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Sen, Debashish
- Eco-friendly Approaches for Managing Leaf Blight of Taro ( Colocasia Esculenta var. Antiquorum)
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1 College of Horticulture & Forestry, Central Agricultural University, Pasighat - 791 102, Arunachal Pradesh, IN
1 College of Horticulture & Forestry, Central Agricultural University, Pasighat - 791 102, Arunachal Pradesh, IN
Source
International Journal of Bioresource Science, Vol 1, No 1 (2014), Pagination: 31-35Abstract
Seed cakes of three plant species and three plant extracts were tested for their capacity to reduce the disease incidence, per cent disease intensity, coefficient of disease index and increased the cormel yield of taro crop. The most effective treatment was two foliar spray of Azadirachta indica leaf extracts with minimum disease incidence (72.18 and 72.73%), per cent disease intensity (26.81 and 25.41) and CODEX (19.35 and 18.48) during Kharif 2006 and Kharif 2007 respectively, which was significantly superior over soil application of cakes of Azadirachta indica seeds, Madhuca longifolia seeds, Brassica juncea seeds and foliar application of tulsi leaf extract (black), tulsi leaf extract (green) and garlic bulb extracts. The highest cormel yield (128.01 and 127.12 q/ha) was obtained in the plots treated with two foliar sprays of neem leaf extracts @ 10 % followed by two foliar sprays tulsi leaf extract black @ 10% (113.41 and 113.29 q/ha), two foliar sprays of tulsi leaf extract green @ 10%, two foliar sprays of garlic bulb extract @ 10%, Azadirachta indica cake @ 10q/ha, Brassica juncea cake @ 10q/ha and Madhuca longifolia cake @ 10q/ha during 2006 and 2007, respectivelyKeywords
Leaf Blight, Eco-friendly Management, Taro, Azadirachta Indica , Madhuca Longifolia, Brassica Juncea, Tulsi, Phytophthora Colocasiae- Hydrological Process Monitoring for Springshed Management in the Indian Himalayan Region: Field Observatory and Reference Database
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee 247 667, IN
2 People’s Science Institute, Dehradun 248 001, IN
1 Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee 247 667, IN
2 People’s Science Institute, Dehradun 248 001, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 120, No 5 (2021), Pagination: 791-799Abstract
The Indian Himalayan Region (IHR) has experienced accelerated changes in climatic seasonality and land use–land cover. Researchers envision understanding the process controls of water fluxes and their hydrogeological and ecological implications but scarce in situ data in the IHR hinders scientific research. Our work discusses an integrative technique for springshed monitoring for insights into hydrological processes and understanding integrated measurement strategies. Initial emphasis was on instrumentation and data collection from two headwater watersheds, instrumented with advanced field-based monitoring platforms in Pauri-Garhwal and Almora districts of Uttarakhand. We describe the observatory setup and discuss the pilot sites’ general characteristics followed by the monitoring concept, infrastructure and initial datasets of the pilot sites. The social dimension of the spring water use and governance is also analysed in brief. Such a springshed management approach is the way forward for water security in the IHR.Keywords
Automatic Weather Station, Evapotranspiration, Hydrological Observatory, Montane Ecosystem, Springshed Management.References
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