S
S. P. Singh
Researcher at Indian Agricultural Research Institute
Publications - 130
Citations - 3234
S. P. Singh is an academic researcher from Indian Agricultural Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Evergreen & Shrub. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 130 publications receiving 2822 citations. Previous affiliations of S. P. Singh include Indian Council of Agricultural Research & Kurukshetra University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Forest vegetation of the Himalaya
J. S. Singh,S. P. Singh +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a review dealing with the forest vegetation of the Himalaya with emphasis on: paleoecological, phytogeographical, and phytosociological aspects of vegetation; structural and functional features of forest ecosystem; and relationship between man and forests.
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Incorporation of blast resistance into “PRR78”, an elite Basmati rice restorer line, through marker assisted backcross breeding
Vikas K. Singh,Anil Kumar Singh,S. P. Singh,Ranjith Kumar Ellur,Vikas Choudhary,S. Sarkel,Devinder Singh,S. Gopala Krishnan,M. Nagarajan,Kunnummal Kurungara Vinod,U. D. Singh,R. S. Rathore,S. K. Prashanthi,Pawan Kumar Agrawal,J.C. Bhatt,Trilochan Mohapatra,Kumble Vinod Prabhu,Ashok Kumar Singh +17 more
TL;DR: The hybrids produced by crossing Pusa6A with improved lines of PRR78, were on par with original Pusa RH10 in terms of yield, grain and cooking quality traits with an added advantage of blast resistance.
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Structure and Function of an Age Series of Poplar Plantations in Central Himalaya: I Dry Matter Dynamics
TL;DR: Compartment models for nutrient dynamics have been developed to represent the distribution of nutrient pools and net annual fluxes within the system and indicate the greater productivity of the stands, which was due to the higher dry matter dynamics and nutrient release for the growing vegetation.
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Physico-chemical characteristics and pollution level of Lake Nainital (U.P., India): role of macrophytes and phytoplankton in biomonitoring and phytoremediation of toxic metal ions.
TL;DR: Study has shown that lake water is rich in nutrients which supports growth of many aquatic macrophytes and algal blooms, and water is contaminated with metals, which could be a useful phytoremediation technology to restore water quality by harvesting submerged and floating biomass inhabiting littoral zone of the lake.
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Biomass and net primary productivity in Central Himalayan forests along an altitudinal gradient
B.S. Rana,S. P. Singh,R.P. Singh +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, plant biomass and net primary productivity of a series of forests located along an altitudinal gradient (300-2200 m) in the Central Himalaya were investigated. And the authors found that the climate in most of the area is humid with the monsoon patttern of rainfall.