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Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar

After independence, development of the rural sector was considered the primary concern of the Government of India. In 1949, with the appointment of the Radhakrishnan University Education Commission, imparting of agricultural education through the setting up of rural universities became the focal point. Later, in 1954 an Indo-American team led by Dr. K.R. Damle, the Vice-President of ICAR, was constituted that arrived at the idea of establishing a Rural University on the land-grant pattern of USA. As a consequence a contract between the Government of India, the Technical Cooperation Mission and some land-grant universities of USA, was signed to promote agricultural education in the country. The US universities included the universities of Tennessee, the Ohio State University, the Kansas State University, The University of Illinois, the Pennsylvania State University and the University of Missouri. The task of assisting Uttar Pradesh in establishing an agricultural university was assigned to the University of Illinois which signed a contract in 1959 to establish an agricultural University in the State. Dean, H.W. Hannah, of the University of Illinois prepared a blueprint for a Rural University to be set up at the Tarai State Farm in the district Nainital, UP. In the initial stage the University of Illinois also offered the services of its scientists and teachers. Thus, in 1960, the first agricultural university of India, UP Agricultural University, came into being by an Act of legislation, UP Act XI-V of 1958. The Act was later amended under UP Universities Re-enactment and Amendment Act 1972 and the University was rechristened as Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology keeping in view the contributions of Pt. Govind Ballabh Pant, the then Chief Minister of UP. The University was dedicated to the Nation by the first Prime Minister of India Pt Jawaharlal Nehru on 17 November 1960. The G.B. Pant University is a symbol of successful partnership between India and the United States. The establishment of this university brought about a revolution in agricultural education, research and extension. It paved the way for setting up of 31 other agricultural universities in the country.

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  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    Therapeutic evaluation of some ethnomedicinal plants against Fasciola gigantica
    (G.B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar - 263145 (Uttarakhand), 2005-06) Parihar, Ganesh Singh; Upadhyay, A.K.
    Various organic solvent and aqueous extracts of three ethnomedicinal plants viz., Butea frondosa, Embelia ribes and Mallotus philippensis were evaluated for their in vitro efficacy against Fasciola gigantica. The extracts were phytochemically analysed for presence of various groups of chemical compounds. Effective extracts were fractionated and characterized through HPTLC. Two (2.5 and 5.0 mg/ml) concentrations of all the extracts were prepared in H-F solution. Similar concentrations of three standard antitrematodal drugs viz., Triclabendazole, Rafoxanide and Closantal were also prepared to run positive control test. The results obtained form each of the extract were compared with that of standards and cumulative efficacies of the extracts and overall efficacies of the plant materials were analysed and interpreted. Mallotus philippensis showed maximum overall efficacy (49.05 % and 46.67 % at 2.5 and 5.0 mg/ml concentrations respectively). Butea frondosa showed 41.43 and 40.95 % whereas Embelia ribes gave 31.43 and 30.95 % overall efficacies at 2.5 and 5.0 mg/ml concentrations respectively. Butea frondosa showed maximum cumulative efficacy in its benzene extract (80.00 and 73.33 % at 2.5 and 5.0 mg/ml concentrations respectively) whereas Mallotus philippensis gave maximum cumulative efficacy with cold aqueous extract (73.33 % in both the concentrations). Embelia ribes showed maximum 46.67 % cumulative efficacy in methanol extract at 2.5 mg/ml and 50.00 % cumulative efficacy in hexane extract at 5.0 mg/ml. Phytochemical analysis was carried out to detect alkaloids, anthraquinones, coumarins, flavonoids, glycosides, proteins, reducing sugars, resins, saponins, sterols, tannins and triterpenes. All the chemical groups were present in one or another extract of Butea frondosa except flavonoids. Flavonoids, proteins and sterols were absent in extracts of Embelia ribes whereas anthraquinones, flavonoids, proteins and reducing sugars could not be detected in any extract of Mallotus philippensis. Determination of Rf values and absorption maxima of the substances present in the effective extracts was carried through HPTLC.