Browsing by Author "Kaur, R."
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Item Invitro anti-mutagenic potential of potentilla fulgens: A western himalayan plant(Informatics Publishing Limited, 2014) Monga, P.; Kaur, R.; Jaitak, VikasInvitro anti-mutagenic potential of different extracts/fractions of Potentilla fulgens has been made by an Ames histidine reversion assay using TA98 and TA100 tester strains of Salmonella typhimurium against the direct-acting mutagens, 4-Nitro-O-phenylenediamine (NPD) and Sodium azide. P. fulgens has been used in traditional system of medicine as anti-hyperglycemic, hypoglycemic, anti-hyperlipidemic, anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-ulcerogenic agent. Results indicated that n-butanol and water fractions showed strong inhibition activity against the mutagens (NPD, Sodium azide) in both co-incubation as well as pre-incubation treatments in TA98 and TA100 tester strains. ? 2017, Informatics Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.Item Spatial trends of surface urban heat island in Bathinda: a semiarid city of northwestern India(Institute for Ionics, 2021-10-25T00:00:00) Kaur, R.; Pandey, P.The rising global temperature coupled with the urban heat island has considerable adverse impacts on urban inhabitants and ecological integrity. An attempt has been made in the present study to monitor the surface urban heat island effect for the Bathinda District of Punjab, India. The surface urban heat island effect was monitored for the period of 5�years (2015�2019) using Landsat 8 OLI/TIRS data. The surface temperature distribution pattern was investigated by spatial extension and statistical analysis of land surface temperature dataset. The spatial autocorrelation among the data was analyzed using Moran�s Index and Getis-Ord Gi* statistics. Besides, the impact of land use land cover on land surface temperature was examined using correlation, covariance and multivariate analysis between land surface temperature and spectral indices. The results revealed that the vegetated and water surfaces accounted for low surface temperature (19.98�30.45��C), while built-up areas with high temperature (26.47�44.01��C) had amplified the heat island effect. The spatial autocorrelation with Moran�s Index (above 0.5) confirmed the spatial clustering with low p values (< 0.001) and high z values (> 2.58). Further, the hot spot analysis validated that the higher-temperature pixels lie in urban areas with dense infrastructure, while vegetated areas exhibit clusters with low-temperature values. Hence, the study inferred the occurrence of surface urban heat island with the urban heat island index of 0.7�1 for the urban cluster. The correlation between spectral indices and land surface temperature urges the need of adequate urban planning with vital urban greening, in order to achieve the urban sustainable development goals. Graphic abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.] � 2021, Islamic Azad University (IAU).