571,991 research outputs found

    Itagi N.H., Kumar Singh S., Linguistic Landscaping in India, with particular reference to the new states

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    Breton Roland J.L. Itagi N.H., Kumar Singh S., Linguistic Landscaping in India, with particular reference to the new states. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 113, n°640, 2004. p. 659

    Bibliographics for the 983 eprints in the live archives of E-LIS : trends and status report up to 7th July 2004, based on author-self-archiving metadata

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    The priority for ideas and philosophy related to "Network Theory" have been traced back and documented by Braun(2004),and credit goes to Karinthy(1929).The IT has empowered to realise it, as the most practical phenomena and it is no more a humour. The OAI (Open Archives Initiatives)and ACIS (Academic Contributor Information System)are progressive in the direction ,which may lead to realise the "Collective Genius" at global level. Focus of present study is on Author-Self-Archiving (A-S-A)Metadata of the 983 Eprints in the Live Archives of the E-LIS (EPrints of Library and Information Science),which were approved till 7th July 2004.The A-S-A Metadata was used for librametric analysis. Self-explanatory bibliographics are illustrated.The highlights include: Conference papers (34%); highest approval, June 2004 (28%); published archives (76%);not refereed (52%); not in public domain (60%); highest self-archiving-author (De Robbio, Antonella).The Nos. of EPrints having single JITA domain specifications were: Theoretical and general aspects of libraries and information(27); Information use and sociology of information(80);Users,literacy and reading(13);Libraries as physical collections(30);Publishing and legal issues(57);Management(13);Industry, profession and education(36);Information sources, supports, channels(113) ; Information treatment for information services, Information functions and techniques (101); Technical services libraries, archives and museums(25); Housing technologies(1); Information technology and library technology(92); and Inter-domainery (395) i.e. having specifications of two or more than two JITA classes

    Bacillus maritimus Pal & Mathan Kumar & Kaur & Kumar & Kaur & Singh & Krishnamurthi & Mayilraj 2017, SP. NOV.

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    DESCRIPTION OF BACILLUS MARITIMUS SP. NOV. Bacillus maritimus (ma.ri′ ti.mus. L. masc. adj. maritimus maritime, marine). Cells are Gram-stain-positive, rod-shaped, endospore-forming (bulging sporangia) and aerobic. Tolerates up to 7 % (w/v) NaCl (optimum 5 %). No growth occurs in the presence of>8.0 % (w/v) NaCl. The temperature range for growth is 12– 42 Ǫ C (optimum 30 Ǫ C). Growth is observed in the pH range 7.0-11 (optimum pH 8.0) but no growth is observed at pH below 6.0. Negative for hydrolysis of casein, starch and gelatin. Nitrate is reduced to nitrite; H 2 S is not produced. Acid is produced from fructose, raffinose, lactose and melibiose but not from adonitol, dulcitol, dextrose, galactose, inositol, inulin, mannitol, mannose, maltose, rhamnose,, sucrose, salicin, sorbitol, trehalose or xylose. Positive for arginine dihydrolase 1, urease, sucrose, trehalose, raffinose, maltose, L- lactate alkalinization, Oi -galactosidase, L- proline arylamidase, Oi -glucosidase and arginine dihydrolase 2, but negative for β -glucosidase, β - galactopyranosidase, β -galactosidase, salicin, optochine resistance, D- amygdalin, phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C, D- xylose, Ala–Phe–Pro arylamidase, cyclodextrin, L- aspartate arylamidase, Oi -mannosidase, phosphatase, leucine arylamidase, L- pyrrolidonyl-arylamidase, β -glucuronidase, alanine arylamidase, tyrosine arylamidase, D- sorbitol, polymixin B resistance, D- galactose, D- ribose, lactose, N -acetyl-D- glucosamine, bacitracin resistance, novobiocin resistance, growth with 6.5 % (w/v) NaCl, D- mannitol, D- mannose, methyl β -D-glucopyranoside, pullulan and 0/129 resistance (comp.vibrio.). Major fatty acids are iso-C 15: 0, anteiso-C 15: 0, iso-C 14: 0 and iso-C 17: 1 I and/or anteiso-C 17: 1 B. The only menaquinone present is MK-7. The major phospholipids are diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylethanolamine. The type strain, KS16-9 T (= MTCC 12305 T = DSM 100413 T = KCTC 33834 T), was isolated from a marine sediment sample collected from Kovalam, Kanyakumari coastal region of the Indian Ocean, India. The DNA G+C content of the type strain is 45.4 mol%.Published as part of Pal, Deepika, Mathan Kumar, Rajendran, Kaur, Navjot, Kumar, Narender, Kaur, Gurwinder, Singh, Nitin Kumar, Krishnamurthi, Srinivasan & Mayilraj, Shanmugam, 2017, Bacillus maritimus sp. nov., a novel member of the genus Bacillus isolated from marine sediment, pp. 60-66 in International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 67 (1) on pages 64-65, DOI: 10.1099/ijsem.0.001569, http://zenodo.org/record/604839

    Advances in PGPR research/ edited by Harikesh Bahadur Singh, Banaras Hindu University, India, Birinchi Kumar Sarma, Banaras Hindu University, India, Chetan Keswani, Banaras Hindu University, India.

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    Includes bibliographical references and index.This book includes 25 contributions from vastly experienced, global experts in PGPR research in a comprehensive and influential manner, with the most recent facts and extended case studies. Also, the chapters address the current global issues in biopesticide research.Mechanisms of Growth Promotion by Members of the Rhizosphere Fungal Genus Trichoderma / Artemio Mendoza-Mendoza, Guillermo Nogueira-L opez, Fabiola Padilla Arizmendi, Natalia Cripps-Guazzone, Mar ia Fernanda Nieto-Jacobo, Robert Lawry, Diwakar Kandula, Fatima Berenice Salazar-Badillo, Silvia Salas-Mu noz, Jorge Armando Mauricio-Castillo, Robert Hill, Alison Stewart and Johanna Steyaert -- Physiological and Molecular Mechanisms of Bacterial Phytostimulation / Randy Ortiz-Castro, Jes us Salvador L opez-Bucio and Jos e L opez-Bucio -- Real-time PCR as a Tool towards Understanding Microbial Community Dynamics in Rhizosphere / Gautam Anand, Upma Singh, Abhineet Sain, Virendra S. Bisaria and Shilpi Sharma -- Biosafety Evaluation: A Necessary Process Ensuring the Equitable Beneficial Effects of PGPR / Juan Ignacio V ilchez, Richard Daniel Lally and Rafael Jorge Le on Morcillo -- ^Role of Plant Growth-Promoting Microorganisms in Sustainable Agriculture and Environmental Remediation / Rama Kant Dubey, Vishal Tripathi, Sheikh Adil Edrisi, Mansi Bakshi, Pradeep Kumar Dubey, Ajeet Singh, Jay Prakash Verma, Akanksha Singh, B.K. Sarma, Amitava Rakshit, D.P. Singh, H.B. Singh and P.C. Abhilash -- Pseudomonas Communities in Soil Agroecosystems / Betina Cecilia Agaras, Luis Gabriel Wall and Claudio Valverde -- Management of Soilborne Plant Pathogens with Beneficial Root-Colonizing Pseudomonas / Dmitri V. Mavrodi, Mingming Yang, Olga V. Mavrodi and Shanshan Wen -- Rhizosphere, Mycorrhizosphere and Hyphosphere as Unique Niches for Soil-Inhabiting Bacteria and Micromycetes / Elena Voronina and Irina Sidorova -- ^The Rhizospheres of Arid and Semi-arid Ecosystems are a Source of Microorganisms with Growth-Promoting Potential / Fatima Berenice Salazar-Badillo, Silvia Salas-Mu noz, Jorge Armando Mauricio-Castillo, Jorge S aenz-Mata, Artemio Mendoza-Mendoza, Maria Fernanda Nieto-Jacobo and Johanna Steyaert -- Rhizosphere Colonization by Plant-Beneficial Pseudomonas spp.: Thriving in a Heterogeneous and Challenging Environment / Antoine Zboralski, Adrien Biessy and Martin Filion -- Endophytomicrobiont: A Multifaceted Beneficial Interaction / Shatrupa Ray, Vivek Singh, Kartikay Bisen, Chetan Keswani, Surendra Singh and H.B. Singh -- Contribution of Plant Growth-Promoting Bacteria to the Maize Yield / Vivian Jaskiw Szilagyi Zecchin, Angela Cristina Ikeda and Atila Francisco M ogor -- The Potential of Mycorrhiza Helper Bacteria as PGPR / Marieta Marin Bruzos -- Methods for Evaluating Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria Traits / Antonio Castellano-Hinojosa and E.J. Bedmar -- ^The Rhizosphere Microbial Community and Methods of its Analysis / Mukesh Meena, Manish Kumar Dubey, Prashant Swapnil, Andleeb Zehra, Shalini Singh, Punam Kumari and R.S. Upadhyay -- Improving Crop Performance under Heat Stress using Thermotolerant Agriculturally Important Microorganisms / M.K. Chitara, Chetan Keswani, Kartikay Bisen, Vivek Singh, S.P. Singh, B.K. Sarma and H.B. Singh -- Phytoremediation and the Key Role of PGPR / Elisabetta Franchi and Gianniantonio Petruzzelli -- Role of Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR) in Degradation of Xenobiotic Compounds and Allelochemicals / Deepika Goyal, Janmejay Pandey and Om Prakash -- Harnessing Bio-priming for Integrated Resource Management under Changing Climate / Deepranjan Sarkar, Sumita Pal, H.B. Singh, Ranjeet Singh Yadav and Amitava Rakshit -- ^Unravelling the Dual Applications of Trichoderma spp. as Biopesticide and Biofertilizer / Vivek Singh, Shatrupa Ray, Kartikay Bisen, Chetan Keswani, R.S. Upadhyay, B.K. Sarma and H.B. Singh -- 21 Genome Insights into Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria, an Important Component of Rhizosphere Microbiome / Vasvi Chaudhry, Niladri Chaudhry and Shrikant S. Mantri -- Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR): Mechanism, Role in Crop Improvement and Sustainable Agriculture / Pallavi Mittal, Madhu Kamle, Shubhangini Sharma, Pooja Choudhary, Devendra Pratap Rao and Pradeep Kumar -- PGPR: A Good Step to Control Several of Plant Pathogens / Laith K. Tawfeeq Al-Ani -- Role of Trichoderma Secondary Metabolites in Plant Growth Promotion and Biological Control / Jyoti Singh, Rahul Singh Rajput, Kartikay Bisen, Surendra Singh and H.B. Singh -- ^PGPR-Mediated Defence Responses in Plants under Biotic and Abiotic Stresses / Gagan Kumar, Jai Singh Patel, Anupam Maharshi, Arpan Mukherjee, Chetan Keswani, S.P. Singh, H.B. Singh and B.K. Sarma.1 online resourc

    Barsaurea apatani S. Singh, Kirti, & N. Singh 2023, sp. nov.

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    Barsaurea apatani S. Singh, Kirti, & N. Singh, sp. nov. (Figs 1, 6) Holotype: Ô, India, Arunachal Pradesh: Ziro (27.534755N, 93.820389E, 1599 m), 3.v.2018, Santosh Singh leg. (13475/H10). Diagnosis: Forewing length 15mm in male. Barsaurea apatani sp. nov. (Fig.1)closely resembles B.phaeoxanthia in its colouration and forewing markings but is distinct by the grey colour of head and vertex, brownish frons, greyish collar and patagia and darker forewing markings covering the marginal area, whereas in B. phaeoxanthia (Figs. 2, 3), the head, vertex, frons, collar, patagia and marginal area of forewing are yellowish. In male genitalia of B. apatani (Fig. 6), the uncus is shorter and more dilated subapically; the valva is shorter, broader and almost rectangular and the vesica with two diverticula, each with a cluster of strong cornuti apically, whereas in the male genitalia of B. phaeoxanthia (Fig. 7), the uncus is longer and subapically less dilated, the valva is long and narrower at apex and the vesica bears a single cluster of 1–3 cornuti apically. Distribution: So far known from its type locality only. Etymology: The name of this species is derived from the local tribe ‘Apatani’ that inhabits the type locality of the species.Published as part of Singh, Santosh, Kirti, Jagbir Singh & Singh, Navneet, 2023, A new species and two species records of genus Barsaurea from India (Erebidae: Arctiinae: Lithosiini), pp. 349-354 in Zootaxa 5315 (4) on page 350, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5315.4.5, http://zenodo.org/record/814232

    Brassica Oilseeds: breeding and management/ edited by Arvind Kumar, S.S. Banga, P.D. Meena, P.R. Kumar.

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    Includes bibliographical references and index.This book contains 12 chapters focusing on the breeding aspects, i.e. genetics and breeding, intersubgenomic heterosis, induced mutagenesis and allele mining, seed quality modifications and genomics, and the management of diseases, such as Albugo candida and Alternaria species, insect pests and abiotic stresses, in rapeseed-mustard.Importance and origin / Arvind Kumar, P.A. Salisbury, A.M. Gurung and M.J. Barbetti -- Genetics and breeding / Shashi Banga, P.R. Kumar, Dhiraj Singh, Ram Bhajan and S.S. Banga -- Intersubgenomic heterosis : brassica napus as an example / Donghui Fu and Meili Xiao -- Induced mutagenesis and allele mining / Sanjay J. Jambhulkar -- Seed quality modifications in oilseed brassica / Abha Agnihotri -- Genomics / Venkatesh Bollina, Yogendra Khedikar, Wayne E. Clarke and Isobel A.P. Parkin -- Diseases / C. Chattopadhyay and S.J. Kolte -- Albogo candida / P.R. Verma, G.S. Saharan and P.D. Meena -- Pathogenesis of alternaria species : physiological, biochemical and molecular characterization / P.D. Meena, Gohar Taj and C. Chattopadhyay -- Plant disease resistance genes : insights and concepts for durable disease resistance / Lisong Ma and M. Hossein Borhan -- Insect-pests / Sarwan Kumar and Y.P. Singh -- Abiotic stresses with emphasis on brassica juncea / D.K. Sharma, D. Kumar and P.C. Sharma.1 online resource (xvii, 261 pages)

    The Folio: F. C. C. Magazine

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    Editorial. pp. 1-2; Samuel, V. M.-Essay-Pilgrimage to Lincoln's Tomb. pp. 2-7; Burke, D. C.-Article-Self-Importance. pp. 7-10; Chaubey, S. K.-Article-The Artist's Cry. pp. 10-11; The Co-Eds' Corner. pp. 11-12; Ranjit Kumar-Whiffs of Wisdom. pp. 12-13; Goverdhan Das-Poetry-Moments of Tryst. pp. 13; Kak, B. N.-Tourism-Kashmir. pp. 13-15; Satyindra Singh-News and Notes. pp. 16-18; W. P. B. pp. 19-20; News from the Outposts. pp. 20-21; The Alumni Corner. pp. 21-22; In Memoriam. pp. 23-24; [Hindi]. 12 p.; Punjabi Kiyari [Punjabi]. 4 p.; The Folio [Urdu]. 16 p.S. Bhagat Singh Malhotra, K. B. S. Maqbool Shah. after page 20; M. K. Tandon, Masud H. Sayid, Philipose Mathai. after page 22; M. L. Banerji, Rev Canon A. B. Chandu Lal, Rev J. Ali Baksh, Mangat Rai, Malik Mohd. Shafi. after page 2

    Medical data security for bioengineers Advances in bioinformatics and biomedical engineering book series./ Butta Singh, Barjinder Singh Saini, Dilbag Singh, Anukul Pandey, [editors].

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    Includes bibliographical references."This book examines the issues facing medical data security in healthcare systems and applications. It also explores the advancements in engineering applications to healthcare technologies, biomedical information security and data privacy, and cloud computing technologies in healthcare"--Provided by publisherAdvancements in data security and privacy techniques used in IoT based hospital applications / Ankita Tiwari, Raghuvendra Tripathi -- Engineering solutions for the future of modern medicine / Surendar Aravindhan, Kavitha M, Synthesishub -- Optimization techniques for the multilevel thresholding of the medical images / Taranjit Kaur, Barjinder Saini -- Bernoulli's chaotic map based 2D ECG image steganography : a medical data security approach / Anukul Pandey, Barjinder Saini, Butta Singh, Neetu Sood -- Cloud computing technologies in healthcare : importance of cloud in e-healthcare / R. Suganya, Sujatha S. -- Techniques for biomedical data security / Harminder Kaur, Sharvan Kumar Pahuja -- An IWT based blend of cryptography and steganography for securing confidential data in biomedical signals / Neetika Soni, D. Indu Saini, Butta Singh -- Changes in physiological dynamics of EEG during meditation using Wavelet families / Neha Gupta -- Compression of biomedical images using compressive sensing / Meenakshi Sood, Charu, Urvashi, Shruti Jain -- Electrocardiogram beat classification using BAT optimized fuzzy KNN classifier / Atul Kumar Verma, Indu Saini, Barjinder Singh Saini.1 online resourc

    Inheritance of spot blotch resistance in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)

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    Singh, S., Singh, H., Sharma, A., Meeta, M., Singh, B., Joshi, N., Grover, P., Al-Yassin, A. and Kumar, S. 2014. Inheritance of spot blotch resistance in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Can. J. Plant Sci. 94: 1203–1209. Spot blotch, caused by Bipolaris sorokiniana, is a major disease of barley hampering its commercial production in many parts of the world. Growing resistant cultivars is the most effective, economical and eco-friendly approach to control the disease. To understand the inheritance of resistance, F1, F2 and F3 generations of two crosses, involving susceptible (PL426 and RD2503) and resistant (BL9 and BL10) parents were studied. The susceptibility of F1 plants and a ratio of 13 susceptible:3 resistant in F2 populations in both crosses indicated that the reaction to spot blotch is hypostatic and is governed by two genes with an epistatic/inhibitory effect of first on the second one. The resistant reaction appeared due to the presence of dominant allele of the second gene. The first gene in dominant homozygous or heterozygous condition had an inhibitory effect over the second gene. The inheritance pattern was confirmed from the segregation pattern of F3 progenies of both the crosses. One hundred-fifty F2:6 recombinant inbred lines (RIL) derived from PL426/BL10 cross gave a good fit to the ratio of 1 resistant:3 susceptible lines under artificial and natural epiphytotic conditions. Recovery of transgressive segregants in the RIL population indicated the presence of some modifiers or minor genes. Test of allelism involving susceptible (PL426)×susceptible (RD2503) and resistant (BL9)×resistant (BL10) parents revealed that both the susceptible parents as well as resistant parents were allelic to each other
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