent print residues from different persons and more particularly from the same person. Finally, the influence of a latent print enhancement process on the initial composition was studied by analyzing traces after treatment with magnetic powder, 1,2-indanedione, and cyanoacrylate.
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In this report, the authors present a case of unusual, accidental methadone intoxication in a 40-year-old man, who had inhaled methadone powder. The drug dealer was a pharmacy technician; methadone had been stolen from a pharmacy and sold as cocaine. After having inhaled methadone powder, he suffered cardiopulmonary arrest. He was admitted to hospital where he died after 24 h of intensive care. The autopsy revealed congestion of internal organs and cerebral and pulmonary edema. Microscopically, the heart showed no changes. The toxicological analyses performed on blood and urine taken at the hospital revealed methadone, cannabinoids, and ethanol. The blood methadone concentration was 290 μg/L. The urine methadone concentration was 160 μg/L. Midazolam and lidocaine, which were administered to the patient at the hospital, were also detected in the blood. The cause of death was determined to be methadone intoxication. The literature has been reviewed and discussed. To date, and to our knowledge, only very few cases of accidental death resulting from methadone inhalation have been described up to the case presented herein.
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The production and use of biofuels has increased in the present context of sustainable development. Biofuel production from plant biomass produces not only biofuel or ethanol but also co-products containing lignin, modified lignin, and lignin derivatives. This research investigated the utilization of lignin-containing biofuel co-products (BCPs) in pavement soil stabilization as a new application area. Laboratory tests were conducted to evaluate the performance and the moisture susceptibility of two types of BCP-treated soil samples compared to the performance of untreated and traditional stabilizer-treated (fly ash) soil samples. The two types of BCPs investigated were (1) a liquid type with higher lignin content (co-product A) and (b) a powder type with lower lignin content (co-product B). Various additive combinations (co-product A and fly ash, co-products A and B, etc.) were also evaluated as alternatives to stand-alone co-products. Test results indicate that BCPs are effective in stabilizing the Iowa Class 10 soil classified as CL or A-6(8) and have excellent resistance to moisture degradation. Strengths and moisture resistance in comparison to traditional additives (fly ash) could be obtained through the use of combined additives (co-product A + fly ash; co-product A + co-product B). Utilizing BCPs as a soil stabilizer appears to be one of the many viable answers to the profitability of the bio-based products and the bioenergy business. Future research is needed to evaluate the freeze-thaw durability and for resilient modulus characterization of BCP-modified layers for a variety of pavement subgrade and base soil types. In addition, the long-term performance of these BCPs should be evaluated under actual field conditions and traffic loadings. Innovative uses of BCP in pavement-related applications could not only provide additional revenue streams to improve the economics of biorefineries, but could also serve to establish green road infrastructures.
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OBJECTIVES: Agriculture is considered one of the occupations most at risk of acute or chronic respiratory problems. The aim of our study was to determine from which level of exposure to organic dust the respiratory function is chronically affected in workers involved in wheat grain or straw manipulation and to test if some of these working populations can recover their respiratory function after an exposure decrease. METHOD: 87 workers exposed to wheat dust: farmers, harvesters, silo workers and livestock farmers and 62 non exposed workers, were included into a longitudinal study comprising two visits at a six months interval with lung function measurements and symptom questionnaires. Cumulative and mean exposure to wheat dust were generated from detailed work history of each worker and a task-exposure matrix based on task-specific exposure measurements. Immunoglobulins (IgG and IgE) specific of the most frequent microorganisms in wheat dust have been determined. RESULTS: FEV1 decreased significantly with the cumulative exposure and mean exposure levels. The estimated decrease was close to 200 mL per year of high exposure, which corresponds roughly to levels of wheat dust higher than 10 mg/m(3). Peak expiratory flow and several acute symptoms correlate with recent exposure level. Recovery of the respiratory function six months after exposure to wheat dust and evolution of exposure indicators in workers blood (IgG and IgE) will be discussed. CONCLUSIONS: These results show a chronic effect of exposure to wheat dust on bronchial obstruction. Short term effects and reversibility will be assessed using the full study results.
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ABSTRACTNeedle fibre calcite (NFC) is one of the most widespread habits of pedogenic calcite. It is a monocrystal of calcite, in the shape of a needle, with a diameter of one micron and a length between 4 and 103 times its width. NFC occurs in soils with different macroscopic and microscopic morphologies. Macroscopically, two main habits of NFC exist: "cotton ball'Mike clusters and as "powder" coating on pebbles inside the soil. It can also act as nucleation sites for precipitation of calcite cements of purely physicochemical origin (LCC - Late Calcitic Cement). Although many studies have been conducted on needle fibre calcite, its origin remains a subject of debate. The NFC having never been reproduced in the laboratory whatever the considered approach, the processes responsible for its precipitation as a so particular morphology remain unexplained. The shift between the length orientation of the needle crystal and the normal axis of calcite growth (c-axis) is also unresolved.Samples taken in two soils observed in quarries (Villiers and Savagnier) in the Swiss Jura Mountains are used to investigate the processes involved in the formation of these calcite crystals in pedogenic environments. Three groups of microscopic morphologies are distinguished: (i) simple needles (SN), (ii) simple needles with overgrowths (SNO), and (iii) simple needles with nanofibres (SNN), nanofibres being either organic or mineral in nature. These groups correspond to different stages in the formation and evolution of NFC.Comparison of carbon and oxygen isotope compositions of NFC with LCC, in relationship with the composition of the carbonate host rock (CHR), and the carbon isotope signature of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from the soil waters, indicates that both NFC and LCC are precipitated in isotopic equilibrium with the soil solution. Similar Ô13C and Ô180 values of the elongated NFC and the rhombohedral calcite crystals of the LCC suggest that the precipitation of these different calcite habits is not due to changes in physicochemical conditions. The growth of NFC crystals inside an organic mould formed by the fungal hyphae could explain the formation of calcite ciystals in the shape of a needle in isotopic equilibrium with the local environment.Strontium and calcium isotope compositions of the three microscopic groups of NFC and LCC were also studied, in order to determine the origin of calcium (Ca2+) entrapped in the calcite lattice and to elucidate the processes responsible for the precipitation of NFC. The 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the SN is closer to the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the carbonate host rock than the LCC, SNO, and SNN. This could be another clue for the formation of SN inside fungal hyphae, because fungi are known to dissolve the rocks to release and translocate through their hyphae nutrients necessary for their growth. SN and SNN are depleted in Sr and enriched in ^Ca compared to the LCC. In the context of Villiers quarry, where the two ciystal shapes precipitate at similar temperature (in a range of 0,6°C), such variations are the result of a slower precipitation rate of NFC, which is inconsistent with a purely physicochemically precipitated elongate crystal.Finally, NFC is enriched in major and trace elements (i.e. Fe, Zn, Cu, and Mo) compared to the LCC. This enrichment is ascribed to modification in precipitation processes between the NFC and LCC. Right now, it is not possible to preclude the influence of the particular shape of NFC or the biological influence. REEs are not fractionated in NFC, contrary to LCC. Thus, NFC does not precipitate from a percolation solution circulating downward the soil, which should lead to the fractionation of the REEs. As explained above, fungi, are able to dissolve and translocate nutrients. This kind of processes allows releasing elements in the soil solution without fractionation and could explain the particular chemical signature of NFC regarding the REEs.The geochemical approach to investigate the origin of NFC presented in this study does not allow providing direct clues to the fungal origin of NFC, but brings several new insights in the understanding of the formation of such a particular mineral, calcite needles, by precluding definitively their physicochemical origin.RESUMELa calcite en aiguilles (NFC) est l'une des formes les plus ubiquiste de calcite pédogénique. Il s'agit d'un monocrystal de calcite d'un diamètre d'un micron et d'une longueur 4 à 102 fois supérieure à sa largeur. A l'échelle macroscopique, la NFC a été observée sous deux principaux aspects : l'une « cotonneuse » et l'autre formant un mince croûte autour des graviers du sol. La NFC peut également servir de support à la nucléation de ciments secondaires précipités de manière purement physico-chimique (LCC). Malgré les nombreuses études menées sur la NFC, son origine demeure encore inconnue. A ce jour, aucune expérience en laboratoire n'a permis de créer de la calcite en aiguilles, et ce, quelque soit l'approche abordée. Par conséquent, les processus précis responsables de la précipitation calcite avec une telle morphologie restent inconnus. Le décalage existant entre l'axe d'allongement des aiguilles de calcite et l'axe normal de croissance de la calcite (axe c) reste inexpliqué.Des échantillons de NFC, LCC, roche mère, eau de pluie des différents horizons du sol ont été prélevés principalement au front de deux carrières de graviers, ainsi que dans un profil de sol adjacent à ces carrières, dans le but de mieux comprendre les processus à l'origine de la précipitation de calcite en forme d'aiguille. Trois micro-morphologies ont été distinguées: les aiguilles simples (SN), les aiguilles simples avec surcroissances calcitiques (SNO) et enfin les aiguilles simples avec nanofibres (SNN), celles-ci pouvant être de minérales ou organiques. Ces groupes, d'après nos résultats et les études antérieures pourraient correspondre à différentes étapes de formation de la calcite en aiguilles.Dans un premier temps, la comparaison des signatures isotopiques de la calcite en aiguilles, du LCC, de la roche mère et du carbone inorganique dissout dans la solution du sol (CID) indique que la NFC, tout comme le LCC, précipite en équilibre avec la solution du sol. Les valeurs similaires en Ô13C et δ180 de cristaux de calcite allongés (NFC) et rhombohédriques (LCC) formés dans un même milieu suggère que ces différences morphologiques ne peuvent pas être attribuées à des modifications purement physico-chimiques. La croissance de NFC à l'intérieur d'un moule organique comme les hyphes de champignons semble être la seule hypothèse plausible permettant d'expliquer la formation de monocrystaux allongés de calcite en équilibre avec leur environnement.La composition isotopique en strontium (Sr) et calcium (Ca) des LCC et des trois micro¬morphologies de la NFC ont été étudiées également, afin de déterminer l'origine du Ca2+ présent dans le réseau cristallin de la calcite en aiguilles, ainsi que les processus responsables de la formation de NFC. Les valeurs du rapport 87Sr/86$r de la forme SN sont les plus proches de celles de la roche mère par rapport aux formes SNN et SNO et du LCC. Ceci pourrait être un nouvel indice de l'implication des champignons dans la précipitation de calcite en aiguilles, puisqu'ils sont connus pour avoir la capacité de dissoudre les roches afin de libérer les nutriments nécessaires à leur croissance, ainsi que de les transloquer par leurs hyphes. De plus, les formes SN et SNN sont appauvries en Sr et enrichies en "Ca, comparativement au LCC. Dans le sol étudié, tous les carbonates de calcium précipitent à la même température, par conséquent, de telles variations sont dues à un taux de précipitation plus lent de SN et SNN, ce qui est contradictoire avec l'hypothèse physico-chimique. Pour finir, la NFC est enrichie en certains éléments majeurs et traces (i.e. Fe, Zn, Cu et Mo) par rapport au LCC. Ceci peut être attribué à différents processus de formation entre la NFC et le LCC. Pour le moment il est impossible d'exclure l'influence de la forme particulière de la NFC ou celle du champignon. Les terres rares (REEs) ne sont pas fractionnées dans la NFC, contrairement au LCC. Ceci peut être expliqué par le fait que la NFC précipite à partir d'une solution qui n'a pas percolé à travers le sol. Les champignons en dissolvant les roches mettent en solution éléments sans les fractionner. L'approche géochimique de l'étude de la calcite en aiguilles ne permets pas de produire des preuves directes sur sa potentielle origine fongique, mais permet de mieux comprendre comment un minéral aussi singulier que la NFC peut se former. D'autre pare cette étude permets d'exclure définitivement l'hypothèse physico-chimique de l'origine de la calcite en aiguilles
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The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of winter land use on the amount of residual straw, the physical soil properties and grain yields of maize, common bean and soybean summer crops cultivated in succession. The experiment was carried out in the North Plateau of Santa Catarina state, Brazil, from May 2006 to April 2010. Five strategies of land use in winter were evaluated: intercropping with black oat + ryegrass + vetch, without grazing and nitrogen (N) fertilization (intercropping cover); the same intercropping, with grazing and 100 kg ha-1 of N per year topdressing (pasture with N); the same intercropping, with grazing and without nitrogen fertilization (pasture without N); oilseed radish, without grazing and nitrogen fertilization (oilseed radish); and natural vegetation, without grazing and nitrogen fertilization (fallow). Intercropping cover produces a greater amount of biomass in the system and, consequently, a greater accumulation of total and particulate organic carbon on the surface soil layer. However, land use in winter does not significantly affect soil physical properties related to soil compaction, nor the grain yield of maize, soybean and common bean cultivated in succession.
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The objective of this work was to assess the productivity and polysaccharide-protein complex content of Agaricus blazei on rice straw medium, in comparison to conventional sawdust, using four casing soils. The A. blazei strain used was BCRC36814T, purchased from the Food Industry Research and Development Institute, Hsin-Chu, Taiwan. The two media were evaluated as to A. blazei productivity, harvesting time, and production costs. The experimental design used was a randomized complete block, with four replicates. Three local casing soils - Typic Paleudult (CCe), Typic Udorthent (Tq) and Oxyaquic Paleudult (TSp) - were compared to imported peat soil (PS, Saprists, Histosols), used as the control. The productivity of A. blazei using Tq and TSp soil was significantly higher. The TSp casing treatment resulted in earlier harvest by at least 14 to 27 days, when compared to the other treatments. The polysaccharide content in CCe (13.2%) and Tq soils (13.2%) did not differ significantly from the PS (13.4%) and TSp (10.6%) treatments. Local casing soils decreased the production costs of A. blazei cultivation. Composted rice straw can substitute sawdust as the culture medium for A. blazei production with increased yield.
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The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of cover crops and timing of pre-emergence herbicide applications on soybean yield under no-tillage system. The experiment consisted of four cover crops (Panicum maximum, Urochloa ruziziensis, U. brizantha, and pearl millet) and fallow, in addition to four herbicide timings (30, 20, 10, and 0 days before soybean sowing), under no-tillage system (NTS), and of two control treatments under conventional tillage system (CTS). The experimental design was a completely randomized block, in a split-plot arrangement, with three replicates. Soybean under fallow, P. maximum, U. ruziziensis, U. brizantha, and pearl millet in the NTS and soybean under U. brizantha in the CTS did not differ significantly regarding yield. Soybean under fallow in the CTS significantly reduced yield when compared to the other treatments. The amount of straw on soil surface did not significantly affect soybean yield. Chemical management of P. maximum and U. brizantha near the soybean sowing date causes significant damage in soybean yield. However, herbicide timing in fallow, U. ruziziensis, and pearl millet does not affect soybean yield.