131 research outputs found

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    Effects of Initial Thinning on the Growth and Biomass Characteristics of Zizyphus spina-christi Trees

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    Seedlings of Zizyphus spina-christi trees grown from seeds were planted intensively in the field at the Experiments and Research Station of College of Agriculture, King Saud University near Riyadh City. After a year, the trees were subjected to thinning through three consecutive years and evaluated for growth and biomass production. Starting from the second year of thinning, the thinned trees increased stem diameter and all above-ground biomass components. Branches and foliage biomass ratio also increased due to thinning at the expense of stem biomass ratio. Unthinned trees were superior in biomass production after three years of the treatment application.Corresponding Author: Prof. Ibrahim Mohammed Aref Forest Sciences and Environment, College of Food Science and Agiculture, King Saud University PO. Box 2460, Riyadh, 11451, Saudi Arabia Email: [email protected]

    The effects of light intensity on seed germination and seedling growth of cassia fistula (linn.), enterolobium saman (jacq.) Prain ex king. And delonix

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    The present study investigated the effect of 100, 50 , and 25 % light intensities on seed germination and early seedling development of Cassia fistula, Enterolobium saman and Delonix regia. The experiment was carried out under temperature of 25°C - 15°C day and night and 65 % relative humidity, in the greenhouse. One hundred percent light intensity significantly produced the highest seed germination and seedling growth of the three species for all growth characteristics measured. Fifty percent light intensity treatment produced seed germination and seedling growth to come in the second order and, sometimes, shared full light intensity treatment. The growth characteristics of Delonix regia seedlings had almost the highest values among species and in full light intensity treatment. Although Cassia fistula seedlings had lower growth, in comparison with the other two species, however, they tolerated low light intensity and had the highest survival and root growth.Corresponding Author: Prof. Ibrahim Mohammed Aref Plant Production Department, College of Agriculture, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2460 Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia. Email: [email protected]

    Effects of pre-germination treatments and sowing depths upon germination potential of some Acacia species

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    Seeds of Acacia farnesiana (L.) Willd., A. salicina Lindley, A. nilotica (L.) Willd. ex Del., A. ehrenbergiana Hayne, A. seyal Del., A. saligna (Labill.) H. L. Wendl. and A. tortilis (Forssk.) Hayne were subjected to pre-germination treatment. This was either by soaking seeds in water for 24 or 48 or 72 hours or by placing them in boiling water and left them to cool to the room temperature. All seeds were sowed either at 2 or 4 or 6-cm at soil. The higher germination percentage for all Acacia species was obtained after boiling seeds in water and at 2-cm sowing depth apart from A. ehrenbergiana. It showed no response to boiling in water but had the best result with soaking in water for 24h. The results of this study suggest that boiling seeds of the investigated Acacia species in water is recommended with sowing depth not deeper than 4 cm.Corresponding Author: Dr. Ibrahim Mohammed Aref Department of Plant Production, College of Agriculture, King Saud University, P. O. Box 2460 Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia Email: [email protected]

    Performance of Leucaena leucocephala and Albizia lebbeck trees under low irrigation water in the field

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    Growth of Leucaena leucocephala and Albizia lebbeck trees was investigated under low water supply in the field using a complete randomized block design at the Research and Experiments Station of the College of Food Science and Agriculture, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The trees were irrigated at either 160 (well water supply) or 500 mm (low water supply) of a class "A" evaporation-pan records for two years. Differences were occurred between L. leucocephala and A. lebbeck trees across irrigation treatments with greater values for L. leucocephala in most of the growth characteristics measured. Comparing with L. leucocephala, leaves of A. lebbeck comprises only small proportion of the total weight of tree while allocated equal proportions to their branches and roots (41%).while L. leucocephala trees allocated almost similar proportions to their branches, stem and roots (27-28%). Low water supply decreased stem by 19.5% with stem diameter was unaffected. Leaf, branches, stem, root and consequently total dry weight of the trees decreases by 42, 51.5, 45, 51 and 94% in low water supply. However, the performance of L. leucocephala and A. lebbeck trees endured low irrigation conditions in terms of survival and maintaining reasonable growth.Corresponding Author: Prof. Ibrahim Mohammed Aref Plant Production Department, College of Food Science and Agriculture, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2460 Riyadh 11451 Saudi Arabia. Email: [email protected]

    Bibliometric analysis of academic journal recommendations and requirements for surgical and anesthesiologic adverse events reporting.

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    BACKGROUND Standards for reporting surgical adverse events vary widely within the scientific literature. Failure to adequately capture adverse events hinders efforts to measure the safety of healthcare delivery and improve the quality of care. The aim of the present study is to assess the prevalence and typology of perioperative adverse event reporting guidelines among surgery and anesthesiology journals. MATERIALS AND METHODS In November 2021, three independent reviewers queried journal lists from the SCImago Journal & Country Rank (SJR) portal (www.scimagojr.com), a bibliometric indicator database for surgery and anesthesiology academic journals. Journal characteristics were summarized using SCImago, a bibliometric indicator database extracted from Scopus journal data. Quartile 1 (Q1) was considered the top quartile and Q4 bottom quartile based on the journal impact factor. Journal author guidelines were collected to determine whether adverse event reporting recommendations were included and, if so, the preferred reporting procedures. RESULTS Of 1,409 journals queried, 655 (46.5%) recommended surgical adverse event reporting. Journals most likely to recommend adverse event reporting were: 1) by category surgery (59.1%), urology (53.3%), and anesthesia (52.3%); 2) in top SJR quartiles (i.e. more influential); 3) by region, based in Western Europe (49.8%), North America (49.3%), and the Middle East (48.3%). CONCLUSIONS Surgery and anesthesiology journals do not consistently require or provide recommendations on perioperative adverse event reporting. Journal guidelines regarding adverse event reporting should be standardized and are needed to improve the quality of surgical adverse event reporting with the ultimate goal of improving patient morbidity and mortality

    Exact nonlinear frequency division multiplexing in lossy fibers

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    The path-average approximation penalizes NFDM transmission over lumped amplified fiber links.We investigate suitably tapered lossy fibers to overcome the approximation error induced by the path average, making the NFDM transmission exact. Error vector magnitude gains up to 4.8 dB are observed.Accepted Author ManuscriptTeam Sander Wahl

    Properties of charcoal produced from some endemic and exotic acacia species grown in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

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    Production and properties of charcoal from four years old Acacia assak, A. negrii, A. seyal, A. karroo, A. ampliceps, A. stenophylla and A. salicina grown in the Experiments and Research Station, College of Agriculture, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia were studied. The first three species are indigenous while the others are exotic. 21 trees were felled and disks of 20 cm each from their stem were cut and shipped to the Wood Testing Laboratory at the Faculty of Agriculture, Alexandria University, Egypt. Specific gravity, charcoal yield and gross heat of combustion of the wood of these species were determined. Wood samples were charcoaled then the physical (apparent density, gross heat of combustion) and chemical properties (moisture, volatile, ash and fixed carbon content) of the produced charcoal produced were determined. A. amplecips, A. negrii and A. asak showed quality charcoal in terms of high gross heat of combustion and fixed carbon content with low moisture and ash content comparing with the other acacia species under investigation.Corresponding Author: Professor Ibrahim Mohammed Aref, 1Plant Production Department, College of Agriculture, King Saud University, P. O. Box 2460 Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia. Email: [email protected]

    54.5 Tb/s WDM Transmission over Field Deployed Fiber Enabled by Neural Network-Based Digital Pre-Distortion

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    We demonstrate a record 54.5 Tb/s WDM transmission at 11.35 bit/s/Hz over 48 km of field-deployed SMF connecting business and academic parks enabled by a novel joint I-Q Neural Network-based transmitter digital pre-distortion technique.Accepted Author ManuscriptTeam Sander Wahl

    Blind Polarization Demultiplexing of Probabilistically Shaped Signals

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    We propose a novel method for blind polarization-demultiplexing of probabilistically shaped signals for coherent receivers. The method is capable of separating signals with (quasi) Gaussian distributions by exploiting temporal correlations added to the transmit signals. The proposed method is evaluated in challenging mixing scenarios.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Team Sander WahlsTeam Raf Van de Pla
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