c

Handbook of plant disease identification and management / Balaji Aglave

Aglave, Balaji, author




c

Natural enemies : an introduction to biological control / Ann E. Hajek (Cornell University), Jørgen Eilenberg (University of Copenhagen)

Hajek, Ann E., author




c

Integrated disease management of wheat and barley / edited by Professor Richard Oliver, Curtin University, Australia




c

Reclaiming the urban commons : the past, present and future of food growing in Australian towns and cities / edited by Nick Rose and Andrea Gaynor




c

Guide to introduced pest animals of Australia / Peter West

West, Peter, author




c

Organic food, farming and culture : an introduction / edited by Janet Chrzan and Jacqueline A. Ricotta




c

Reptile medicine and surgery




c

Good enough to eat? : next generation GM crops / Ian D. Godwin

Godwin, Ian, author




c

Plant virus vector interactions / edited by R.T. Plumb




c

Beneficial insects / by David V. Alford

Alford, D. V., author




c

Advances in breeding techniques for cereal crops / edited by Professor Frank Ordon and Professor Wolfgang Freidt




c

Breeding crops with resistance to diseases and pests / R.E. Niks, J.E. Parlevliet, P. Lindhout and Y. Bai

Niks, R. E. (Rients Engelhard), 1953- author




c

Postharvest technology of perishable horticultural commodities / edited by Elhadi M. Yahia




c

Handbook of plant and crop stress / edited by Mohammad Pessarakli




c

Rehabilitation of mining and resources projects and power station ash dams as it relates to Commonwealth responsibilities / The Senate, Environment and Communications References Committee

Australia. Parliament. Senate. Environment and Communications References Committee, author, issuing body




c

Bush invaders of South-East Australia : a guide to the identification and control of environmental weeds found in South-East Australia / Adam Muyt

Muyt, Adam, author




c

Weeds of the south-east : an identification guide for Australia / F.J. Richardson, R.G. Richardson, R.C.H. Shepherd

Richardson, F. J




c

Cane toads on the march : inquiry into controlling the spread of cane toads / House of Representatives Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy

Australia. Parliament. House of Representatives. Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy, author, issuing body




c

Engineering salinity solutions : 1st National Salinity Engineering Conference 2004 conference proceedings : 9-12 November 2004, Burswood International Resort, Perth, Western Australia / Engineers Australia; edited by Shawan Dogramaci, Alex Waterhouse

National Salinity Engineering Conference (1st : 2004 : Perth, W.A.)




c

Invertebrates in aquaculture, 19, 20 & 21 May 1989 : venue, University of Queensland

Refresher Course for Veterinarians (117th : 1989 : University of Queensland)




c

Bureau of Outreach & Communication awaits Rs 350 crore to clear media dues

Industry estimates peg advertising dues owed by BOC to the media industry at ₹1,800 crore. According to the sources cited above, the ministries and departments owe ₹350-450 crore to BOC. Sources say the health and family welfare ministry owes over ₹60 crore to BOC, the finance ministry hasn’t paid over ₹35 crore and the rural development ministry still has to clear advertising bills of over ₹25 crore.




c

ET Edit: Pay for content, Google & Facebook

While media organisations invest money, time and effort to create content, the digital platforms display the content without paying for it. Digital cos and their advocates argue that the inclusion of the content on their site or engine has directed traffic to news cos. But this traffic comes stripped of revenue, which is collected by Google and Facebook.




c

Opinion: News producers can’t keep incurring the costs while digital platforms drain away profits

Facebook and Google cornered nearly 70 per cent (Rs 11,500 crore) of online ad revenues from India in 2018-19, a market pegged at Rs 28,000 crore by 2022. The Government of India must resist a digital colonisation, where the sweat and toil of Indians is drained out of the country while local communities and businesses are destroyed.




c

India Lockdown: Mythology shows on TV pay off

While ‘Ramayan’ has clocked highest viewership for any show on a Hindi GEC in recent times, due to ‘Mahabharat’ DD Bharati entered in the top five channels’ list for the first time ever.




c

ET Catalyse Virtual: The role of brand communication during a lockdown

Speaking on the role of authentic and informative content, Meera said, “Digital is brilliant as it has destroyed information asymmetry."




c

Trai recommends restructuring of BARC India with an aim to improve credibility, transparency

Industry experts call Trai recommendations impractical and driven by vested interests.




c

Private FM radio companies write to PM Modi for urgent relief

AROI pointed out that currently there are 370 private FM stations across 107 cities, out of which most are dependent on government advertising. “Since Covid-19 outbreak, jobs of over 20,000 employees are under threat,” the letter said.




c

After 5 weeks of steady gains, TV viewership declines

TV audiences grew as the entire country came under a lockdown from March 25. Initially, news and movies were the prime genres which were driving the growth, but the introduction of classics like Ramayan by national broadcaster DD helped the general entertainment channels segment as well.




c

Prakash Javadekar assures broadcasters of regulatory stability

The minister told office bearers of the Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF) on Friday that he will consult with the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) on changes in the tariff order and its recommendations on the rating agency BARC India.




c

Centre releases new draft rules for uplinking TV channels

Permits with a five-year validity, expanded scope and easier clearance for non-news channels to cover events live, and higher preference to Indian satellites to uplink signals — these are among the new guidelines that the government has proposed for TV channels.




c

India's changed media consumption habits may remain post lockdown

The cacophonous physical world has been replaced by a virtual life — streaming via cable, broadband and 4G.




c

In relief to print media, Gujarat government clears dues till March

Talking to a media house, Rupani said that his government would clear the pending payments owed for all government advertisements published until April if the state’s cash flows remained stable. Rupani told the media outlet that newspapers were the biggest and best source of true, accurate, and credible information.




c

Publishers urge government to include books in list of essential goods

The Association of Publishers in India has written to commerce minister Piyush Goyal seeking the inclusion of books in the list of essential goods that consumers should be allowed during the current lockdown at least via online retailing.




c

TV broadcasters face existential crisis amid drop in ad revenue

The very survival of small television networks and free-to-air (FTA) channels is at stake after the advertising slump due to Covid-19 pandemic delivered a crippling blow to their cashflows, and with costs mounting every day, the liquidity crunch has now begun hindering their day-to-day operations.




c

Frames per second: Killing Gandhi, again

Neither the mahatma's murder, nor the Babri demolition was a result of madness. Astute men and women planned both, funded them, and provided logistical and ideological support




c

Frames per second: The Spectre of the camps

Research has shown most Germans were well aware of what was going on at the detention centres




c

rediff.com

Visit rediff.com




c

Scientists show how brain distinguishes lyrics from music

Albouy and his team found that degradation of temporal information impaired speech recognition but not melody recognition. On the other hand, the perception of melody decreased only with spectral degradation of the song.




c

NASA releases spectacular high-resolution panorama images of Mars

"While many on our team were at home enjoying turkey, Curiosity produced this feast for the eyes," said Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity's project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which leads the Curiosity rover mission.




c

Huge asteroid to safely pass earth on April 28, 2020, here's how to watch it

A huge asteroid is set to safely pass earth earth on April 29, 2020 and though the asteroid will not hit the earth excitement is building among both professional and amateur astronomers to catch a glimpse of this asteroid.




c

Researchers find tiny worm-like creature which could be ancestor of modern-day animals

Researchers have discovered the first ancestor on the family tree that contains most modern-day animals, including humans, a finding that sheds more light on the origins and evolution of the animal kingdom.




c

Earth-size, habitable zone planet Kepler-1649c found hidden in early NASA Kepler data

NASA on Wednesday announced that scientists have discovered an Earth-size exoplanet orbiting in its star's habitable zone, the area around a star where a rocky planet could support liquid water. It added that a team of transatlantic scientists using reanalyzed data from NASA’s Kepler space telescope, made the discovery.




c

Earth’s core may be leaking heavy isotopes of iron, claims study

A new study conducted by geoscientists from Aarhus University and the University of California, Davis has found that the Earth's molten core may be leaking heavy isotopes of iron.




c

NASA, SpaceX to launch first Crew Dragon test flight with astronauts on May 27

World's premier space agency NASA and SpaceX have decided to launch the first crewed flight of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon - a vehicle designed to take astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) on May 27. The demonstration mission will carry two NASA astronauts to ISS.




c

NASA selects Elon Musk's SpaceX, Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin land contracts to build astronaut moon lander

The three companies, which include firms of tech billionaires Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, will share $967 million from NASA, though specific amounts each company will receive were not immediately known.




c

Scientists identify forces behind shifting of Earth’s north magnetic pole from Canada to Russia

The wandering pole is driven by unpredictable changes in liquid iron deep inside the Earth.




c

The ethics of biotechnology / edited by Gaymon Bennett.

Location Circulation Collection
Call No. TP248.2 .E86 2017




c

Reactive polymers, ion exchangers, sorbents.

Publisher Amsterdam : Elsevier, 1982-©1988.
Location World Wide Web
Call No. TP156.P6




c

Metallography [electronic resource].

Publisher New York : American Elsevier Pub.
Location World Wide Web
Call No. TN690




c

Progress in metal physics [electronic resource].

Publisher London : Butterworths Scientific Publications, 1949-1959.
Location World Wide Web
Call No. TN600