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University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru

University of Agricultural Sciences Bangalore, a premier institution of agricultural education and research in the country, began as a small agricultural research farm in 1899 on 30 acres of land donated by Her Excellency Maharani Kempa Nanjammanni Vani Vilasa Sannidhiyavaru, the Regent of Mysore and appointed Dr. Lehmann, German Scientist to initiate research on soil crop response with a Laboratory in the Directorate of Agriculture. Later under the initiative of the Dewan of Mysore Sir M. Vishweshwaraiah, the Mysore Agriculture Residential School was established in 1913 at Hebbal which offered Licentiate in Agriculture and later offered a diploma programme in agriculture during 1920. The School was upgraded to Agriculture Collegein 1946 which offered four year degree programs in Agriculture. The Government of Mysore headed by Sri. S. Nijalingappa, the then Chief Minister, established the University of Agricultural Sciences on the pattern of Land Grant College system of USA and the University of Agricultural Sciences Act No. 22 was passed in Legislative Assembly in 1963. Dr. Zakir Hussain, the Vice President of India inaugurated the University on 21st August 1964.

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  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    STUDIES IN THE PHYSIOLOGY OF YIELD IN CEREALS
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES GKVK, BANGALORE, 1963) KALAYYA KRISHNAMURTHY
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    CULTURAL PRACTICES IN RICE (Other than manuring)
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES GKVK, BANGALORE, 1963) KULKARNI, R V
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    STUDIES ON THE BIOLOGY AND HOST' PARASITE RELATIONSHIPS OF ROOT KNOT NEMATODES (MELOIDOGYNE SPP.) ON TOMATOES
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES GKVK, BANGALORE, 1968) KOTA GOVINDA SETTY HANUMANTHARAYA SETTY
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    INSURANCE STRATEGIES OF WEST KENTUCKY FARMERS
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, BANGALORE, 1966) CRISWEEL, JAMES EARNEST; JENSEN, HARALD R
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    DEVELOPMENT AND MORPHOLOGY OF THE BEADED ROOTLETS, MYCORRHIZAE, AND ASSOCIATED ROOT FAN STRUCTURES OF RED MAPLE (ACER RUBRUM L.)
    (University of Agricultural Sciences GKVK, Bangalore, 1968) JOHN, RICHARD
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    RESPONSE OF CORN TO DIFFERENT SEQUENCE OF WATER STRESS AS MEASURED BY EVAPOTRANSPIRATION DEFICITS
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, BANGALORE, 1963) MIRSRA, RAM DEO; HAGAN, ROBERT M; HENDERSON, DELBERT W; PRUITT, WILLIAM O
    Increased demands by engineer and economist for informs ion pertaining to agricultural production with different levels of water supply call for intensified efforts to develop crop water production functions. Their importance is increasingly recognized, especially in water project planning, water allocation and delivery and in farm irrigation planning, design and operations. Improvements in the accuracy of such estimates increase the usefulness of the planning process. Functional relationships between crop yield and water supply presently available are only roughly estimated and are either assumed or derived empirically. This may be one of the reasons why present irrigation practices are not much different from those of the past in spite of the tremendous amount of work reported in relevant literature. This is not to imply that past work has not been important; in fact, work done in the past has helped to formulate present experimentation. Recently, however, the need for better predictive capability has become much greater, due to population expansion, intense competition for water between agricultural and nonagricultural needs, and increasing scarcity of natural water resources. Finally, but not least, environmentalists are bringing pressure on agriculturalists to use water more judiciously and wisely than in the past. This situation requires sound planning and management of irrigation.
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    STUDIES IN THE PHYSIOLOGY OF YIELD IN CEREALS
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, BANGALORE, 1963) KRISHNAMURTHY, KALAYYA; BUNTING, A H; S H, DONALD
    Abstract not available
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    A TECHNIQUE FOR CONTROLLING SOIL WATER CONTENT IN THE VICINITY OF ROOT HAIRS AND ITS APPLICATION TO SOIL-WATER-PLANT STUDIES
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, BANGALORE, 1963) HSIEH, JACK JUI-CHANG; GARDNER, W H
    A technique for controlling water content in the root hair zone of growing plants has been developed and used to investigate (1) the relationship between soil water tension and plant growth and (2) the nature of water flow in the vicinity of root hairs . This technique could also be adapted to study the extent of mobilization of various plant nutrients and herbicides into the root hair zone and their subsequent uptake. The technique involves growing plants on a fine screen placed over soil in such a way that root hairs extend about 1.5 mm through the screen into soil with both main roots and rootlets remaining above the screen. A gamma-ray moisture detecting device is used to monitor the supply of water in the root hair zone • . By paeans of either adjusting the length of a hanging water column or controlling the rate of water supply. the rate of water flow to the soil lamina beneath the screen can be so adjusted as just to offset the loss due to evapotranspiration . Therefore. a predetermined soil water level can be maintained to within ~1.5\ water content in the root hair zone a growing plant. The expert~~~entail data show the dependence of plant growth upon Soil -~•r tension. lbe &Roth of corn leaves vas first affected by water -tension at 1 bar or less. Growth ceased at about 22-30 bars tension within the root b£ir ~. lbe soil laaina just outside the root hair zone had only about b&l.f ~he water ~end ion of t ha.t inside the zone.
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    WATER PROJECTS AND WATERSHED TREATMENT
    (UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, BANGALORE, 1968) HAWKINS, RICHARD HOLMES; DILS, R E
    A presumptive approach was used to analyze the effect of land~nag~ent-caused alteration of hydrology on the output of water conservation projects. Two basic kinds of hydrologic reaction to land treatment were assumed: a constant factor flow increase for all months of the year, and a 1/2 month delay in the annual hydrograph. These alterations were applied singly and in combination to a series of computer-generated reservoir inflows, and storage-yield relationships determined qy the sequent peak method, both for the altered {treated) and unaltered (virgin) inflows. The difference between the yields at various storages was determined by subtraction, and attributed to the differences in inflows, or the alterations. Results showed that not all increases in flow were of value to the water project in terms of increased yield. A constant factor increase gained utility with increasing storage. A timing delay had very little effect on yield at very small and very large storages, but was of maximum effectiveness at intermediate storages. A.p~mbination effect, i.e., flow increases and timing delays, affected the yield curve in an approximately additive fashion, combining the two separate treatments nearly linearly. The method used appears viable and applicable to other investigations of hydrology alterations on downstream uses