3,306 research outputs found

    Marrubium asumaniae U. B. Deshmukh, E. S. Reddy & M. B. Shende 2022, nom. nov.

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    Marrubium asumaniae U.B. Deshmukh, E. S. Reddy & M. B. Shende nom. nov. Replaced name:— Marrubium lanatum Akgül, in Ot Sist. Bot. Dergisi 25(2): 25. 2018. nom. illeg., non M. lanatum Benth., Labiat. Gen. Spec. 587. 1834. Type:— TURKEY. C5 Niğde: Centrum, near Azatlı Village, rocky slopes, 1600–1650 m, 15 July 2012, G. Akgül 2418 (holotype: ANK; isotype: Yıldırımlı Otluk’u). Eponymy:— The specific epithet honors Dr. Asuman Baytop (1920−2015), a Turkish botanist in recognition of her contributions for the Turkish flora.Published as part of Deshmukh, Umakant Bhoopati, Reddy, Eanguwar Srinivas & Shende, Mukund Bapurao, 2022, Marrubium asumaniae, a new name proposed for a Marrubium species (Lamiaceae) in the flora Turkey, pp. 161-162 in Phytotaxa 543 (2) on page 161, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.543.2.6, http://zenodo.org/record/645076

    Informetrics on M. N. Srinivas

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    M. N. Srinivas, the well known sociologist is widely recognised as architect of modern Indian sociology and social anthropology. His publications have been analysed by year, domain, authorship pattern, channels of communication used. Keywords, etc. The results indicate that the papers published by him are of a nature that qualify him to be a 'role model' for the younger generations to emulate. By the end of 1995, Srinivas had to his credit 144 papers which, included 33 broad papers in sociology and anthropology; 18 papers in social change; 28 papers in village studies; 12 papers on religion; 17 papers on caste and 36 papers of general popular interest. The periods 1958-61 and 1974-77, when Srinivas was 38-41 and 58-61 years old. were his most productive periods with highest publication activity

    Andropogon campbellii U. B. Deshmukh, M. B. Shende & E. S. Reddy 2022, nom. nov.

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    Andropogon campbellii U.B. Deshmukh, M. B. Shende & E. S. Reddy nom. nov. Replaced name:— Andropogon decipiens (Campbell) E. Bridges & Orzell, J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 14(2):214.2020, nom. illeg., non A. decipiens (Hack.) Domin, Bibliotheca Botanica 20(Heft 85, 2): 266. 1915. Type:—TYPE: U.S.A., Florida, Martin County, Jonathan Dickinson State Park, more or less open pine flatwoods, 16 Oct 1977, Campbell 3870 (holotype: GH; isotypes: DUKE, FLAS, FSU, GA, MAINE, MISSA, MISSI, TAES, TENN, USF, VDB); Highlands County, Archbold Biological Station, sandy soil of scrublands, 15 Sep 1977, Campbell 3747 (paratypes: CEN, F, GH, NY, US). Distribution:— USA (Florida) Eponymy:— The specific epithet honors the Professor Christopher S. Campbell, School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine 04469, USA.Published as part of Deshmukh, Umakant Bhoopati, Shende, Mukund Bapurao & Reddy, Eanguwar Srinivas, 2022, A new replacing name for Andropogon decipiens (Campbell) E. Bridges & Orzell (Poaceae: Andropogoneae), pp. 111 in Phytotaxa 530 (1) on page 111, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.530.1.10, http://zenodo.org/record/582385

    Marrubium asumaniae, a new name proposed for a Marrubium species (Lamiaceae) in the flora Turkey

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    Deshmukh, Umakant Bhoopati, Reddy, Eanguwar Srinivas, Shende, Mukund Bapurao (2022): Marrubium asumaniae, a new name proposed for a Marrubium species (Lamiaceae) in the flora Turkey. Phytotaxa 543 (2): 161-162, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.543.2.6, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.543.2.

    A new replacing name for Andropogon decipiens (Campbell) E. Bridges & Orzell (Poaceae: Andropogoneae)

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    Deshmukh, Umakant Bhoopati, Shende, Mukund Bapurao, Reddy, Eanguwar Srinivas (2022): A new replacing name for Andropogon decipiens (Campbell) E. Bridges & Orzell (Poaceae: Andropogoneae). Phytotaxa 530 (1): 111-111, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.530.1.1

    supplementary-HLE_Schedule – Supplemental material for Health-related life events in patients with somatic symptom disorders: A case control study

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    Supplemental material, supplementary-HLE_Schedule for Health-related life events in patients with somatic symptom disorders: A case control study by Balaswamy Reddy, Santosh Kumar Chaturvedi, Geetha Desai, Narayana Manjunatha and Srinivas Guruprasad in International Journal of Social Psychiatry</p

    Neoasymmetrella, a new name for the genus Asymmetrella Gorochov, 2022 preoccupied by Asymmetrella Cobb, 1920 and Asymmetrella Neckaja, 1973

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    Deshmukh, Umakant Bhoopati, Misar, Sachin Damodhar, Shende, Mukund Bapurao, Mungole, Aravind Janardhan, Reddy, Eanguwar Srinivas (2023): Neoasymmetrella, a new name for the genus Asymmetrella Gorochov, 2022 preoccupied by Asymmetrella Cobb, 1920 and Asymmetrella Neckaja, 1973. Zootaxa 5264 (4): 599-600, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.4.10, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-04-22-0755-PD

    EMS886424 Supplemetal Material - Supplemental material for Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis of reaction products of sulfur mustards with phenol

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    Supplemental material, EMS886424 Supplemetal Material for Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis of reaction products of sulfur mustards with phenol by A Veeresham, M Sandeep, T Jagadeshwar Reddy, A Suresh Pal, K Srinivas and S Prabhakar in European Journal of Mass Spectrometry</p

    Conflict and inequality in surface irrigation: a socio-ecological perspective

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    This paper attempts to understand the role of institutions and governance, in explaining unequal access to canal water under different rules of the game. Two states at different levels of agricultural productivity with different rules of distribution of canal water are chosen to study the problem at project level. While Bihar, at low level of agricultural productivity, represents absence of scientific method of distribution of water, Punjab offers high level of agricultural productivity with the warabandi system. The two case studies offer interesting similarities and dissimilarities in terms of unequal access to water by the tail enders and mechanisms needed to mitigate this inequality. Some similarities are: (a) the tail enders suffer the most with low access to water forcing them to adopt only low water intensive crops in comparison to the head reach and mid reach farmers; and (b) the farmers supplement canal water with ground water. The dissimilarities noticed are: (a) while over exploitation of ground water in Punjab has reached levels beyond natural recharge of aquifers in several places; in Bihar, with low withdrawal of ground water and natural endowment of high water table, such a situation has not arisen; (b) the breaking of canal and water courses for own benefit by the powerful with political clout is rampant in Bihar, rarely attracting a penalty from the irrigation department; (c) the water market for tubewell water (Rs.70 to 80 per hour) has developed in Bihar partly mitigating inequality in access to canal water by the tail enders; no such phenomenon is common in Punjab. The plausible reason for the low density of tubewells in Bihar in contrast to Punjab is low incomes making affordability of tubewell an issue, and (d) cooperative efforts by farmers to lay down pipes through neighbors’ plots to minimize loss of water has succeeded in Punjab; in Bihar such efforts succeeded initially at a small scale but could not sustain without government assistance. The absence of scientific rule for distribution of canal water and the weak canal governance system aggravates the misery of tail enders. In such a scenario, the mitigation of unequal access to water by the tail enders is facilitated by the development of water markets at high cost in a complex situation with tiny holdings and lack of cooperation among the farmers.Length: pp.808-818CanalsWater distributionCrop managementGroundwaterWater market
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