Search results for "Dittrichia viscosa"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

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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Fungal Assemblages Associated with Roots of Halophytic and Non-halophytic Plant Species Vary Differentially Along a Salinity Gradient

2012

Structure of fungal communities is known to be influenced by host plants and environmental conditions. However, in most cases, the dynamics of these variation patterns are poorly understood. In this work, we compared richness, diversity, and composition between assemblages of endophytic and rhizospheric fungi associated to roots of two plants with different lifestyles: the halophyte Inula crithmoides and the non-halophyte I. viscosa (syn. Dittrichia viscosa L.), along a spatially short salinity gradient. Roots and rhizospheric soil from these plants were collected at three points between a salt marsh and a sand dune, and fungi were isolated and characterized by ITS rDNA sequencing. Isolates…

SalinitySoil salinityInula crithmoideSoil ScienceSodium ChlorideEndophyteDNA RibosomalPlant RootsPlant use of endophytic fungi in defenseSoilAscomycotaSpecies SpecificityHalophyteBotanyDNA Ribosomal SpacerDittrichia viscosaEndophytesLife ScienceOtusDNA FungalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenySoil Microbiologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyBasidiomycotaFungiSalt-Tolerant PlantsSequence Analysis DNAPlantsDittrichia viscosabiology.organism_classificationAscomycota; Basidiomycota; Dittrichia viscosa; Fungi; Inula; Inula crithmoides; OtusSalinitySalt marshInulaSpecies richness
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Electrochemical monitoring of ROS influence on seedlings and germination response to salinity stress of three species of the tribe Inuleae.

2019

Solid-state electrochemical methods have been applied to the establishment of patterns of plant growth and response to saline stress using seedlings of Inula helenium L., Dittrichia viscosa (L.) Greuter (Inula viscosa (L.) Aiton), Limbarda crithmoides (L.) Dumort (Inula crithmoides L.). Upon in situ electrochemical generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) the reactivity with such species was monitored using voltammetric signals associated to the oxidation of polyphenolic components of the plants. A simple kinetic model based on second-order reaction between ROS and polyphenolic components is applied to electrochemical data yielding apparent rate constants which can be correlated with the…

chemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesInulabiologyGeneral Chemical Engineeringfood and beverages02 engineering and technologyGeneral Chemistry010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyElectrochemistrybiology.organism_classificationDittrichia viscosa01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesInuleaechemistryPolyphenolGerminationBotany0210 nano-technologyHeleniumRSC advances
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Sesquiterpene compounds from Inula Viscosa

2007

Two new compounds, 2,5-dihydroxyisocostic acid and 2,3-dihydroxycostic acid together with three known sesquiterpene compounds, Isocostic acid, Carabrone and Tomentosin, have been isolated from the acetone extract of Inula viscosa (L.) Aiton. The structures of all new compounds were determined by spectroscopic methods, in particular 1D and 2D (1)H- and (13)C-NMR. The (13)C-NMR spectra of Isocostic acid and of Tomentosin are reported here for the first time.

inulaeMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyInula viscosaMolecular StructureOrganic ChemistryPlant ScienceSesquiterpeneBiochemistryTomentosinAnalytical Chemistryinula viscosa (sin. dittrichia viscosa)chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryItalycompositaesesquiterpenesBotanyAcetoneOrganic chemistryInula
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