241 results match your criteria: "Kearney Agricultural Research & Extension Center[Affiliation]"
J Food Prot
May 2019
4 IEH Laboratories and Consulting Group, 15300 Bothell Way N.E., Lake Forest Park, Washington 98155, USA.
Beef and veal products have been vehicles implicated in the transmission of a gastroenteritis-causing bacteria. Recent regulatory samples collected from veal have indicated bob veal, or calves harvested within days of birth, have higher rates of than samples collected from formula-fed veal, or calves raised 20 weeks on milk replacer formula before harvest. To investigate this problem, we collected samples from veal calf hides, preevisceration carcasses, and final carcasses at five veal processors that harvested bob or formula-fed veal or both.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
June 2019
1 Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, University of California, Davis, Parlier, CA 93648, U.S.A.; and.
Botryosphaeriaceae and Diaporthaceae species are the causal agents of branch dieback of English walnut in California. In this study, the effects of the interaction between and were evaluated in vitro by using mycelial plugs or spore suspensions and in vivo by inoculating shoots and epicarps (hulls) of walnut. Single inoculations of each species and different coinfection treatments were performed under laboratory or field conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Microbiol
June 2019
Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Aims: Soil biosolarization (SBS) is a pest control technology that includes the incorporation of organic matter into soil prior to solarization. The objective of this study was to measure the impact of the initial soil microbiome on the temporal evolution of genes encoding lignocellulose-degrading enzymes during SBS.
Methods And Results: Soil biosolarization field experiments were completed using green waste (GW) as a soil amendment and in the presence and absence of compost activating inoculum.
BMC Genomics
March 2019
Department of Entomology and Nematology, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of California - Davis, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Background: In the summer of 2013, Aedes aegypti Linnaeus was first detected in three cities in central California (Clovis, Madera and Menlo Park). It has now been detected in multiple locations in central and southern CA as far south as San Diego and Imperial Counties. A number of published reports suggest that CA populations have been established from multiple independent introductions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
May 2019
1 Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis, and Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Parlier, CA 93648; and.
In California, aflatoxin contamination of almond, fig, and pistachio has become a serious problem in recent years due to long periods of drought and probably other climatic changes. The atoxigenic biocontrol product AF36 has been registered for use to limit aflatoxin contamination of pistachio since 2012 and for use in almond and fig since 2017. New biocontrol technologies employ multiple atoxigenic genotypes because those provide greater benefits than using a single genotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
June 2019
Pacific Northwest Research Station, US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Bend, OR, 97702, USA.
Origins of abscisic acid (ABA)-mediated metabolic control of stomatal conductance have been suggested to be recent, based on a gradualistic model of stomatal evolution. In ferns, steady-state stomatal conductance (g ) was unresponsive to ABA in some studies, supporting this model. Stomatal kinetic responses to ABA have not been considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
December 2017
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California Davis, Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center.
Laboratory and field studies were conducted to determine the effects of wounding of nut exocarp, susceptibility period after wounding, and sap nut on infection of pistachio nut by Neofusicoccum mediterraneum, the main causal agent of panicle and shoot blight of pistachio. Under controlled conditions and in the field, detached nuts were inoculated with a conidial suspension 30 min before or after wounding. In addition, a 30-µl drop of pistachio sap was placed on the surface of noninjured nuts 30 min before or after they were wounded and then inoculated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
August 2018
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California-Davis, Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Parlier.
Almond trees with trunk and branch cankers were observed in several orchards across almond-producing counties in California. Symptoms of cankers included bark lesions, discoloration of xylem tissues, longitudinal wood necrosis, and extensive gumming. Spur and shoot blight associated with rotted fruit were detected in two orchards in Kern County.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
June 2019
UC-ANR Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension (KARE) Center, Parlier, CA, USA.
Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench is an important annual C cereal crop with unique properties-it can be used in almost all renewable schemes being proposed for renewable fuels and green technologies. In the United States, the grain is currently used as a feedstock in the grain-ethanol process, while in China, the Philippines, and India, sweet sorghums are used in a sugar-to-ethanol process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
March 2019
School of Geographic Sciences and Urban Planning, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Humans influence ecosystems on magnitudes that often exceed that of natural forces such as climate and geology; however, frameworks rarely include anthropogenic disturbance when delineating unique ecological regions. A critical step toward understanding, managing and monitoring human-altered ecosystems is to incorporate disturbance into ecological regionalizations. Furthermore, quantitative regionalization approaches are desirable to provide cost-effective, repeatable and statistically sound stratification for environmental monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIMA Fungus
July 2018
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis and Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Centre, Parlier, CA 93648, USA.
species are destructive canker and dieback pathogens of woody hosts in natural and agroecosystems around the world. In this genus, molecular identification has been limited due to the paucity of multi-locus sequence typing studies and the lack of sequence data from type specimens in public repositories, stalling robust phylogenetic reconstructions. In most cases a morphological species concept could not be applied due to the plasticity of characters and significant overlap of morphological features such as spore dimensions and fruiting body characters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Ind Med
February 2019
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Background: Although children as young as 10 years can work in agriculture, little research has addressed their occupational health. This paper describes a large, multicomponent study of hired Latinx child farmworkers, and the characteristics of children participating in this study.
Methods: Survey interviews were conducted in 2017 with 202 Latinx children aged 10-17 years employed in agriculture across North Carolina (NC).
Sci Total Environ
March 2019
School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, PO Box 157, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia.
Many coffee (Coffea arabica L) production systems are characterised by high use of nitrogen (N) fertilisers, which can result in N leaching and emissions of nitrous oxide (NO). We investigated the potential for legume cover crops grown inter-row to provide N for coffee trees and lower seasonal NO emissions compared to poultry litter amendment at two subtropical field sites over 12 months, with unfertilised traditional grass groundcover used as a control treatment. Groundcovers (legume and grass treatments) were slashed from the inter-row into the tree line every 2-6 weeks as per normal farming operations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Microbe Interact
April 2019
1 United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)-Agricultural Research Service (ARS), University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583, U.S.A.
Panicum mosaic virus (PMV) (genus Panicovirus, family Tombusviridae) and its molecular parasite, Satellite panicum mosaic virus (SPMV), synergistically interact in coinfected proso and pearl millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) plants resulting in a severe symptom phenotype. In this study, we examined synergistic interactions between the isolates of PMV and SPMV by using PMV-NE, PMV85, SPMV-KS, and SPMV-Type as interacting partner viruses in different combinations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
December 2018
Department of Agricultural Leadership, Education & Communication, University of Nebraska, Lincoln 68583, USA.
The datasets in this article are associated with the research article ' (Brinley Buckley et al., 2018). We documented biotic and abiotic changes during a total solar eclipse on 21 August 2017, in south-central Nebraska, USA, with a multimodal suite of tools, including time-lapse camera systems, data loggers, and sound recording devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
September 2018
DOE Joint Genome Institute, 2800 Mitchell Dr, Walnut Creek, CA, 94598, USA.
Background: Sorghum bicolor is the fifth most commonly grown cereal worldwide and is remarkable for its drought and abiotic stress tolerance. For these reasons and the large size of biomass varieties, it has been proposed as a bioenergy crop. However, little is known about the genes underlying sorghum's abiotic stress tolerance and biomass yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
January 2019
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720-3102, USA.
The ecology of fungi lags behind that of plants and animals because most fungi are microscopic and hidden in their substrates. Here, we address the basic ecological process of fungal succession in nature using the microscopic, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) that form essential mutualisms with 70-90% of plants. We find a signal for temporal change in AMF community similarity that is 40-fold stronger than seen in the most recent studies, likely due to weekly samplings of roots, rhizosphere and soil throughout the 17 weeks from seedling to fruit maturity and the use of the fungal DNA barcode to recognize species in a simple, agricultural environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLett Appl Microbiol
November 2018
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California Davis, UC Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Parlier, CA, USA.
Unlabelled: Alternaria late blight caused by Alternaria alternata is a major disease affecting pistachios grown in California and to some degree those grown in Arizona. Alternaria alternata is prone to quick fungicide resistance selection when single-mode of action fungicides are used. For the specific detection of five possible amino acid alterations associated with Alternaria alternata resistance to succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors used in California and Arizona pistachio orchards, we have designed five primer sets to be used as an allele-specific PCR assay (AS-PCR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2018
Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, 215123 Suzhou, China.
Transgenic Res
October 2018
Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, 3010, Australia.
Alkaloid concentration of perennial ryegrass herbage is affected by endophyte strain and host plant genotype. However, previous studies suggest that associations between host and endophyte also depends on environmental conditions, especially those affecting nutrient reserves and that water-soluble carbohydrate (WSC) concentration of perennial ryegrass plants may influence grass-endophyte associations. In this study a single transgenic event, with altered expression of fructosyltransferase genes to produce high WSC and biomass, has been crossed into a range of cultivar backgrounds with varying Epichloë endophyte strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcohealth
September 2018
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCLA, 621 Charles E. Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA, 90095, USA.
Birds, with their broad geographic ranges and close association with humans, have historically played an important role as carriers of human disease and as reservoirs for drug-resistant bacteria. Here, we examine scientific literature over a 15-year timespan to identify reported avian-bacterial associations and factors that may impact zoonotic disease emergence by classifying traits of bird species and their bacteria. We find that the majority of wild birds studied were migratory, in temperate habitats, and in the order Passeriformes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
December 2018
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
Interactions between pathogenic and nonpathogenic fungal species in the tree canopy are complex and can determine if disease will manifest in the plant and in other organisms such as honey bees. Seasonal dynamics of fungi were studied in an almond orchard in California where experimental release of the atoxigenic biopesticide Aspergillus flavus AF36 to displace toxigenic Aspergillus strains has been conducted for five years. The presence of the vegetative compatibility group (VCG) YV36, to which AF36 belongs, in the blossoms, and the honey bees that attend these blossoms, was assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Agric Food Chem
June 2018
Department of Food Science and Technology , University of California, One Shields Avenue , Davis , California 95616 , United States.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
May 2018
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720;
Drought stress is a major obstacle to crop productivity, and the severity and frequency of drought are expected to increase in the coming century. Certain root-associated bacteria have been shown to mitigate the negative effects of drought stress on plant growth, and manipulation of the crop microbiome is an emerging strategy for overcoming drought stress in agricultural systems, yet the effect of drought on the development of the root microbiome is poorly understood. Through 16S rRNA amplicon and metatranscriptome sequencing, as well as root metabolomics, we demonstrate that drought delays the development of the early sorghum root microbiome and causes increased abundance and activity of monoderm bacteria, which lack an outer cell membrane and contain thick cell walls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
July 2018
Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation, University of Bonn, D-53115, Bonn, Germany.
Aerosols are important components of the global plant environment, with beneficial and deleterious impacts. The direct effects of aerosol deposition on plant-water relationships remain poorly characterized but potentially important. Vicia faba was grown in ambient urban air and in the same air with aerosol excluded, in a moderately polluted environment using two exposure protocols.
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