Academic literature on the topic 'Oil mallee'

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Journal articles on the topic "Oil mallee"

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Milthorpe, P. L., M. I. H. Brooker, A. Slee, and H. I. Nicol. "Optimum planting densities for the production of eucalyptus oil from blue mallee (Eucalyptus polybractea) and oil mallee (E. kochii)." Industrial Crops and Products 8, no. 3 (September 1998): 219–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0926-6690(98)00006-5.

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Barton, Allan. "The Oil Mallee Project: A Multifaceted Industrial Ecology Case Study." Journal of Industrial Ecology 3, no. 2-3 (March 1999): 161–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/108819899569467.

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Smith, Patrick F. "Bird activity in oil mallee plantings in the wheatbelt of Western Australia." Ecological Management & Restoration 10, no. 3 (December 2009): 236–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-8903.2009.00496.x.

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Nicolle, D., M. Byrne, and M. Whalen. "A taxonomic revision and morphological variation within Eucalyptus series Subulatae subseries Oleaginae (Myrtaceae), including the oil mallee complex, of south-western Australia." Australian Systematic Botany 18, no. 6 (2005): 525. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb04038.

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Morphological variation within Eucalyptus series Subulatae subseries Oleaginae, a group of mallee taxa distributed in south-western Australia, was assessed by adult and seedling characteristics. A total of 36 adult morphological characters and 20 seedling characters was included in phenetic analyses of 82 individuals representing 29 populations covering all the taxa and the broad geographical distribution of the series. The phenetic analyses indicate relatively weak separation of all previously recognised taxa within E. subser. Oleaginae, except for E. longissima (previously referred to as E. grasbyi), which is distinctive in its seedling morphology, and to a lesser degree, E. ultima, which is also most easily distinguished by seedling morphology. E. eremicola, E. peeneri and E. sublucida are not well differentiated from one another, differing significantly only in adult leaf colour and gloss. The three previously recognised species of the oil mallee complex (E. kochii, E. plenissima and E. ‘horistes’) are also only weakly differentiated from one another. Two variants within E. kochii were observed to differ from each other in several adult vegetative and floral characteristics and are recognised at the subspecific level. A new taxonomy for E. subser. Oleaginae is presented, based on phenetic analyses combined with extensive field, glasshouse and herbarium examination of all taxa in the subseries. A new species is described (E. longissima Nicolle sp. nov.) to accommodate populations of mallees previously erroneously referred to E. grasbyi. New combinations are made for E. peeneri [E. eremicola subsp. peeneri (Blakely) Nicolle comb. nov.] and E. oleosa var. borealis [E. kochii subsp. borealis (C. Gardner) Nicolle comb. nov.] and two new subspecies of E. kochii are described (subspp. amaryssia Nicolle and yellowdinensis Nicolle). Eucalyptus sublucida is considered to be synonymous with E. eremicola subsp. peeneri. Keys to the taxa within the subseries are presented.
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Bell, Sarah J., Allan F. M. Barton, and Laura J. Stocker. "Agriculture for Health and Profit in Western Australia: The Western Oil Mallee Project." Ecosystem Health 7, no. 2 (June 2001): 116–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1526-0992.2001.007002116.x.

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Shen, Jun, Xiao-Shan Wang, Manuel Garcia-Perez, Daniel Mourant, Martin J. Rhodes, and Chun-Zhu Li. "Effects of particle size on the fast pyrolysis of oil mallee woody biomass." Fuel 88, no. 10 (October 2009): 1810–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2009.05.001.

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Quin, P. R., A. L. Cowie, R. J. Flavel, B. P. Keen, L. M. Macdonald, S. G. Morris, B. P. Singh, I. M. Young, and L. Van Zwieten. "Oil mallee biochar improves soil structural properties—A study with x-ray micro-CT." Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 191 (June 2014): 142–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2014.03.022.

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Kainer, David, David Bush, William J. Foley, and Carsten Külheim. "Assessment of a non-destructive method to predict oil yield in Eucalyptus polybractea (blue mallee)." Industrial Crops and Products 102 (August 2017): 32–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2017.03.008.

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Leng, Mei Chen, and Jonathan Majer. "Oil Mallee Plantings Increase Diversity of Beetles (Coleoptera) and Other Terrestrial Invertebrates within a Cropping Field." Open Journal of Forestry 08, no. 02 (2018): 167–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojf.2018.82012.

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Hu, Xun, Richard Gunawan, Daniel Mourant, Caroline Lievens, Xiang Li, Shu Zhang, Weerawut Chaiwat, and Chun-Zhu Li. "Acid-catalysed reactions between methanol and the bio-oil from the fast pyrolysis of mallee bark." Fuel 97 (July 2012): 512–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2012.02.032.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Oil mallee"

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Bell, Sarah Jayne. "Researching sustainability : material semiotics and the Oil Mallee Project." Access via Murdoch University Digital Theses Project, 2003. http://wwwlibmurdoch.edu.au/adt/browse/view/adt-MU20040302.153647.

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au, sbell@orange usyd edu, and Sarah Jane Bell. "Researching Sustainability: Material Semiotics and the Oil Mallee Project." Murdoch University, 2003. http://wwwlib.murdoch.edu.au/adt/browse/view/adt-MU20040302.153647.

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Sustainability responds to crises of ecology and human development and the relationships between them. Sustainability cannot be adequately described using disciplinary categories arising from the modern dichotomy between nature and culture. Sustainability research requires a methodology that reflects the reality of its subject. This thesis presents material semiotics as a methodology for sustainability research. Material semiotics refers to the work of actor-network theorists and latter developments of alternate spatial metaphors for material relationality. Actor-network theory is a methodology that describes human and non-human actors in the same terms. It follows actor through networks of material relationships that they constitute and are constituted by, depicting heterogeneous objects without recourse to prior categories of nature or culture. The description of material relationships in fluid and regional, as well as network, spaces expands the descriptive power of material semiotics to include Others and to better represent complexity. The Oil Mallee Project is a case study of sustainability in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Indigenous eucalypts, oil mallees, are planted on land that was cleared for agriculture. The above ground biomass can be processed for eucalyptus oil, electricity and activated carbon, and the rights to carbon stored in the extensive mallee roots, or in unharvested trees, can be sold. The Project responds to a number of sustainability issues, including ozone depletion, land degradation, climate change and rural decline. This thesis follows the actors that comprise the Oil Mallee Project to describe its complexity, multiplicity and sustainability. Qualitative interviews with actors in the Project and the wheatbelt provided the primary data, which is supported by documentary material. Three contingent phases can be identified in the history of the Oil Mallee Project – eucalyptus oil industry, dryland salinity management, and greenhouse response. The Project has persisted because it is simultaneously a regional, network and fluid object. Mallees grow well in the tough conditions of the wheatbelt. Mallees can be integrated with existing networks of industrial agriculture. The Project has achieved contingent stability in policy documents and the networks of scientific research. The fluidity of the Project has enabled it to change shape and identity in response to threats and opportunities, and as relationships break and form, without complete disruption. Specific humans have been central heroes in different phases of the Project. The mallees themselves are the only actors that have been consistently central to the identity of the Project. Sustainability requires knowledge of the relationships between humans and non-humans that constitute the multiple crises of ecology and human development. Sustainability is the re-ordering of those relationships in ways that make possible ecological integrity and human fulfilment. Material semiotics is a methodology for knowing sustainability in ways that reveal the possibilities for such re-orderings.
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Bell, Sarah Jane. "Researching sustainability: material semiotics and the Oil Mallee Project." Bell, Sarah Jane (2003) Researching sustainability: material semiotics and the Oil Mallee Project. PhD thesis, Murdoch University, 2003. http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/291/.

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Sustainability responds to crises of ecology and human development and the relationships between them. Sustainability cannot be adequately described using disciplinary categories arising from the modern dichotomy between nature and culture. Sustainability research requires a methodology that reflects the reality of its subject. This thesis presents material semiotics as a methodology for sustainability research. Material semiotics refers to the work of actor-network theorists and latter developments of alternate spatial metaphors for material relationality. Actor-network theory is a methodology that describes human and non-human actors in the same terms. It follows actor through networks of material relationships that they constitute and are constituted by, depicting heterogeneous objects without recourse to prior categories of nature or culture. The description of material relationships in fluid and regional, as well as network, spaces expands the descriptive power of material semiotics to include Others and to better represent complexity. The Oil Mallee Project is a case study of sustainability in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Indigenous eucalypts, oil mallees, are planted on land that was cleared for agriculture. The above ground biomass can be processed for eucalyptus oil, electricity and activated carbon, and the rights to carbon stored in the extensive mallee roots, or in unharvested trees, can be sold. The Project responds to a number of sustainability issues, including ozone depletion, land degradation, climate change and rural decline. This thesis follows the actors that comprise the Oil Mallee Project to describe its complexity, multiplicity and sustainability. Qualitative interviews with actors in the Project and the wheatbelt provided the primary data, which is supported by documentary material. Three contingent phases can be identified in the history of the Oil Mallee Project - eucalyptus oil industry, dryland salinity management, and greenhouse response. The Project has persisted because it is simultaneously a regional, network and fluid object. Mallees grow well in the tough conditions of the wheatbelt. Mallees can be integrated with existing networks of industrial agriculture. The Project has achieved contingent stability in policy documents and the networks of scientific research. The fluidity of the Project has enabled it to change shape and identity in response to threats and opportunities, and as relationships break and form, without complete disruption. Specific humans have been central heroes in different phases of the Project. The mallees themselves are the only actors that have been consistently central to the identity of the Project. Sustainability requires knowledge of the relationships between humans and non-humans that constitute the multiple crises of ecology and human development. Sustainability is the re-ordering of those relationships in ways that make possible ecological integrity and human fulfilment. Material semiotics is a methodology for knowing sustainability in ways that reveal the possibilities for such re-orderings.
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Wildy, Daniel Thomas. "Growing mallee eucalypts as short-rotation tree crops in the semi-arid wheatbelt of Western Australia." University of Western Australia. School of Plant Biology, 2004. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2004.0031.

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[Truncated abstract] Insufficient water use by annual crop and pasture species leading to costly rises in saline watertables has prompted research into potentially profitable deep-rooted perennial species in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Native mallee eucalypts are currently being developed as a short-rotation coppice crop for production of leaf oils, activated carbon and bio-electricity for low rainfall areas (300—450 mm) too dry for many of the traditional timber and forage species. The research in this study was aimed at developing a knowledge base necessary to grow and manage coppiced mallee eucalypts for both high productivity and salinity control. This firstly necessitated identification of suitable species, climatic and site requirements favourable to rapid growth, and understanding of factors likely to affect yield of the desirable leaf oil constituent, 1,8-cineole. This was undertaken using nine mallee taxa at twelve sites with two harvest regimes. E. kochii subsp. plenissima emerged as showing promise in the central and northern wheatbelt, particularly at a deep acid sand site (Gn 2.61; Northcote, 1979), so further studies focussed on physiology of its resprouting, water use and water-use efficiency at a similar site near Kalannie. Young E. kochii trees were well equipped with large numbers of meristematic foci and adequate root starch reserves to endure repeated shoot removal. The cutting season and interval between cuts were then demonstrated to have a strong influence on productivity, since first-year coppice growth was slow and root systems appeared to cease in secondary growth during the first 1.5—2.5 years after cutting. After decapitation, trees altered their physiology to promote rapid replacement of shoots. Compared to uncut trees, leaves of coppices were formed with a low carbon content per unit area, and showed high stomatal conductance accompanied by high leaf photosynthetic rates. Whole-plant water use efficiency of coppiced trees was unusually high due to their fast relative growth rates associated with preferential investments of photosynthates into regenerating canopies rather than roots. Despite relatively small leaf areas on coppice shoots over the two years following decapitation, high leaf transpiration rates resulted in coppices using water at rates far in excess of that falling as rain on the tree belt area. Water budgets showed that 20 % of the study paddock would have been needed as 0—2 year coppices in 5 m wide twin-row belts in order to maintain hydrological balance over the study period. Maximum water use occurred where uncut trees were accessing a fresh perched aquifer, but where this was not present water budgets still showed transpiration of uncut trees occurring at rates equivalent to 3—4 times rainfall incident on the tree belt canopy. In this scenario, only 10 % of the paddock surface would have been required under 5 m wide tree belts to restore hydrological balance, but competition losses in adjacent pasture would have been greater
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Books on the topic "Oil mallee"

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Murrah, David J. Oil, taxes, and cats: A history of the DeVitt family and the Mallet Ranch. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 1994.

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Cremona, Matty. Cooking with Maltese olive oil: Maltese and Mediterranean dishes. Ta'Xbiex, Malta: Proximus PR, 2002.

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Annie, Attia, and Buisson Gilles, eds. Advances in Mesopotamian medicine from Hammurabi to Hippocrates: Proceedings of the International Conference "Oeil Malade et Mauvais Oeil", Collège de France, Paris, 23rd June 2006. Leiden: Brill, 2009.

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International Conference "Oeil malade et mauvais oeil" (2006 Collège de France). Advances in Mesopotamian medicine from Hammurabi to Hippocrates: Proceedings of the International Conference "Oeil Malade et Mauvais Oeil", Collège de France, Paris, 23rd June 2006. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill, 2009.

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Oil, Taxes, and Cats: The Saga of the Devitt Family and the Mallet Ranch. Texas Tech University Press, 2001.

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Brazil, Kevin. Pig Vomit. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824459.003.0001.

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Towards the end of his life Samuel Beckett reflected that ‘[l]iterature and painting are like oil and water’—two substances that can never be mixed together. Yet in spite of this—or perhaps because of it—Beckett repeatedly used writing about art as a means to reflect on his own practice as a novelist: in letters, diaries, and in his published art criticism. This chapter traces Beckett’s engagement with art during the 1930s and 1940s, the period when he wrote his most significant novels: Molloy, Malone Dies, and The Unnamable. It argues that Beckett saw modernist painting as offering an example of formal necessity that could stand against the demands for political commitment circulating in postwar French critical debates, and it draws on detailed archival and manuscript research to show how Beckett’s art criticism informed the style and composition of his postwar trilogy.
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High, Casey. Like the Ancient Ones. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039058.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the gendered dimensions of alterity and Waorani understandings of what it means to be “like the ancient ones” (durani bai). It analyzes the place of violence and memory in contemporary Waorani gender dynamics by elucidating the meanings of the expression durani bai by which young people describe their public warrior performances. Despite a strongly egalitarian ethos, the chapter shows that Waorani women and men experience the generational changes that have come with oil work, urban migration, and other social transformations in different ways. It explains how young men struggling to demonstrate the abilities for which male elders and ancestors are remembered embrace the Amazonian warrior of colonial imagination and violent imagery in popular cinema in expressing a form of masculinity they associate with durani bai. Rather than leading to pronounced gender antagonisms between women and men, these generational changes reflect Waorani understandings of gendered agency that associate women with the production of interiority and men with relations of exteriority.
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Book chapters on the topic "Oil mallee"

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José Soto-Castillo, Juan, and Isicio Ortega-Medina. "Experimental Carcinogenesis with 7,12-Dimethylbenz(a)Anthrazene (DMBA) and Its Inhibition with Extra Virgin Olive Oil and a Diet of Mature Olives (Picual Variety)." In Olive Oil - New Perspectives and Applications [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96514.

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7,12-Dimethylbenz(a)anthrazene (DMBA) is a carcinogen that induces carcinomas within a few weeks of application. Forty-four male hamsters were divided into four groups: DMBA dissolved in paraffin oil (DMBA-PO), DMBA dissolved in olive oil (DMBA-OO), paraffin oil and olive oil. Their mouths were swabbed daily with paraffin oil or extra virgin olive oil alternatively for the first two weeks, during the biweekly application of DMBA at 0.5% diluted in paraffin oil or olive oil for five weeks and daily until the twentieth week. The animals in the DMBA-OO and olive oil groups received an additional diet of mature Picual olives. The DMBA-PO carcinogen effect (35 carcinomas) is 100% and the inhibitory effect 0. The use of olive oil as DMBA solvent and the ad libitum diet with Picual olive has an inhibitory effect of 80%, with only three intraepithelial carcinomas and four verrucous carcinomas occurring and no invasive carcinoma.
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Chand, Subhash, Om Prakash Patidar, Rajat Chaudhary, Ranjit Saroj, Kailash Chandra, Vijay Kamal Meena, Omkar M. Limbalkar, Manoj Kumar Patel, Priya P. Pardeshi, and Prashant Vasisth. "Rapeseed-Mustard Breeding in India: Scenario, Achievements and Research Needs." In Brassica Breeding and Biotechnology [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96319.

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Brassica spp., commonly known as rapeseed-mustard, plays a significant role in the Indian economy by providing edible oils, vegetables, condiments and animal feed. Globally, India holds second and third position in rapeseed-mustard area under cultivation and production, respectively. However, anthropogenically accelerated climate change thwarts yield potential of rapeseed-mustard by employing abiotic (drought, flood, temperature variation and salinity) and biotic (disease and insects) stresses. Various approaches such as molecular breeding, pre-breeding, −omics and biotechnological interventions have been used to develop varieties for improved yield and oil quality, climate resilient and resistance or tolerance to abiotic and biotic stresses. In this context, this chapter highlighted the different cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) sources and their potential use for hybrid development. At the end, this chapter also enlisted salient achievement by the government and non-government institutes and briefly described the future perspective for improvement of rapeseed-mustard in India.
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A. Olabiyi, Folorunso, Yapo G. Aboua, and Thomas K. Monsees. "Role of Red Palm Oil in Male Obesity and Infertility Prevention." In Elaeis guineensis [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98393.

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The African continent has wide, varied, and rich plant diversity due to its climate. Some of these plants and their products have received tremendous attention due to their benefits in treating and managing ailments that plagues humanity. Red palm oil (RPO) is one of such natural products that have immense nutritional value with ability to ameliorate cardiac- and reproductive-related disorders. In this review article, the current knowledge on the potential of RPO as a phytomedicine to lessen or even prevent the negative impact of obesity on general health status and male fertility was evaluated. This study was done using electronic databases such as PubMed, Scopus, Science Direct, Google Scholar and Web of Science. The study revealed some controversies and inconsistent reports on the effect of RPO on obesity and male fertility which needs further research using appropriate experimental models of obesity. Obesity is known to disrupt male fertility by causing changes to the hypothalamic- pituitary-gonadal axis, thus impairing steroidogenesis and spermatogenesis. As spermatozoa are extremely sensitive towards oxidative stress, a carefully balanced daily supplementation of normal diet with antioxidant-rich RPO might be useful to protect spermatozoa and preserving male fertility. RPO was shown to be useful to protect against or ameliorate toxin- or medical condition-induced male infertility. Also, RPO is packed with powerful antioxidants like carotenoids and vitamin E which helps to prevent cell damage. However, its role in obesity prevention remains a debate.
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Preshous, Andrew, An Ostyn, and Nicole Keng. "OIL for English for business: the intercultural product pitch." In Flipping the blend through MOOCs, MALL and OIL – new directions in CALL, 41–50. Research-publishing.net, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14705/rpnet.2018.23.789.

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"Eels at the Edge: Science, Status, and Conservation Concerns." In Eels at the Edge: Science, Status, and Conservation Concerns, edited by Anthony Acou, Gabriel Gaelle, Pascal Laffaille, and Eric Feunteun. American Fisheries Society, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781888569964.ch12.

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<em>Abstract.—</em>This paper assesses potential production of premigrant European eels <em>Anguilla anguilla </em>based on analysis of sedentary eel populations in two small river systems in western France that are in close proximity. Abundance and biological characteristics were evaluated from electrofishing surveys conducted in three years in September and October, before the catadromous migration of silver eels. Mean density and biomass density of the eel population differed greatly between the systems (39 ± 6 ind.100 m<sup>–2</sup> [indivdual per 100 m<sup>2</sup>] and 1,352 ± 171 g.100 m–2 in the Frémur River and 3 ± 0.32 ind.100 m–2 and 385 ± 42 g.100 m<sup>–2</sup> in the Oir River). Premigrants were dominated by males in the Frémur (85.8%) and by females in the Oir (79.0%). Estimated premigrant biomass density was 4.5-fold higher in the Frémur (254.5 g.100 m<sup>–2</sup>/ year) than in the Oir (56.0 g.100 m–2/year). Mean Fulton’s K condition factor was significantly higher for both sexes in the Oir (0.20 ± 0.004 and 0.20 ± 0.003 for males and females, respectively) than in the Frémur (0.17 ± 0.002 and 0.17 ± 0.004, respectively). The large differences in densities and biological characteristics of eels from neighboring catchments suggest that huge variability of both quantity and quality of silver eel production can be expected at the scale of the European stock.
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Noble a, R., A. "Maldjian a,b,*", and P. Penny a. "Docosahexaenoic Acid-Rich Marine Oils and Improved Reproductive Efficiency in Pigs." In Male Fertility and Lipid Metabolism. AOCS Publishing, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781439822234.ch6.

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Vyshnevsky, Sergey. "USE OF INDICATORS OF BIOCHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF SEEDS FOR BREEDING FOR HETEROSIS WINTER OILSEED RAPE BASED CYTOPLASMIC MALE STERILITY." In European vector of development of the modern scientific researches. Publishing House “Baltija Publishing”, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-26-077-3-26.

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The paper presents the results of research (2014-2017) on the creation of source material for the selection of hybrids of winter oilseed rape on the basis of cytoplasmic male sterility. The source material was varieties, hybrids, lines of individual selection of the Institute of Feed Research and Agriculture of Podillya NAAS, collection samples of domestic and foreign selection. We used 44 genotypes of winter oilseed rape in 2014-16 as parents for pollination with a form with cytoplasmic male sterility. Material for breeding was taken taking into account many years of processing according to seed productivity, indicators of biochemical composition, winter resistance, oleaginousness, length of growing season, lesion of pathogens of disease and damage to pests. To accelerate the selection process for the creation of competitive domestic varieties and hybrids of winter oilseed rape, studies were conducted on the biochemical parameters of seeds of F1 hybrids obtained on the basis of cytoplasmic male sterility. By indicators of the content of erucic acid, glucosinolates from 25 combinations of 2016, seven combinations are allocated, in which the biochemical composition of the seeds correspond to such requirements; Oil - erucic acid is absent, or its traces are contained, and the content of glucosinolates does not exceed 25 μmol/g. In 2017, in studies on the manifestation of heterosis and the creation of highly heterosis hybrids using CMS on their basis, 19 new hybrids and 7 best ones of 2016 were used. In terms of oil quality and yield in 2017 with 26 numbers have highlighted 15, 7 of them are of 2016. According to the results of a two-year trial, we have the following results: 2016, the total average crop capacity of the 7 best hybrids was 7.41 t/ha, which was 2.59 t/ha higher than the standard; 2017, these combinations showed a total average crop capacity of 6.58 t/ha, which was 1.8 t/ha higher than the standard. The manifestation of heterosis in winter oilseed rape hybrids on average for two years was observed at 46%. The expediency of selection work is determined, to create the source material of commercial hybrids of winter oilseed rape, which includes early detection, even at the stage of first-generation hybrids, promising two-zero lines of restorers and fixers of cytoplasmic male sterility. The study gives the chance in the further exclusion from the selection program of works on improvement of biochemical indicators of the received initial material.
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Orsini-Jones, Marina, and Simon Smith. "Dedication." In Flipping the blend through MOOCs, MALL and OIL – new directions in CALL, xiii—xiv. Research-publishing.net, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14705/rpnet.2018.23.782.

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Orsini-Jones, Marina, and Simon Smith. "Preface." In Flipping the blend through MOOCs, MALL and OIL – new directions in CALL, xv—xxii. Research-publishing.net, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14705/rpnet.2018.23.783.

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Kukulska-Hulme, Agnes. "Mobile assistance for personal learning on a massive scale." In Flipping the blend through MOOCs, MALL and OIL – new directions in CALL, 1–7. Research-publishing.net, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14705/rpnet.2018.23.784.

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Conference papers on the topic "Oil mallee"

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Honnert, Michael Andrew, Prentice George Creel, Richard H. Tate, and Don M. Everett. "Five Years of On-Going Conformance Work in the Central Mallet Unit CO2 Flood in West Texas Yields Improved Economics for Operator." In International Oil Conference and Exhibition in Mexico. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/101701-ms.

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Kurihara, Masanori, Akihiko Sato, Kunihiro Funatsu, Hisanao Ouchi, Koji Yamamoto, Masaaki Numasawa, Takao Ebinuma, et al. "Analysis of Production Data for 2007/2008 Mallik Gas Hydrate Production Tests in Canada." In International Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition in China. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/132155-ms.

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Jaya Sumarto Putra, Christian. "Effect of 10% Lavender Essential Oil Balm on Serum Cortisol Levels in Male Wistar Rats." In 2nd International Conference of Essential Oil Indonesia. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0009954500130017.

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Obregon Tinoco, Henry Alcibiades, Fiorella Patricia Cardenas Toro, Roberto Carlos Chuquilin Goicochea, and Fredy Vicente Huayta Socantaype. "Supercritical carbon dioxide extraction of Vitis Vinifera Malbec seeds oil: Kinetic modelling and solubility evaluation." In The 18th LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education, and Technology: Engineering, Integration, And Alliances for A Sustainable Development” “Hemispheric Cooperation for Competitiveness and Prosperity on A Knowledge-Based Economy”. Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18687/laccei2020.1.1.93.

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5

Diego-Marin, Antonio, Carlos Melendez-Cervantes, and Armando Giles-Alarcon. "Experimental Study in a 350 MWe Utility Boiler of Oil Droplet and Coke Size Analysis." In ASME 2007 Power Conference. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/power2007-22105.

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A study was carried out to find out the cause of premature plugging of air heaters of a 350 MWe oil fired boiler. The unit burnt a heavy fuel oil number 6, with both high levels of sulfur (3.75%) and asphaltenes (16.2%), as well as high viscosity (555 SSF at 50°C) and API gravity of 11.2. Particle concentration at the furnace exit and at the stack were measured, also flue gas analyses were performed at the same sites. In the furnace were employed water cooled probes of six meters in length which allowed traversing 70% of its width. In addition, the oil droplet size distribution from an atomizer was measured with a Malver Particle Sizer. Cold condition using simulating fluids were taken in this analysis. Also, the unburned carbon particles size distribution, both from the furnace exit and from the stack, was performed with a particle Malver Sizer. The atomizer produced large oil drops, 5.7% by volume larger than 300 micron size, which were considered as promoters of unburned carbon. The concentration of carbon particles in the stack was 60% of that of the furnace exit. Furthermore, the particles from the stack were of smaller size (95% <150 μm) than those of the furnace (89% <150 μm). Deposition of carbon particles in the internal component of the boiler, mainly in the air heaters, was the cause of this finding. To solve the premature plugging of the air heaters of this oil fired boiler, the atomizers should be modified to reduce at a minimum level the oil drops larger than 200 micron size.
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Moridis, G. J. "Numerical Simulation Studies of Thermally-Induced Gas Production From Hydrate Accumulations With No Free Gas Zones at the Mallik Site, Mackenzie Delta, Canada." In SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/77861-ms.

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"The Effects of Oil Paint Vapor on Thermal Pain Sensitivity in Male Rats." In International Conference on Cellular & Molecular Biology and Medical Sciences. Universal Researchers (UAE), 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.17758/uruae.ae0916427.

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Li, Fangfang, Yingkai Zhao, and Zhibing Jiang. "The Prediction of Oil Quality based On Least Squares Support Vector Machines and Daubechies wavelet and Mallat algorithm." In Sixth International Conference on Intelligent Systems Design and Applications]. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isda.2006.270.

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DiMarzio, Jenna M., Svetoslav V. Georgiev, Holly J. Stein, and Judith L. Hannah. "RESIDENCE OF RHENIUM AND OSMIUM (RE-OS) WITHIN ASPHALTENE AND MALTENE SUB-FRACTIONS OF A HEAVY CRUDE OIL." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-281621.

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"A Comparison Between Gasoline and Diesel Oil Vapor Inhalation On Anxiety in Male Rats." In International Conference on Cellular & Molecular Biology and Medical Sciences. Universal Researchers (UAE), 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.17758/uruae.ae0916410.

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Reports on the topic "Oil mallee"

1

Hodey, Louis, and Fred Dzanku. Impact of COVID-19 on Food Systems and Rural Livelihoods in Ghana - Round 2 Report. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/apra.2020.016.

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This study seeks to assess the continuing impact of COVID-19 on food systems and livelihoods in south-western Ghana and provides insights obtained from household-level and key informant data in the second of three surveys conducted during October/November 2020. This second round (R2) survey involved 107 households of oil palm farmers (86 male-headed and 21 female-headed) and 5 key local informants in the Mpohor and Ahanta West Districts of the Western Region.
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2

Hodey, Louis, and Fred Dzanku. Impact of COVID-19 on Food Systems and Rural Livelihoods in Ghana - Round 1 Report. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/apra.2020.003.

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Given the ravaging effects of the COVID-19 pandemic worldwide, this study seeks to estimate its likely impact on food systems and livelihoods in south-western Ghana. Our sample consisted of 110 female and male respondents drawn randomly from an APRA household survey of oil palm producers in the Mpohor and Ahanta West Districts in the Western region, as well as a set of five key informant interviews. Data collection for this study will be carried out over three rounds. This report presents insights obtained from the first round conducted during June/July 2020.
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