Search results for " research."

showing 10 items of 13407 documents

Plant functional trait response to environmental drivers across European temperate forest understorey communities

2020

Functional traits respond to environmental drivers, hence evaluating trait-environment relationships across spatial environmental gradients can help to understand how multiple drivers influence plant communities. Global-change drivers such as changes in atmospheric nitrogen deposition occur worldwide, but affect community trait distributions at the local scale, where resources (e.g. light availability) and conditions (e.g. soil pH) also influence plant communities. We investigate how multiple environmental drivers affect community trait responses related to resource acquisition (plant height, specific leaf area (SLA), woodiness, and mycorrhizal status) and regeneration (seed mass, lateral s…

0106 biological sciencesSpecific leaf areaNitrogenPlant ScienceForestsBiologyTemperate deciduous forestGlobal Warming010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSoilground vegetationBosecologie en BosbeheerGlobal environmental change/dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/biologyherbaceous layerplant–soil relationsEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerEcologyTemperate forestPlant communityGeneral MedicineUnderstoryPlants15. Life on landSoil typePE&RCForest Ecology and Forest ManagementEuropePlant LeavesEcosystems Researchresource acquisition13. Climate actionregenerationLitterSpecies richness010606 plant biology & botany
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The WtmsDW Locus on Wheat Chromosome 2B Controls Major Natural Variation for Floret Sterility Responses to Heat Stress at Booting Stage

2021

Heat stress at booting stage causes significant losses to floret fertility (grain set) and hence yield in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.); however, there is a lack of well-characterized sources of tolerance to this type of stress. Here, we describe the genetic analysis of booting stage heat tolerance in a cross between the Australian cultivars Drysdale (intolerant) and Waagan (tolerant), leading to the definition of a major-effect tolerance locus on the short arm of chromosome 2B, Wheat thermosensitive male sterile Drysdale/Waagan (WtmsDW). WtmsDW offsets between 44 and 65% of the losses in grain set due to heat, suggesting that it offers significant value for marker-assisted tolerance breedin…

0106 biological sciencesSterilityQTLLocus (genetics)Plant ScienceQuantitative trait locusBiologylcsh:Plant culturemale sterility01 natural sciencesGenetic analysis03 medical and health sciencesfloret sterilitywheatlcsh:SB1-1110CultivarAllele030304 developmental biologyOriginal Research0303 health sciencesauricle distanceChromosomefood and beveragesheat toleranceDwarfingHorticulture010606 plant biology & botanyFrontiers in Plant Science
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Fruit and Leaf Sensing for Continuous Detection of Nectarine Water Status

2019

Continuous assessment of plant water status indicators provides the most precise information for irrigation management and automation, as plants represent an interface between soil and atmosphere. This study investigated the relationship of plant water status to continuous fruit diameter (FD) and inverse leaf turgor pressure rates (pp) in nectarine trees [Prunus persica (L.) Batsch] throughout fruit development. The influence of deficit irrigation treatments on stem (Ψstem) and leaf water potential, leaf relative water content, leaf stomatal conductance, and fruit growth was studied across the stages of double-sigmoidal fruit development in ‘September Bright’ nectarines. Fruit relative grow…

0106 biological sciencesStomatal conductanceIrrigationDeficit irrigationTurgor pressuredroughtPlant Sciencelcsh:Plant cultureBiology01 natural sciencesirrigationPrunusPrunus persica (L.) BatschRelative growth ratelcsh:SB1-1110water potentialIrrigation managementWater contentOriginal Researchturgor pressurefungifood and beverages04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesHorticulturefruit growth irrigation precision horticulture Prunus persica turgor pressure water potential040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesfruit growth010606 plant biology & botanyFrontiers in Plant Science
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Flower abscission in Vitis vinifera L. triggered by gibberellic acid and shade discloses differences in the underlying metabolic pathways

2015

Understanding abscission is both a biological and an agronomic challenge. Flower abscission induced independently by shade and gibberellic acid (GAc) sprays was monitored in grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) growing under a soilless greenhouse system during two seasonal growing conditions, in an early and late production cycle. Physiological and metabolic changes triggered by each of the two distinct stimuli were determined. Environmental conditions exerted a significant effect on fruit set as showed by the higher natural drop rate recorded in the late production cycle with respect to the early cycle. Shade and GAc treatments increased the percentage of flower drop compared to the control, and …

0106 biological sciencesSucrosePlant Sciencelcsh:Plant cultureBiologyCarbohydrate metabolism01 natural sciences03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundAbscissionBotanylcsh:SB1-1110inflorescenceRaffinoseGibberellic acidOriginal Research030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesthinningfungifood and beveragesTricarboxylic acid15. Life on landmetabolomicsgrapevineabscissionabscission gibberellic acid grapevine inflorescence metabolomics shade thinningSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeMetabolic pathwaychemistryInflorescenceshadegibberellic acid010606 plant biology & botanyFrontiers in Plant Science
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Stratification strength and light climate explain variation in chlorophyll a at the continental scale in a European multilake survey in a heatwave su…

2021

The authors acknowledge COST Action ES 1105 "CYANOCOST Cyanobacterial blooms and toxins in water resources: Occurrence impacts and management" and COST Action Global Change Biology ES 1201 NETLAKE -Networking Lake Observatories in Europe" for contributing to this study through networking and knowledge sharing with European experts in the field. We acknowledge the members of the Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network (GLEON) for their collaborative spirit and enthusiasm that inspired the grassroots effort of the EMLS. E.M. was supported by a grant from the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation to Bas Ibelings and by supplementary funding from University of Geneva…

0106 biological sciencesTemperateAquatic Ecology and Water Quality Management010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesChlorophyll aCYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMSMediterraneanOceanography01 natural sciencesFilamentous cyanobacteriaPHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICSKlimatforskningPhotosystem-IIClimate changePhytoplankton biomasschlorophyllTemperature anomalyPhytoplankton Dynamicsmedia_commonFilamentous CyanobacteriaEcologyplanktonTEMPERATEDissolved Organic-MatterPlan_S-Compliant_NOArtEutrophicationBiological Sciences6. Clean waterEuropekesäinternationalEUTROPHICATION1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyarticleslämpötilaGREEN-ALGAENatural SciencesLAKESSHALLOWklorofylliThermal stratificaitonClimate Researchmedia_common.quotation_subjectmultilake surveyCyanobacterial BloomsAquatic Sciencephytoplankton ; European lakes ; climate change ; large scale ; light ; stratification ; nutrientsjärvetstratificationHeat wavelimnologiaPHOTOSYSTEM-IISettore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIAddc:570Life Sciencebiomassa (ekologia)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEkologiGreen-AlgaeWIMEKFILAMENTOUS CYANOBACTERIA010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyilmastonmuutoksetmikrolevätAquatische Ecologie en WaterkwaliteitsbeheerSurface temperatureLakesShallow13. Climate actionDISSOLVED ORGANIC-MATTER; CYANOBACTERIAL BLOOMS; PHYTOPLANKTON DYNAMICS; FILAMENTOUS CYANOBACTERIA; PHOTOSYSTEM-II; GREEN-ALGAE; LAKES; EUTROPHICATION; SHALLOW; TEMPERATEPhytoplanktonDISSOLVED ORGANIC-MATTERkerrostuneisuusHumanitiesvalo
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The "Tracked Roaming Transect" and distance sampling methods increase the efficiency of underwater visual censuses.

2018

Underwater visual census (UVC) is the most common approach for estimating diversity, abundance and size of reef fishes in shallow and clear waters. Abundance estimation through UVC is particularly problematic in species occurring at low densities and/or highly aggregated because of their high variability at both spatial and temporal scales. The statistical power of experiments involving UVC techniques may be increased by augmenting the number of replicates or the area surveyed. In this work we present and test the efficiency of an UVC method based on diver towed GPS, the Tracked Roaming Transect (TRT), designed to maximize transect length (and thus the surveyed area) with respect to diving …

0106 biological sciencesTopographyMarine and Aquatic Scienceslcsh:Medicine01 natural sciences//purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https]Abundance (ecology)StatisticsRange (statistics)Marine Fishlcsh:ScienceIslandsAbundance estimationMultidisciplinaryDistance samplingUnderwater visual censusesAnimal BehaviorEcologyCoral ReefsGeographic Information SystemFishesEukaryotaEstimatorBiodiversityResearch DesignVertebratesEngineering and TechnologyCoral ReefCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASHumanResearch ArticleEnvironmental MonitoringCensusAccuracy and precisionFish BiologyField experimentEquipmentMarine BiologyResearch and Analysis Methods010603 evolutionary biologyCiencias BiológicasFish PhysiologyAnimal PhysiologyAnimalsHumans14. Life underwater//purl.org/becyt/ford/1.6 [https]TransectVision OcularBehaviorLandformsSurvey ResearchAnimal010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcology and Environmental Scienceslcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesGeomorphologyEcologíaVertebrate PhysiologyTracked roaming transectFishEarth SciencesReefsGeographic Information SystemsEnvironmental sciencelcsh:QZoologyFishePLoS ONE
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Mating Status of an Herbivorous Stink Bug Female Affects the Emission of Oviposition-Induced Plant Volatiles Exploited by an Egg Parasitoid

2019

Insect parasitoids are under selection pressure to optimize their host location strategy in order to maximize fitness. In parasitoid species that develop on host eggs, one of these strategies consists in the exploitation of oviposition-induced plant volatiles (OIPVs), specific blends of volatile organic compounds released by plants in response to egg deposition by herbivorous insects. Plants can recognize insect oviposition via elicitors that trigger OIPVs, but very few elicitors have been characterized so far. In particular, the source and the nature of the elicitor responsible of egg parasitoid recruitment in the case of plants induced with oviposition by stink bugs are still unknown. In …

0106 biological sciencesTrissolcus basalis;Nezara viridula;Vicia faba;indirect plant defenses;OIPVs;elicitorOIPVscomposé volatilPhysiologyBiodiversité et Ecologiemedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyInsect010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:PhysiologyParasitoidBiodiversity and EcologyPhysiology (medical)MatingTrissolcus basalisparasitoidOriginal Researchmedia_commonTrissolcus basalis Nezara viridula host location behaviour indirect plant defences egg parasitoid recruitmentelicitorlcsh:QP1-981biologyparasitoïdeHost (biology)fungiNezara viridulafood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationAttractioninsecte herbivoreElicitorVicia fabaElicitor; Indirect plant defenses; Nezara viridula; OIPVs; Trissolcus basalis; Vicia faba010602 entomologySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataOlfactometerNezara viridulaoeuf d'insecte[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologyindirect plant defenses
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A modified niche model for generating food webs with stage‐structured consumers: The stabilizing effects of life‐history stages on complex food webs

2021

Abstract Almost all organisms grow in size during their lifetime and switch diets, trophic positions, and interacting partners as they grow. Such ontogenetic development introduces life‐history stages and flows of biomass between the stages through growth and reproduction. However, current research on complex food webs rarely considers life‐history stages. The few previously proposed methods do not take full advantage of the existing food web structural models that can produce realistic food web topologies.We extended the niche model developed by Williams and Martinez (Nature, 2000, 404, 180–183) to generate food webs that included trophic species with a life‐history stage structure. Our me…

0106 biological sciencesTrophic specieseducationPopulationNicheBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencespredator–prey interactionlife‐history stage03 medical and health sciencesontogenetic shifteducationQH540-549.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOriginal Researchmultilayer network030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape ConservationTrophic level0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyBiomass (ecology)EcologyEcologydigestive oral and skin physiologyFood webcommunity dynamicsLife History StagesAllometryallometric trophic networkEcology and Evolution
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No evidence for differential sociosexual behavior and space use in the color morphs of the European common wall lizard (Podarcis muralis)

2020

Abstract Explaining the evolutionary origin and maintenance of color polymorphisms is a major challenge in evolutionary biology. Such polymorphisms are commonly thought to reflect the existence of alternative behavioral or life‐history strategies under negative frequency‐dependent selection. The European common wall lizard Podarcis muralis exhibits a striking ventral color polymorphism that has been intensely studied and is often assumed to reflect alternative reproductive strategies, similar to the iconic “rock–paper–scissors” system described in the North American lizard Uta stansburiana. However, available studies so far have ignored central aspects in the behavioral ecology of this spec…

0106 biological sciencesWall lizard[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Populationcolor polymorphism010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencessocial behavior03 medical and health sciencesalternative strategiesBehavioral ecologybiology.animaleducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsQH540-549.5030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape ConservationOriginal Research0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studybiologyReproductive successEcologyLizardSpace usefree‐ranging populationbiology.organism_classificationmesocosmPodarcis muralisNatural population growthEvolutionary biology[SDE]Environmental SciencesPodarcis muralisEcology and Evolution
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Native-Invasive Plants vs. Halophytes in Mediterranean Salt Marshes: Stress Tolerance Mechanisms in Two Related Species

2016

Dittrichia viscosa is a Mediterranean ruderal species that over the last decades has expanded into new habitats, including coastal salt marshes, ecosystems that are per se fragile and threatened by human activities. To assess the potential risk that this native-invasive species represents for the genuine salt marsh vegetation, we compared its distribution with that of Inula crithmoides, a taxonomically related halophyte, in three salt marshes located in “La Albufera” Natural Park, near the city of Valencia (East Spain). The presence of D. viscosa was restricted to areas of low and moderate salinity, while I. crithmoides was also present in the most saline zones of the salt marshes. Analyses…

0106 biological sciencesWater stress toleranceDrought toleranceBOTANICAdrought tolerancePlant ScienceBiologylcsh:Plant culture010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesInvasive speciesHalophyteBotanyDittrichia viscosaBIOQUIMICA Y BIOLOGIA MOLECULARRuderal specieslcsh:SB1-1110Original ResearchBIOLOGIA VEGETALgeographyInula crithmoidesgeography.geographical_feature_categoryDittrichia viscosabiology.organism_classificationNative-invasive speciesSalinity toleranceSalinityOsmolytesOsmolyteOxidative stressSalt marshToxic ions010606 plant biology & botanyDittrichia viscosa; Inula crithmoides; Native-invasive species; Osmolytes; Oxidative stress; Salinity tolerance; Toxic ions; Water stress tolerance
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