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Eyob Habte Tesfamariam

Researcher at University of Pretoria

Publications -  48
Citations -  519

Eyob Habte Tesfamariam is an academic researcher from University of Pretoria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Leaching (agriculture) & Sewage treatment. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 42 publications receiving 349 citations.

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Water Stress Effects on Winter Canola Growth and Yield

TL;DR: Canola seed and oil yield are most sensitive to water stress at flowering and less sensitive during the vegetative and seed-filling stages.
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Application of Artificial Neural Network for Predicting Maize Production in South Africa

TL;DR: In this article, an ANN model was used for predicting maize production in the major maize producing provinces of South Africa using the following climate variables: precipitation (PRE), maximum temperature (TMX), minimum temperature(TMN), potential evapotranspiration (PET), soil moisture (SM) and land cultivated (Land) for maize.
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Potential use of forage-legume intercropping technologies to adapt to climate-change impacts on mixed crop-livestock systems in Africa: a review

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of forage-legume intercropping on grain and fodder yield, land equivalent ratio, residual soil fertility, disease and insect pest reduction in mixed crop-livestock systems in Africa are summarized.
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Analysis of agro-climatic parameters and their influence on maize production in South Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the variability of the agro-climatic parameters that impact maize production across different seasons in South Africa were analyzed for the period spanning 1986-2015, covering the North West, Free State, Mpumalanga, and KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) provinces.
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Exporting large volumes of municipal sewage sludge through turfgrass sod production.

TL;DR: The potential to export large volumes of anaerobically digested municipal sewage sludge through turfgrass sod production is reported on, with results suggesting that sludge loading rates far above recommendations based on crop nutrient removal are possible without reducing turf growth and quality.