Search results for "Endemic"

showing 10 items of 167 documents

Supplementary material 1 from: Bartolucci F, Domina G, Adorni M, Andreatta S, Angiolini C, Bacchetta G, Banfi E, Barberis D, Bertani G, Bonari G, Buc…

2022

Supplementary data

Endemic taxaItalyFloristic data
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Supplementary material 1 from: Bartolucci F, Domina G, Argenti C, Bacchetta G, Ballelli S, Banfi E, Barberis D, Barberis G, Bertolli A, Bolpagni R, B…

2021

Supplementary data

Endemic taxaItalyFloristic data
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Notulae to the Italian native vascular flora: 9

2020

In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of native vascular flora in Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes to the Italian administrative regions. Two new combinations are proposed. Nomenclatural and distribution updates, published elsewhere, and corrigenda are provided as Suppl. material 1.

Endemic Floristic data Italy NomenclatureEndemic Floristic data Italy Nomenclature0106 biological sciencesBIO/03 - BOTANICA AMBIENTALE E APPLICATA010506 paleontologyFloraNomenclatureZoologyFloristic dataPlant ScienceBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:QK1-989EndemicItalylcsh:BotanyBIO/02 - BOTANICA SISTEMATICASettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEndemic; Floristic data; Italy; Nomenclature0105 earth and related environmental sciencesItalian Botanist
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Typification of the name Asperula rupestris (Rubiaceae)

2021

Asperula rupestris Tineo (1827: 276) is a species endemic to Sicily, southern Italy. It is a chasmophyte growing on northexposed calcareous rocks and cliffs of the main promontories of NW Sicily and the islands of Favignana and Marettimo, Egadi Islands, NW of Siciliy (see e.g., Giardina et al. 2007).A nomenclatural study of Asperula rupestris (Rubiaceae, tribe Rubieae) revealed that this name has not yet been typified (Peruzzi et al. 2015). The present paper is part of ongoing research on the names of vascular plants described using specimens collected in Sicily (e.g., Di Gristina et al. 2012, 2016, 2017, 2020; Domina et al. 2014, 2016, 2017a, 2017b; Scafidi & Domina 2019; Scafidi et al…

EndemicAsperulaSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaTypificationSicily
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Supplementary material 1 from: Bartolucci F, Domina G, Ardenghi NMG, Bacaro G, Bacchetta G, Ballarin F, Banfi E, Barberis G, Beccarisi L, Bernardo L,…

2019

: Data type: species data

EndemicItalyNomenclatureFloristic data
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Limonium cophanense (Plumbaginaceae), a new species from Sicily

2016

Limonium cophanense is described and illustrated as a new species from the rocky coast of northwestern Sicily. It is a very rare and localized chamaephyte occurring near the sea on calcarenitic substrate, where it grows together with other halophytes. Its morphology, ecology, conservation status and relationships with the species belonging to the L. bocconei group are also examined.

Endemic; Mediterranean flora; Sea lavander; SicilyEcologyLimoniumMorphology (biology)Plant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationPlumbaginaceaeEndemicSea lavanderHalophyteBotanyMediterranean floraConservation statusEudicotsSicilyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhytotaxa
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From ethnobotany to experimental research: the therapeutic properties of Sicilian hellebore

2018

In Sicily, the genus Helleborus (Ranuculaceae) is only represented by H. bocconei subsp. siculus (= H. bocconei subsp. intermedius). In some mountain areas of the Island, the rhizomes of this plant, harvested in a particular month of the year (May) and dried, are used in traditional veterinary practice for treating pneumonia in domestic animals, cattle and horses in particular. The same usage – with rhizomes of other Helleborus species or subspecies – is reported from various other areas of Mediterranean Europe. Phytochemical tests have permitted the isolation and characterization of new biologically active molecules. The extracts of rhizomes and aerial parts of the plant were shown antibac…

Endophytic fungiRanunculaceaePlant ScienceBiologyHelleborePlant use of endophytic fungi in defensePlant sciencemedicineHelleborus bocconei subsp. intermediuSettore BIO/15 - Biologia FarmaceuticaTraditional medicineFolk veterinary medicineSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaPneumoniabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseEndemic plantlanguage.human_languageExperimental researchHelleborus bocconei subsp. siculus ranunculacea folk veterinary medicine Chaetomium strumarium strain RR1 endophytic ascomycete antibiotic property assaysEthnobotanylanguageSicilianPneumonia (non-human)Ranunculaceae
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The Small Sized Galericini from F32 “Terre Rosse” fissure filling (Gargano, Southeastern Italy) and its biochronological implications.

2011

Deinogalerix is by far the better known Galericinae (Galericini according toVan den Hoek Ostende, 2001) from the Gargano fissure filling thanks to very careful description of Butler 1980. However, another moon rat, very small sized, belonging to the Galericini tribe, is virtually present in all the assemblages from the “terre rosse” fissure filling of the Gargano. It was first mentioned in the pioneering report of Freudenthal (1971) and by Butler (1980) in his study of the “gigantic” Deinogaleri and it has been quoted in several faunal lists. It has been ascribed to Parasorex by Van den Hoek Ostende (2001), and to Galerix (Apulogalerix) by Fanfani (1999). Van den Hoek Ostende (2001) conside…

Erinaceidae Gargano Endemic Taxonomy EvolutionSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologia
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Ex situ conservation of Sicilian endemic species in the Botanical garden of Catania University

2009

Ex situ conservation botanical gardens plant biodiversity wild flora endemic plantsSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata
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Fascioliasis and other plant-borne trematode zoonoses

2005

Fascioliasis and other food-borne trematodiases are included in the list of important helminthiases with a great impact on human development. Six plant-borne trematode species have been found to affect humans: Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica and Fasciolopsis buski (Fasciolidae), Gastrodiscoides hominis (Gastrodiscidae), Watsonius watsoni and Fischoederius elongatus (Paramphistomidae). Whereas F. hepatica and F. gigantica are hepatic, the other four species are intestinal parasites. The fasciolids and the gastrodiscid cause important zoonoses distributed throughout many countries, while W. watsoni and F. elongatus have been only accidentally detected in humans. Present climate and glob…

FascioliasisFood ChainEndemic DiseasesFasciola giganticaSnailsHelminthiasisDisease VectorsGlobal HealthFasciolidaeHost-Parasite InteractionsFood ParasitologyHepaticaFasciolopsisZoonosesmedicineAnimalsHumansFasciolopsiasisIntestinal Diseases ParasiticGalba truncatulaLife Cycle StagesbiologyFasciolaEcologyPlantsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseFasciolaInfectious DiseasesParasitologyGastrodiscoides hominisInternational Journal for Parasitology
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