Search results for "Cactaceae"

showing 6 items of 16 documents

Regulating Internet Trade in CITES Species

2013

International trade in species that are or may be endangered by collection from the wild is regulated under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of wild fauna and flora (CITES) for 176 member States (Parties). Internet commerce is a relatively new route for such trade. In 2007, the CITES Secretariat asked Parties to collect information on internet wildlife trade and report problems and implemented regulations. The reports indicated it was difficult to even approximate the influence of e-commerce on CITES-listed species (CITES Secretariat 2009). We report a case study in which we quantified international transactions over an internet auction site of CITES-listed cacti …

CactaceaeSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaConservation of Natural ResourcesInternationalityInternational tradeBiologyConference of the partiesmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionTreatyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonInternetDiversityEcologyCITESEcologybusiness.industryEndangered SpeciesCommerceRange stateCITES Internet trade international Cactaceae cactiEnvironmental PolicyWildlife tradeSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataListing (finance)businessDatabase transaction
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Yeasts vectored by migratory birds collected in the Mediterranean island of Ustica and description of Phaffomyces usticensis f.a. sp. nov., a new spe…

2014

Nine yeast species belonging to genera Candida , Cryptococcus , Phaffomyces , Rhodotorula and Wickerhamomyces , and one species of Aureobasidium genus were isolated from the cloaca of migratory birds. Candida glabrata and C. inconspicua were the species most frequently isolated and Wickerhamomyces sylviae , which has recently been described as a new species isolated from bird cloaca, was again found. The majority of isolates showed the ability to grow up to 40 °C and/or at pH 3.0, two environmental conditions typical of the digestive tract of birds. The phylogenetic analysis of the D1/D2 domain of 26S rRNA gene placed the cultures of Phaffomyces in a new lineage that differed from the close…

Cactaceaephenotypic characterizationMolecular Sequence DataCryptococcusAureobasidiumRhodotorulaApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyNew species Yeast birdsBirdscactus-yeastMediterranean IslandsWickerhamomycesAscomycotaGenusPhaffomyces usticensis sp. novBotanyAnimalsPhylogenyRibosomalPhylogenetic treebiologyCandida glabrataphylogenetic analysisGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationnovel speciesDelichon urbicumSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataPhenotypeRNA RibosomalCactusRNADelichon urbicum; Phaffomyces usticensis sp. nov.; cactus-yeast; novel species; phenotypic characterization; phylogenetic analysis; Animals; Ascomycota; Birds; Cactaceae; Mediterranean Islands; Molecular Sequence Data; Phenotype; Phylogeny; RNA RibosomalSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia Agraria
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Leaf-like Structure in the Photosynthetic, Succulent Stems of Cacti

1991

This research examined the hypothesis that as cacti evolve to the leafless condition, the stem epidermis and cortex become more leaflike and more compatible with a photosynthetic role. All cacti in the relict genus Pereskia have non-succulent stems and broad, thin leaves. All members of the derived subfamily Cactoideae are ‘leafless’, having an expanded cortex that is the plant's only photosynthetic tissue. In Pereskia, leaves have a high stomatal density (mean: 50.7 stomata mm−2 in the lower epidermis, 38.1 mm−2 in the upper epidermis), but stems have low stomatal densities (mean: 11.3 mm 2, three of the species have none). Stems of Cactoideae have a high stomatal density (mean: 31.1 mm−2,…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaPereskiaSubfamilyCactaceae cactus intercellular space stomatal density evolutionbiologyEpidermis (botany)Succulent plantPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationPhotosynthesisSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataCactusBotanyAreoleCactoideaeAnnals of Botany
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CITES and Cacti a user's guide

2012

This user’s guide covers the widely traded cactus family and how it is regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). The guide explores the major groups of cacti in trade, their distribution, conservation status, use and levels of trade as well as the likelihood of illegal trade. All CITES Appendix I taxa and a wide selection of Appendix II taxa are covered in detail. Major exemptions from CITES regulations are also outlined, including cacti not covered by CITES. The guide includes a fully illustrated PowerPoint training presentation with comprehensive speaker notes on CD-ROM.

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataCITES Cactaceae Conservation Endangered Species International Conventions International Trade UNEP
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Cortical Bundles in the Persistent, Photosynthetic Stems of Cacti

1992

We examined 62 species in 45 genera of the cactus subfamily Cactoideae; all had collateral cortical bundles that permeated the broad, water-storing inner cortex and extended to the base of the outer, photosynthetic palisade cortex. Mean distance between cortical bundles was 0.75 mm, similar to the mean spacing (0.74 mm) of veins in leaves of Pereskia, a genus of relict leaf-bearing cacti. In 16 species, both young and extremely old stem cortex was available for study: in all of these, older bundles had larger amounts of phloem than did younger bundles, indicating that phloem had been produced for many years. In ten species, older bundles also had more xylem than younger bundles. In two gene…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataCactaceae cortical bundles homeotic xylem phloem evolution
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Stigma morphology inAylosterasubg.Mediolobivia(Cactaceae) and its importance for systematic investigation

2013

The stigma of 31 taxa of Aylostera (Cactaceae) was studied using environmental scanning electron microscopy. Seven stigma types could be defined, based on the degree of fusion of the stigmatic lobes and, when these are completely separated (types I and II), their orientation. Four types (types IV, V, VI and VII) are present only in Aylostera subg. Mediolobivia, two of which (types IV and VII) are species-specific. Stigma morphology was found to be a good diagnostic character in Aylostera subg. Mediolobivia, allowing in some cases to distinguish species that had been confused previously. The stigmatic types here defined seem apt to characterize natural groups within the subgenus and are usef…

TaxonSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBotanyAylostera Mediolobivia Cactaceae stigma morphology environmental scanning electron microscopySpecies identificationStigma (botany)Plant ScienceBiologySubgenusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
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