5 results match your criteria: "Louisana State University Agricultural Center[Affiliation]"

Nutrient and sediment runoff from newly constructed levee embankments pose a threat to water quality during soft armor vegetation establishment. Research was initiated in 2008 and 2009 to evaluate the effect of bermudagrass ( L.) coverage and N source on nutrient and sediment runoff from levee embankments during establishment.

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Long-term land application of sewage sludge (SS) has caused concern over the potential release of trace metals into the environment following the degradation of organic matter (OM). This study was performed to assess the impact of OM degradation on the relative distribution of Cu, Zn, Pb, and As in SS and SS-amended soils. Three SSs of different ages and two soils treated with SS were subjected to incubation and direct chemical oxidation using diluted HO, followed by a sequential extraction.

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Staphylococcus aureus strains of bovine origin were induced to L-form by exposure to 100 U of penicillin in brain heart infusion broth supplemented with 5% NaCl, 5% sucrose, and 10% horse serum. L-forms were cultured on similarly supplemented brain heart infusion agar containing no antibiotic. Light and electron microscopic examination of plastic-embedded L-form colonies revealed a variety of morphologic types.

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1. At 32 hr prior to slaughter, broiler chickens were treated for 24 hr with either: 1200 ppm of L-ascorbic acid (AA; Vitamin C) in their drinking water or with no-AA supplementation (controls; simultaneously maintained on tap water). 2.

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Carbohydrate partitioning and the capacity of apparent nitrogen fixation of soybean plants grown outdoors.

Plant Physiol

May 1986

Department of Agronomy, Louisiana Agricultural Experiment Station, Louisana State University Agricultural Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803.

Patterns of leaf carbohydrate partitioning and nodule activity in soybean plants grown under natural conditions and the irradiance level required to produce sufficient carbohydrate to obtain maximum rates of apparent N(2)-fixation (acetylene reduction) were measured. Soybean plants, grown outdoors, maintained constant levels of leaf soluble sugars while leaf starch pools varied diurnally. When root temperature was kept at 25 degrees C and shoot temperature was allowed to vary with ambient temperature, the plants maintained constant rates of apparent N(2)-fixation and root+nodule respiration.

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