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Nath, Amit
- Technological Needs of Women of Tripura in Dairying
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Agricultural Extension, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Divyodaya, Khowai (TRIPURA), IN
2 Department of Agricultural Extension, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Divyodaya, khowai (TRIPURA), IN
1 Department of Agricultural Extension, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Divyodaya, Khowai (TRIPURA), IN
2 Department of Agricultural Extension, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Divyodaya, khowai (TRIPURA), IN
Source
Agriculture Update, Vol 8, No 1 & 2 (2013), Pagination: 67-69Abstract
No AbstractKeywords
Dairying, Recommended, Cattle, Livestock, Balanced Diet- Effect of Washing on Insecticide Residues in Cauliflower Curds
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Sugarcane Research Station, Jullundur - 144 001, IN
2 Department of Entomology,Rajendra Agricultural University, Pusa - 848 125, IN
3 College of Agriculture, Solan-173 212, IN
1 Sugarcane Research Station, Jullundur - 144 001, IN
2 Department of Entomology,Rajendra Agricultural University, Pusa - 848 125, IN
3 College of Agriculture, Solan-173 212, IN
Source
The Indian Journal of Nutrition and Dietetics, Vol 21, No 4 (1984), Pagination: 124-128Abstract
In Himachal Pradesh, cauliflower Brassica oleracea L. var botrytis is grown as an off - season head crop during summer in the high hills and as a seed crop ( Late varieties ) during winter through spring in the mid hills. Because of the serious menance of insect pests, farmers resort to multiple sprays of insecticides High frequency of insecticidal application at narrow intervals has created residue problem.- Evaluation of Taro (Colocasia esculenta L.) Cultivars for Growth, Yield and Quality Attributes
Abstract Views :194 |
PDF Views:117
Authors
Affiliations
1 Division of Horticulture, ICAR Research Complex for NEH Region, Umiam-793103, IN
1 Division of Horticulture, ICAR Research Complex for NEH Region, Umiam-793103, IN
Source
Journal of Horticultural Sciences, Vol 10, No 2 (2015), Pagination: 183-189Abstract
A study on varietal evaluation in taro for growth, yield and quality attributes was carried out in a replicated experiment and morphological and chemical analysis was done. Significant differences were recorded for all the characteristics studied. 'Panchmukhi' recorded highest plant height (179.33cm), petiole length (153.11cm), petiole breadth (13.87mm) and leaf size (3095.67cm2), LAI (1.14), corm length (152.41mm) and breadth (107.77mm), average corm weight (1500.00g) and corm yield (20.00t/ha). 'C-3' recorded maximum (15.00) petiole number and cormel length (85.93mm). Cormel yield (15.29t/ha), total yield (25.92t/ha) and number of cormels per plant (30.33) was found to be maximum in cv. White Gouriya. 'ML-2' recorded maximum (7.33) number of side shoots. Highest average cormel weight (72.85g) was maximum in cv. Arcol-7, and 'Arcol-5' recorded maximum (67.43mm) cormel breadth; the least blight incidence percentage (8.00) was recorded in 'Nayabungalow'. As for biochemical constituents, 'Nainital' recorded the highest (5.85%) total sugars, 'Kandha-5' exhibited the highest (34.67%) starch content and 'Nadia Local' with showed highest levels of oxalic acid (1.05mg/100g). Highest dry matter content (27.50%) was recorded in cvs. KCA-1 and Panchmukhi, while the highest moisture percentage (82.83) was recorded in 'IG Coll-5'.Keywords
Colocasia, Taro Cultivars, Growth, Yield, Quality.References
- Barooah, H. 1982. Collection, screening and evaluation of some local colocasia (Colocasia esculenta L. Schott.) and xanthosoma (Xanthosoma sagittifolium L. Schott.) cultivars of Assam. M.Sc. (Agri.) Thesis, Assam Agricultural University, Jorhat, Assam, India
- Bhuiyan, M.A.J. and Quadir, M.A. 1989. Crop duration effect on growth and yield contributing components of taro (Colocasia esculenta L.). South Indian Hort. 37:235-236
- Bora, A. and Das, R.P. 1998. Role of Indole butyric acid (IBA) on vegetative growth of ischolar_mained cuttings of some minor fruits of Assam. J. Agri. Sci. Soc. NE India., 11:197-201
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- Huang Chien-Chun, Chen Woan-Chin and Wang Chiun-C., R. 2007. Comparison of Taiwan paddy and upland cultivated taro (Colocasia esculenta L.) cultivars for nutritive values. Food Chem., 102:250-256
- Libert, B. and Franceschi, V.R. 1987. Oxalate in crop plants. J. Agri. Food Chem., 35:926-938
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- Mili, A. 2001. Comparative performance of some ‘Nalkachu’ (Colocasia esculenta L.) cultivars under lowland condition. M.Sc. (Agri.) Thesis, Assam Agricultural University, Jorhat, Assam, India
- Onwueme, I.C. 1978. The tropical tuber crops. John Wiley and Sons, New York, USA, 199 p.
- Panse, V.G. and Sukhatme, P.V. 1978. Statistical methods for agricultural workers. ICAR, New Delhi, India
- Pardales, J.R. 1986. Characteristics of growth and Development of taro (Colocasia esculenta L. Schott.) under upland environment. Philipp. J. Crop Sci., 11:209-212
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- Sarma, B.K. 2001. Underutilized crops for hills and mountain ecosystems. In: Summer School on Agriculture for Hills and Mountain Ecosystem, GB Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development, Almora, Uttarakhand, India, pp. 308-314
- Sarmah, I. 1997. Performance of some colocasia under different spacings. M.Sc. (Agri.) Thesis, AAU, Jorhat, Assam, India
- Tang, C.S. and Sakai, W.S. 1983. Acridity of taro and related plants. In: Taro wang, J.K. (ed.), Univ. of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, Hawaii, pp. 148-163
- Wills Ron, B.H., Lim Jessie, S.K., Greenfield Heather and Bayliss-Smith Tim. 1983. Nutrient composition of taro (Colocasia esculenta L.) cultivars from the Papua New Guinea highlands. J. Sci. Food & Agri., 34:1137-1142
- Data Wrangling from Socio-Academic Web-Space : Designing a Meta Model
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Authors
Amit Nath
1,
Sibsankar Jana
1
Affiliations
1 Department of Library and Information Science, University of Kalyani, Kalyani –741235, West Bengal, IN
1 Department of Library and Information Science, University of Kalyani, Kalyani –741235, West Bengal, IN
Source
Journal of Information and Knowledge (Formerly SRELS Journal of Information Management), Vol 60, No 2 (2023), Pagination: 113-125Abstract
Data carpentry is an emerging field in the domain of LIS and has opened new possibilities for information professionals to survive in the age of data-intensive information services. However, library professionals face the challenges of information overload because of the free availability of data, both in terms of quantity and variety. The role of library professionals is moving from tech-savvy to data-savvy. This research discusses the possibilities of ODbL-based data sources that offer freely accessible data through API calls and proposes a meta-model for fetching and extracting datasets from these databases using an open-Source Data Wrangling Tool (OpenRefine). Further, it discusses the possible application of data wrangling techniques from diverse sources in libraries and how information professionals can take advantage of openly available data to provide value-added information services to users. The practical implications of an array of databases are projected through two case studies: Case Study I deals with measuring the productivity of individual institutions through different metrics, and Case Study II projects a coverage comparison among the ODbL-based citation and Altmetric databases. This meta-model will aid in understanding the potential application of data wrangling techniques to an array of library services.Keywords
Data Wrangling, Data Carpentry, OpenRefine, ODbL Databases, Socio-Academic Data, REST/API.References
- Eberendu, A. C. (2016). Unstructured Data: an overview of the data of Big Data. International Journal of Computer Trends and Technology, 38, 46-50. https://doi.org/10.14445/22312803/IJCTT-V38P109
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- Kinney, R., Anastasiades, C., Authur, R., Beltagy, I., Bragg, J., Buraczynski, A., et al. (2023). The Semantic Scholar Open Data Platform. arXiv. Available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/2301.10140
- Kusumasari, T. F. (2016). Data profiling for data quality improvement with OpenRefine. In 2016 International Conference on Information Technology Systems and Innovation (ICITSI 2016), 24-27 Oct 2016, BandungBali, Indonesia. p. 1-6. https://doi.org/10.1109/ICITSI.2016.7858197
- Mani, N. S., Cawley, M., Henley, A., Triump, T. and Williams, J. M. (2021). Creating a data science framework: A model for academic research libraries. Journal of Library Administration. 61(3): 281-300. https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2021.1883366
- Mukhopadhyay, P., Mitra, R. and Mukhopadhyay, M. (2021). Library carpentry: Towards a new professional dimension (Part I–Concepts and case studies). SRELS Journal of Information Management, 58(2), 67-80. https://doi.org/10.17821/srels/2021/v58i2/159969
- Peroni, S., Shotton, D. and Vitali, F. (2017). One year of the OpenCitations Corpus: Releasing RDF-based scholarly citation data into the public domain. In 16th International Semantic Web Conference, 21-25 Oct 2017, Vienna, Austria, edited by C. d’Amato, M. Fernandez, V. Tamma, F. Lecue, P. Cudré-Mauroux, J. Sequeda, C. Lange, and J. Heflin, 2012, p. 184-192. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3- 319-68204-4_19
- Robinson, L. and Bawden, D. (2017). “The story of data”: A socio-technical approach to education for the data librarian role in the CityLIS library school at City, University of London. Library Management, 38(6/7), 312-322. https://doi.org/10.1108/LM-01-2017-0009