406 research outputs found
Push-pull fatigue properties of wires in an iridium - 5% tungsten alloy
Introduction
This memorandum reports a series of tests to determine the fatigue
properties of an iridium - 5% tungsten alloy at 600°c and 700°C.
A previous memorandum, Memo. Mat. 61, reports the fatigue properties
at room temperature of the same alloy
Health service changes to address diabetes in pregnancy in a complex setting: perspectives of health professionals
Background: Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have high rates of gestational and pre-existing type 2 diabetes in pregnancy. The Northern Territory (NT) Diabetes in Pregnancy Partnership was established to enhance systems and services to improve health outcomes. It has three arms: a clinical register, developing models of care and a longitudinal birth cohort. This study used a process evaluation to report on health professional's perceptions of models of care and related quality improvement activities since the implementation of the Partnership. Methods: Changes to models of care were documented according to goals and aims of the Partnership and reviewed annually by the Partnership Steering group. A 'systems assessment tool' was used to guide six focus groups (49 healthcare professionals). Transcripts were coded and analysed according to pre-identified themes of orientation and guidelines, education, communication, logistics and access, and information technology. Results: Key improvements since implementation of the Partnership include: health professional relationships, communication and education; and integration of quality improvement activities. Focus groups with 49 health professionals provided in depth information about how these activities have impacted their practice and models of care for diabetes in pregnancy. Co-ordination of care was reported to have improved, however it was also identified as an opportunity for further development. Recommendations included a central care coordinator, better integration of information technology systems and ongoing comprehensive quality improvement processes. Conclusions: The Partnership has facilitated quality improvement through supporting the development of improved systems that enhance models of care. Persisting challenges exist for delivering care to a high risk population however improvements in formal processes and structures, as demonstrated in this work thus far, play an important role in work towards improving health outcomes.R. Kirkham, J.A. Boyle, C. Whitbread, M. Dowden, C. Connors, S. Corpus, L. McCarthy, J. Oats, H.D. McIntyre, E. Moore, K. O’Dea, A. Brown, L. Maple-Brown (On behalf of the NT Diabetes in Pregnancy Partnership
Involving Stakeholders in Crop-Livestock Systems Analysis: Innovation Platforms in Burkina Faso and Niger, West Africa
The development of markets and agricultural productivity need participative research approaches that involve farmers, stakeholders and actors in the value chains of agricultural products and inputs. This study illustrates the use of multi-stakeholder platforms to address critical issues that often curtail effective implementation of development strategies and achievement of objectives. The process used to facilitate stakeholder participation and achieve enhanced understanding of collective actions to achieve objectives is illustrated by case studies in Niger and Burkina Faso. The process that determines the causal relationships among the various problems is also presented; results from the process can be used to determine entry points for addressing system challenges. Finally, the study offers specific insights and analysis related to small-ruminant and feed value chains within Niger and Burkina Faso. The strengths and weaknesses of each node of the value chain are assessed and appropriate upgrading, management, and development strategies suggested. Entry points for action and strategies for intervention are identified to improve functioning of the crop-livestock value chain and the productivity of agro-pastoral farming systems. Participative analysis and understanding of the functioning of agricultural value chains enable farmers and actors to improve agricultural productivity and marketing. The multi-stakeholder platform approach is a more suitable tool for socio-economic analysis of integrated systems, and identification and implementation of development strategies, than traditional disciplinary research approaches
Regional Geological Visualisation Models
A series of 14 Regional Geological Visualisation Models (GV Models) for England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been produced to provide interactive, user-friendly tools for exploring the UK’s geology in three dimensions. The GV Models are designed for use on desktop/laptop computers and complement the existing range of free-of-charge digital data, maps and models that are published online by the BGS.
The GV Models are based on the national fence diagram of the UK (UK3D v2015) with additional cross-sections developed along the regional boundaries, the BGS 1:625 000 scale digital bedrock geological map of the UK (DiGMapGB-625), and the BGS 1:250 000 scale marine bedrock map. These geological datasets have been combined with digital terrain, bathymetric and topographic data to develop 3D ‘block models’, displaying the bedrock geology of the upper 1.5 km of the crust.
Users can manipulate the model to explore the region’s geology by switching on/off individual blocks, hiding or displaying groups of geological units, and zooming and rotating to view the blocks from any angle. The model legend provides information about the geological units, and select functions link to additional sources of information including the BGS Lexicon and scanned records of key boreholes that have informed the model’s development.
The GV models can be downloaded via the following page of the BGS website:
www.bgs.ac.uk/research/ukgeology/nationalGeologicalModel/GVModels.htm
Simulation of Lablab Pastures
The potential of legume-based pastures to address declining soil nitrogen on marginal cropping soils is increasingly recognised in northern Australia, as such there is a need for cost benefit analysis of pastures and crops in a mixed farming system. In highly variable rainfall environments, biophysical modelling may be the best way of identifying and quantifying interactions with mixed crop-livestock systems on a seasonal basis. This paper describes a case study where both animal productivity and lablab pasture production is simulated. Lablab (Lablab purpureus) is an annual tropical legume widely used as a short-term legume phase in crop-pasture rotations, providing high quality forage for animal production and a low risk nitrogen input for crop production
Evaluation of the feed quality of six dual purpose pearl millet varieties and growth performance of sheep fed their residues in Niger
Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) is a
staple food popularly cultivated by
small farmers in Niger. The stover are
also used as feeds for livestock (small
ruminant) as basal diet, especially
during the cold dry season.
ICRISAT has developed many dualpurpose
millet varieties that aim to
increase feeds for livestock while
providing grain as food to farmers. But
the nutritional quality of Stover of
these varieties for livestock are not
known.
This research aims to assess the
quality of residues of the dual-purpose
varieties and their effect on feed
intake and live weight changes of
young sheep
Using homosoils for quantitative extrapolation of soil mapping models
Since the early 2000s, digital soil maps have been successfully used for various applications, including precision agriculture, environmental assessments and land use management. Globally, however, there are large disparities in the availability of soil data on which digital soil mapping (DSM) models can be fitted. Several studies attempted to transfer a DSM model fitted from an area with a well-developed soil database to map the soil in areas with low sampling density. This usually is a challenging task because two areas have hardly ever the same soil-forming factors in two different regions of the world. In this study, we aim to determine whether finding homosoils (i.e., locations sharing similar soil-forming factors) can help transferring soil information by means of a DSM model extrapolation. We hypothesize that within areas in the world considered as homosoils, one can leverage on areas with high sampling density and fit a DSM model, which can then be extrapolated geographically to an area with little or no data. We collected publicly available soil data for clay, silt, sand, organic carbon (OC), pH and total nitrogen (N) within our study area in Mali, West Africa and its homosoils. We fitted a regression tree model between the soil properties and environmental covariates of the homosoils, and applied this model to our study area in Mali. Several calibration and validation strategies were explored. We also compared our approach with existing maps made at a global and a continental scale. We concluded that geographic model extrapolation within homosoils was possible, but that model accuracy dramatically improved when local data were included in the calibration dataset. The maps produced from models fitted with data from homosoils were more accurate than existing products for this study area, for three (silt, sand, pH) out of six soil properties. This study would be relevant to areas with very little or no soil data to carry critical soils and environmental risk assessments at a regional level
Innovation platforms as vehicle to strengthen stakeholders capacity to innovate for improved livelihoods in drylands in Asia and Sub Saharan Africa
Agriculture is the engine for poverty reduction and economic development in the developing nations The sector employs over 50 of the population in South Asia SA and Sub Saharan Africa SSA and contributes significantly to their Gross Domestic Product GDP McCullough Pingali and Stamoulis 2008 Majority of agricultural lands in these regions are drylands and vulnerable to droughts of various intensities These threats are far more pronounced in the semiarid and arid regions Globally drylands occupy some 609 billion ha with a population of 21 billion people nearly half of which are the poorest and most vulnerable and marginalized in the world UN 2013 Despite the importance of dryland agriculture for the livelihood security of millions of rural people the level of innovations and technological change in the sector continues to be slow and patchy Access to and adoption of technologies and innovations remain very low resulting in low productivity resource degradation and persistent poverty Many developing countries are now working towards improving rural livelihoods of smallholder farmers However achieving this goal will require transforming the traditional top down technologydriven extension model to a more decentralized farmerled and marketdriven extension system Innovation has become a focus of dryland agriculture development and innovation systems are the centre piece of many development projects These Innovation systems IS approaches emphasize the collective dimension of innovation pointing to the need to effect necessary linkages and interaction among multiple actors IS thinking also pays attention to the coevolution of innovation processes arguing that successful innovation results from alignment of technical social institutional and organizational dimensions Hall 2005 Hall 2007 These insights are increasingly informing interventions that focus on supporting multistakeholder arrangements such as innovation platforms IPs as mechanisms for enhancing agriculture innovations
Agricultural cropland extent and areas of South Asia derived using Landsat satellite 30-m time-series big-data using random forest machine learning algorithms on the Google Earth Engine cloud
The South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan) has a staggering 900 million
people (~43% of the population) who face food insecurity or severe food insecurity as per United
Nations, Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) the Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES). The
existing coarse-resolution (≥250-m) cropland maps lack precision in geo-location of individual farms
and have low map accuracies. This also results in uncertainties in cropland areas calculated fromsuch
products. Thereby, the overarching goal of this study was to develop a high spatial resolution (30-m
or better) baseline cropland extent product of South Asia for the year 2015 using Landsat satellite
time-series big-data and machine learning algorithms (MLAs) on the Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud
computing platform. To eliminate the impact of clouds, 10 time-composited Landsat bands (blue,
green, red, NIR, SWIR1, SWIR2, Thermal, EVI, NDVI, NDWI) were derived for each of the three timeperiods
over 12 months (monsoon: Days of the Year (DOY) 151–300; winter: DOY 301–365 plus 1–60;
and summer: DOY 61–150), taking the every 8-day data from Landsat-8 and 7 for the years
2013–2015, for a total of 30-bands plus global digital elevation model (GDEM) derived slope band.
This 31-band mega-file big data-cube was composed for each of the five agro-ecological zones
(AEZ’s) of South Asia and formed a baseline data for image classification and analysis. Knowledgebase
for the Random Forest (RF) MLAs were developed using spatially well spread-out reference
training data (N = 2179) in five AEZs. The classification was performed on GEE for each of the five AEZs
using well-established knowledge-base and RF MLAs on the cloud. Map accuracies were measured
using independent validation data (N = 1185). The survey showed that the South Asia cropland
product had a producer’s accuracy of 89.9% (errors of omissions of 10.1%), user’s accuracy of 95.3%
(errors of commission of 4.7%) and an overall accuracy of 88.7%. The National and sub-national
(districts) areas computed from this cropland extent product explained 80-96% variability when
compared with the National statistics of the South Asian Countries. The full-resolution imagery can be
viewed at full-resolution, by zooming-in to any location in South Asia or the world, atwww.croplands.
org and the cropland products of South Asia downloaded from The Land Processes Distributed Active
Archive Center (LP DAAC) of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the United
States Geological Survey (USGS): https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/products/gfsad30saafgircev001/
Identifying Low Emissions Development Pathways – Synergies and Trade-offs: A Case Study of Mahbubnagar District, Telangana, India
This case study examines the opportunities for obtaining synergies between agricultural productivity, whole-farm profitability and greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation and highlights where trade-offs exist. We explore how agricultural practices and systems can be designed and managed to balance the synergies and trade-offs for small-holder farmers in semi-arid India. We used data on farm-household characteristics and agricultural practices from 100 farm-households of Telangana state, India. Quantifying synergies and trade-offs between profitability, adaptation and mitigation we employed simulation modelling- crop, livestock and whole-farm simulation models, and Cool Farm Tool to estimate net GHG emissions. Our analysis reveals that specific plot-level crop management strategies and farm-level enterprise interventions can increase profitability as well as benefit climate change mitigation. It depict how farming systems can be managed to achieve synergies between profitability and mitigation outcomes and where, if any trade-offs exist. Combinations of reduced tillage, retaining crop-residue, improved nitrogen management, utilizing organic manure, improved livestock feeding practices, introducing agro-forestry could contribute to GHG abatement and improved profitability at our study site. Such multi-model systems analysis using participatory design and tools could help practitioners and policymakers to identify and promote use of management practices that can help achieve multiple objectives and guide investments towards synergistic climate smart agriculture strategies. Our study contributes empirical evidence to the debate surrounding integrated approaches to sustainable development goals and adaptation and mitigation objectives
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