337,927 research outputs found
Coffee berry disease in Kenya
Data are presented on research in Kenya in 1964 - 1969 on anatomical, mycological, epidemiological, chemical control and cultural aspects of coffee berry disease, Colletotrichum coffeanum Noack, of Coffea arabica L. The pathogen causes flower and berry losses and was found in branches where it occupied clearly defined areas of the cortex just before or after formation of the first phellogen. Saprophytic Colletotrichum spp. inhabit bark areas with more periderms in the cortex. No relationship could be found in Kenya between Glomerella cingulata (Stonem.) Sp. & Schr., the perfect stage of most of the saprophytic Colletotrichum bark components, and C. coffeanum . The seasonal fluctuations in pathogenicity in the bark population of C. coffeanum could be assessed and compared with the total sporulating capacity of the bark population of all Colletotrichum spp. Formerly the level of this total sporulating capacity, or 'inoculum potential' as it was then called, was used as an indication when pre-rain copper sprays had to be applied and how effectively the fungicide had reduced the bark inoculum. Based on these data the recommendations for chemical control were changed from pre-rain fungicide applications, to a spraying regime well into the rainy period, the accent being on protection of the berries rather than on a reduction of the bark inoculum. The fungicide Ortho Difolatan proved to be more effective than copper based compounds. Cultural practices, like the application of high levels of fertilizers, manure and mulch and rigid pruning practices, had no effect on the level of C. coffeanum in branches. Copper containing fungicides pushed the Colletotrichum balance in favour of C. coffeanum . Berries from non-copper sprayed coffee fields were less susceptible to standard conidial suspensions of C. coffeanum than berries from copper sprayed trees. A similar effect of fungicides should be considered in South and Central American coffee growing countries, where the application of fungicides has increased tremendously since the occurrence of Hemileia vastatrix Berk. et Br. in Brazil
Polarization singularities in isotropic random vector waves
Following Nye & Hajnal, we explore the geometry of complex vector waves by regarding them as a field of polarization ellipses. Singularities of this field are the C lines and L lines, where the polarization is purely circular and purely linear, respectively. The singularities can be reinterpreted as loci of photon spin 1 (C lines) and 0 (L lines). For Gaussian random superpositions of plane waves equidistributed in direction but with an arbitrary frequency spectrum, we calculate the density (length per unit volume) of C and L lines
Vascular functioning and development of the kiwifruit berry (Actinidia deliciosa)
The aim of this study was to understand kiwifruit berry development and the role of cell turgor and the phloem unloading pathway in development. Important aspects of berry development include the size of the fruit and its composition. The fresh weight growth curve of the kiwifruit berry was shown to be double sigmoid in shape. Dry weight accumulated linearly for the initial 139 days after anthesis (DAA). At this time the soluble solids concentration began to increase. Berry firmness was measured using two methods, with the penetrometer and with a new non-destructive method, utilising skinfold callipers. Both methods exhibited similar results, indicating that the skin callipers may be useful in the future for non-destructive berry rheological measurements.
Cell turgor was measured indirectly from measurements of symplasmic and apoplasmic solute potentials, and the matric potential of the berry. Apoplasmic sap, required to measure the apoplasmic solute potential, was extracted using two different methods the pressure chamber and through centrifugation. Measurements of sap osmotic potential suggest that the sap extracted using the centrifuge was contaminated with symplasmic sap, resulting in a negative cell turgor estimate. However, the pressure chamber technique provided apoplasmic sap that produced a more accurate estimate of cell turgor. Direct estimates of cell turgor were only obtained from the midpoint of the growing season because of contamination with symplasmic sap, but the values obtained were comparable to literature values for developing grape and tomato berries.
The phloem unloading pathway in the fruit was investigated using a symplasmic tracer dye, carboxyfluorescein diacetate coupled with 14C labelling and autoradiography. The phloem unloading pathway was symplasmic until 91 DAA when the dye was restricted to the phloem cells only, indicating a change to an apoplasmic pathway. However, due to the lack of functional unloading seen in radiolabelled samples, a change in the phloem unloading pathway could not be confirmed
Ethylene signalling receptors and transcription factors over the grape berry development: gene expression profiling
The ethylene signalling pathway has never been fully described in grapes. Regarded as a non-climacteric fruit, grape berry seems to ripen independently to ethylene, however 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), a specific inhibitor of ethylene receptors has been shown to alter berry ripening processes. Here, we report profiles of transcript abundance of various receptors and transcription factors, associated with ethylene signalling, throughout berry development. Transcript abundance of ortholog VvETR2 gene showed a transient peak at the inception of ripening in 'Cabernet Sauvignon' berries coinciding with an internal ethylene peak, prior to colour changes. The transcripts of other orthologs such as VvRTE1 and VvEIN4 steadily increased over the berry development, while VvERS1 ortholog transcripts exhibited a peak of accumulation only when the berries were fully coloured. Finally, mRNAs of two transcription factors, VvEIN3 and VvMADS4, showed strong accumulation during the late phase of berry ripening. We also observed inflections of mRNA accumulation after incubating berry clusters with ethylene and 1-MCP (inhibitor of ethylene action). The main effect was observed with VvEIN3 transcripts that showed a significant up-regulation after incubation with 1-MCP. Furthermore, other transcript levels (VvETR2 and VvCTR1) were also increased by exogenous ethylene, once the colour change was initiated (i.e. 10 to 11 weeks after bloom). Some studies have already indicated that non-climacteric fruits shared signalling pathways with climacteric fruits. However, most differences between these ripening classifications remain poorly described at the genetic/molecular level. This data set will contribute to a better understanding on potential involvements of ethylene signalling in a non-climacteric fruit such as grape berry
Bertice Berry - 04/06/1999 - (Riall Lecture Series)
Begun in 1988, the E. Pauline Riall Lecture Series brings to the University and community outstanding national lecturers in the field of education. The series was established by the late Miss Riall, long-time principal and teacher of the former Salisbury University's Campus School. A generous bequest was provided by Miss Riall's will to fund this special program.
Dr. Bertice Berry, Author, Sociologist, Comedian – 4/6/1999https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjageKPrvY
Interview with Emmett Berry / interviewed by Felix Grant, Unknown date
Emmett Berry discusses his career with interviewer and radio host Felix Grant.Made available in DSpace on 2012-10-09T17:35:36Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
berry_emmett.rm: 50605115 bytes, checksum: 471bdf22a03954ca81c67eaec5874fa9 (MD5)
manifest.xml: 3411 bytes, checksum: 14d82d00c7c4f1c67928a759c4d2ce6f (MD5)Emmett Berry interviewed by Felix Grant on WMAL. Recorded unknown date. Reproduction of radio interview produced at Washington, D.C. Station WMAL for broadcast on The Album Sound. Forms part of the Felix Grant Collection at the Felix E. Grant Jazz Archives. Original format: 2 sound tape reels (1 hr. 6 min.) : analog, 7 1/2 ips., full track mono; 7 in
Vivian Berry Interview
Interview in which Ms. Berry describes moving to Newark from Montclair, New Jersey in 1954, among other topics.In/out timestamps and clip/story labelsThumbnail image, "The Krueger-Scott Mansion," (photographer unknown), c. 1916. Image courtesy of Clarence E. Brunner
Berry Collection; no.05796
Black and white image of 23 individuals- 16 women and 7 men posed, standing on a stage in front of a painted stage prop scene. Prop scene depicts european style buildings in a snow capped mountain setting. Foreground; a piano and rows of seating marked A through E. Image mounted on a light gray matte board with a dark gray boarder. Written on the upper left corner in pencil; "4/18- 19- 29." Pasted on the lower middle edge of matte board is a torn newspaper clipping titled, SHOW A REAL HIT.Performance possibly showcased at the Elks Lodge, per newspaper clipping.Master file: image/tiff; 122,113 KB; Computer Hardware: Intel Pentium (R) 4 3.20 GHz/ 1.99 GB RAM manufactured by Dell; Operating system: Windows XP 2002; Creation software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 version 9.0.2; Scanner: flatbed reflective scanner Microtek 1000XL; Scanner software: Microtek SilverFast Ai 6.4.2r2b; Scanned by Jackie Becker on 2009-10-15
Data for Self‐assembled porphyrazine‐nucleoside on DNA templates
Spectroscopic data of binding of compounds 1 and 2 to selected DNA sequences as described in the main text. Includes absorbance, fluorescence and CD data.
Data supports the paper:
Stulz, E., Berry, A., Ishutkina, M., Khelevina, O., Siligardi, G., & Hussain, R. (2018). Self‐assembled porphyrazine‐nucleoside on DNA templates: highly fluorescent chromophore arrays and sizing forensic tandem repeat sequences. European Journal of Organic Chemistry. DOI: 10.1002/ejoc.201800683</span
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