10 results on '"Kathleen M. Yeater"'
Search Results
2. Quantification of methoprene aerosol deposition using reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography
- Author
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Amie E. Norton, Daniel L. Brabec, Michael Tilley, Kathleen M. Yeater, and Deanna S. Scheff
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Insect Science ,Horticulture ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
3. Effect of a maternal high-fat diet with vegetable substitution on fetal brain transcriptome
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Kate J. Claycombe-Larson, Amy N. Bundy, Terry Kuntz, Junguk Hur, Kathleen M. Yeater, Shanon Casperson, Dale C. Brunelle, and James N. Roemmich
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Male ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Placenta ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Brain ,Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Diet, High-Fat ,Biochemistry ,Fetal Development ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Mice ,Fetal Weight ,Pregnancy ,Vegetables ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Transcriptome ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Maternal dietary conditions play a major role in fetal growth and brain development. The primary aim of this study was to determine the effects of 5% of energy substitution by vegetables in a maternal dietary fat on placental and fetal weight and on fetal brain gene expression. Two-month-old female C57BL/6 mice were fed 16% (normal-fat, NF), 45% fat (HF), or HF substituted with vegetables (5% energy, HF+VS) diets for 12 weeks. Dams were then bred with NF diet-fed male mice. Placenta and fetal weights were measured at gestational age 19 (D19). RNA was isolated from fetal whole brains and sequenced using Illumina HiSeq. HF+VS diet prevented maternal HF diet-induced decreases in placental weight at D19. Feeding of a maternal HF diet was associated with 79 differentially expressed genes (DEGs), while maternal vegetable substitution was associated with 131 DEGs. The vegetable substitution diet decreased Apold1 (P=.0319), Spata2l (P=.0404), and Celsr1 (Plt;.03) expression compared to HF diet. Enrichment analysis of HF vs. HF+VS DEGs identified that synapse organization and regulation of embryonic development were significantly represented. KEGG enrichment analysis identified a significant representation of DEGs in the ubiquitin mediated proteolysis pathway in HF vs. HF+VS, and chemokine signaling pathway in NF vs. HF. These findings suggest that at D19, in a rodent model, a maternal HF diet alters placental and fetal growth, and that vegetable supplementation renders a protective effect against these changes.
- Published
- 2022
4. Cryopreservation of several Ribes species by dormant winter buds
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Jill M. Bushakra, Kim E. Hummer, Kathleen M. Yeater, Maria M. Jenderek, and Barbara D. Ambruzs
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Germplasm ,Crop ,Horticulture ,biology ,Cassis ,Temperate climate ,Cold storage ,Cultivar ,Ribes ,biology.organism_classification ,Cryopreservation - Abstract
Currant and gooseberry plants (Ribes L.) are native to the temperate regions of the Northern hemisphere through high elevations in Mexico and Central America to the mountainous regions of South America. Annually, the global production is about 838 MT. The fruits are used for cassis, juice preserves, in bakery, dairy products and pharmaceuticals. Some species such as black currant (Ribes nigrum) have antimicrobial, antitumor and immunostimulatory qualities; hence, interest is growing in crop improvement using a diversity of plant genetic resources. Active germplasm collections preserve Ribes cultivars as clonal plantations in the field or under protected cultivation, and species as plants in the field or seeds in cold storage. Long-term preservation of Ribes germplasm may be accomplished by various methods, one of them is cryopreservation of dormant winter buds (DB). This method is reported for preservation of R. nigrum. We have investigated the possibility of applying DBs for cryopreservation of other Ribes species. Eleven accessions in seven species (R. aureum var. aureum, R. aureum var. villosum, R. cereum, R. erythrocarpum, R. mascalerium, R. turbinatum and R. uva-crispa) were cryopreserved over two winter seasons without a pretreatment (standard), with a cryoprotectant (0.75 M sucrose) or a cryoprotectant with an antioxidant (0.75 M sucrose with 0.75 mM vitamin C). A 2-year average viability varied significantly among the accessions processed with the standard method (10 to 87.5%) and among accessions processed with the pretreatments (32.5 to 97.5%); however, the difference between the standard and treatment procedures was not significant. A significant difference in viability between the processing years was observed and there was an interaction between accession, year and treatments for seven accessions processed in three treatments but not in the four accessions processed in the two treatments. Cryopreservation of the broad species in the Ribes germplasm collection may be supported by identifying modifications of the standard cryopreservation procedure.
- Published
- 2021
5. Evaluation of dosimeter tubes for monitoring phosphine fumigations
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Kathleen M. Yeater, Daniel L. Brabec, William R. Morrison, Frank H. Arthur, James F. Campbell, and Alexander Bruce
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0106 biological sciences ,Integrated pest management ,Dosimeter ,biology ,fungi ,Fumigation ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Horticulture ,Gas concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Toxicology ,010602 entomology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,Bostrichidae ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Treatment level ,Environmental science ,Red flour beetle ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Phosphine ,Food Science - Abstract
Within integrated pest management options, fumigation of stored products is one method to help control post-harvest insect infestations in our food and agricultural products. Fumigant gas concentration monitoring is important to confirm that the treatment was adequate to achieve the desired insect control, but monitoring can be relatively expensive and labor intensive. This study evaluated how accurately dosimeter tubes could monitor phosphine fumigation treatments. The dosimeter tube is designed to continuously react with phosphine gas during the fumigation period and yields a measurement in terms of concentration ∗ time product or CT, which can be interpreted as cumulative exposure. Two models of dosimeter tubes were evaluated (high range and low range). The reference method for these trials were wireless phosphine monitoring sensors, which recorded gas concentrations at hourly intervals during an exposure, and from this a CT product was also calculated. Model LPG-1, high-range dosimeter tube, measured within ± 25% of the phosphine monitoring sensors for CT dosages less the 70,000 ppm∗hr. Model LPG-2, low-range tube, tended to significantly over-estimate phosphine CT dosage by 50%–100% of the phosphine monitoring sensor references. Secondly, bioassays of fumigant efficacy were performed using susceptible and resistant adult Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) (Coleoptera: Bostrichidae), lesser grain borers, and Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae), red flour beetle, for estimating insect control at the varied fumigation CT treatments. For the susceptible strains, CT dosages ∼5000 ppm∗hr controlled both species. However, the insect control varied from 60% to 100% for resistant adults at CT dosages of ∼20,000 ppm∗hr. The dosimeter tubes function in these ranges of dosages where each insect species are controlled and the dosimeter tube model LPG-1 provides reasonable estimates of the fumigation dosage for a given treatment level.
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- 2021
6. Poultry litter and the environment: Physiochemical properties of litter and soil during successive flock rotations and after remote site deposition
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Kathleen M. Yeater, Cynthia L. Sheffield, Ross C. Beier, Tawni L. Crippen, Jesus F. Esquivel, and J. Allen Byrd
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Environmental Engineering ,010501 environmental sciences ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Poultry ,Soil ,Animal science ,Nutrient ,Animals ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic matter ,Animal Husbandry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Poultry litter ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Pollutant ,business.industry ,Environmental engineering ,Broiler ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Poultry farming ,Pollution ,Refuse Disposal ,chemistry ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,engineering ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Fertilizer ,business - Abstract
The U.S. broiler meat market has grown over the past 16 years and destinations for U.S. broiler meat exports expanded to over 150 countries. This market opportunity has spurred a corresponding increase in industrialized poultry production, which due to the confined space in which high numbers of animals are housed, risks accumulating nutrients and pollutants. The purpose of this research was to determine the level of pollutants within poultry litter and the underlying soil within a production facility; and to explore the impact of spent litter deposition into the environment. The study follows a production facility for the first 2.5 years of production. It monitors the effects of successive flocks and management practices on 15 physiochemical parameters: Ca, Cu, electrical conductivity, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, moisture, Na, NO3(-)/N, organic matter, P, pH, S, and Zn. Litter samples were collected in-house, after clean-outs and during stockpiling. The soil before house placement, after the clean-outs and following litter stockpiling was monitored. Management practices markedly altered the physiochemical profiles of the litter in-house. A canonical discriminant analysis was used to describe the relationship between the parameters and sampling times. The litter profiles grouped into five clusters corresponding to time and management practices. The soil in-house exhibited mean increases in all physiochemical parameters (2-297 fold) except Fe, Mg, %M, and pH. The spent litter was followed after deposition onto a field for use as fertilizer. After 20 weeks, the soil beneath the litter exhibited increases in EC, Cu, K, Na, NO3(-)/N, %OM, P, S and Zn; while %M decreased. Understanding the impacts of industrialized poultry farms on the environment is vital as the cumulative ecological impact of this land usage could be substantial if not properly managed to reduce the risk of potential pollutant infiltration into the environment.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Could cyclone performance improve with reduced inlet velocity?
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Derek P. Whitelock, Greg A. Holt, Khairy Elsayed, Kathleen M. Yeater, and Paul A. Funk
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Pressure drop ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Meteorology ,Inlet velocity ,General Chemical Engineering ,Euler number (physics) ,PM2.5 ,Mechanics ,Particulates ,Inlet ,Energy consumption ,symbols.namesake ,Cyclones ,Emissions ,Particle-size distribution ,symbols ,Chemical Engineering(all) ,Cyclone ,Environmental science ,Fine particulate ,Stokes number - Abstract
Emission abatement cyclone performance is improved by increasing collection effectiveness or decreasing energy consumption. The object of this study was to quantify the pressure drop and fine particulate (PM2.5) collection of 1D3D cyclones (H = 4Dc, h = 1Dc) at inlet velocities from 8 to 18 m s− 1 (Stk = 0.7–1.5) using heterogeneous particulate as a test material at inlet concentrations from 3 to 75 g m− 3. Cyclone exhaust was passed through filters. Laser diffraction particle size distribution analysis was used to estimate PM2.5 emissions. Response surface models showed a strong correlation between cyclone pressure loss (Euler number) and inlet velocity and predicted a 46% reduction in pressure loss for a 25% reduction in inlet velocity (Stokes number). The model for PM2.5 emissions was less definitive and, surprisingly, predicted a 31% decrease in PM2.5 emissions when operating 25% below the design inlet velocity. Operating below the design inlet velocity (at a lower Stokes number) to reduce pressure losses (Euler number) would reduce both the financial and the environmental cost of procuring electricity. The unexpected co-benefit suggested by these trials was that emission abatement may improve at the same time, though other empirical trials have shown emissions to be independent of inlet velocity and Stokes number.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Exploring the use of an anti-tick vaccine as a tool for the integrated eradication of the cattle fever tick, Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) annulatus
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Matthew T. Messenger, Agustín Estrada-Peña, Consuelo Almazán, Dee Ellis, Lauren Jory, Andrew G. Allen, Adalberto A. Pérez de León, Kathleen M. Yeater, and Robert J. Miller
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Veterinary medicine ,Biosecurity ,Cattle Diseases ,Tick ,law.invention ,law ,parasitic diseases ,Quarantine ,Rhipicephalus ,Animals ,Computer Simulation ,Vaccines ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Tick Control ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Fever tick ,Vaccination ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,biology.organism_classification ,Recombinant Proteins ,United States ,Tick Infestations ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Molecular Medicine ,Cattle ,Female - Abstract
Bovine babesiosis, also known as cattle fever, is a tick-borne protozoal disease foreign to the United States. It was eradicated by eliminating the vector species, Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) annulatus and Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus, through the efforts of the Cattle Fever Tick Eradication Program (CFTEP), with the exception of a permanent quarantine zone (PQZ) in south Texas along the border with Mexico. Keeping the U.S. free of cattle fever ticks in a sustainable manner is a critical national agricultural biosecurity issue. The efficacy of a Bm86-based anti-tick vaccine commercialized outside of the U.S. was evaluated against a strain of R. annulatus originated from an outbreak in Texas. Vaccination controlled 99.9 and 91.4% of the ticks 8 weeks and 5.5 months after the initial vaccination, respectively. Computer modeling of habitat suitability within the PQZ typically at risk of re-infestation with R. annulatus from Mexico predicted that at a level of control greater than 40%, eradication would be maintained indefinitely. Efficacy and computer modeling data indicate that the integration of vaccination using a Bm86-based anti-tick vaccine with standard eradication practices within the northwestern half of the PQZ could incentivize producers to maintain cattle on pasture thereby avoiding the need to vacate infested premises. Implementing this epidemiologically proactive strategy offers the opportunity to prevent R. annulatus outbreaks in the U.S., which would represent a significant shift in the way the CFTEP operates.
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- 2012
9. Agricultural applications of a low-cost infrared thermometer
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Kathleen M. Yeater and James R. Mahan
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Canopy ,Engineering ,Infrared ,business.industry ,Forestry ,Horticulture ,Computer Science Applications ,Infrared thermometer ,Thermocouple ,Thermometer ,Thermal monitoring ,Plant canopy ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Remote sensing ,Field conditions - Abstract
Plant canopy temperature is used in many studies of plant/environment interactions and non-contact measurement is often made with radiometric surface thermometers commonly referred to as infrared thermometers. Industrial-quality infrared thermocouples are widely available and often used in agricultural research. While research on canopy temperature has provided management tools for production agriculture, the high cost of the industrial-quality infrared thermocouples has limited their adoption and use in production agriculture settings. Our objective was to evaluate a low-cost consumer-quality infrared thermocouple as a component of a wireless thermal monitoring system designed for use in a production agriculture setting. The performances of industrial-quality and low-cost consumer-quality sensors were compared under controlled constant temperature and under field conditions using both grass and cotton canopies. Results demonstrate that under controlled constant-temperature the two types of infrared thermocouples were ''significantly the same'' at 10^oC, 20^oC and 30^oC and ''significantly not the same'' at 40^oC and 50^oC. Across the temperature range tested, the consumer-quality infrared thermocouples temperature reading was closer to the thermocouple reading than the industrial-quality infrared thermocouples. A field comparison of industrial-quality and consumer-quality infrared thermocouple sensors monitoring a grass canopy and a cotton canopy indicated that the two types of sensors were similar over a 13-35^oC range. The measurement of temperature made with two types of sensors would not differ significantly. Based on these results we conclude that the lower-cost consumer-quality infrared thermometers are suitable for use in production agricultural applications.
- Published
- 2008
10. Mapping QTLs for milling yield and grain characteristics in a tropical japonica long grain cross
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J.L. Kepiro, R. G. Fjellstrom, Ming-Hsuan Chen, Anna M. McClung, and Kathleen M. Yeater
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Yield (engineering) ,biology ,Quantitative trait locus ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Japonica ,Crop ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Amylose ,Trait ,Amplified fragment length polymorphism ,Brown rice ,Food Science - Abstract
Percent milling yield is an economically important trait of commercial rice because it largely determines the price that farmers receive for their crop. Analyzing 22 trait variables including milling yield, grain dimensions, chemistry and appearance, we identified 43 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in a long grain japonica by long grain japonica cross. We report one QTL explaining 20% of the variation in brown rice recovery; two QTLs explaining 14% and 13% of the variation in milled rice recovery; and one QTL explaining 14% of the variation in head rice (HR) recovery. QTLs for the proportion of pre-broken brown rice kernels, seed density, amylose content, and kernel whiteness and chalkiness were found in the same region as the HR QTL. QTLs explaining up to 54% of the variation in grain shape measurements were identified and mapped to areas independent from those identified for milling yield. Analyses of grain appearance traits identified two QTLs for chalk in brown rice and one in head rice, and a QTL explaining up to 33% of the variance in green kernel area. Our results confirm previous findings on the multigenically complex nature of milling yield.
- Published
- 2008
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