Search results for "Genus"

showing 10 items of 755 documents

<strong>Nomenclatural types of <em>Hieracium</em> (Asteraceae) species described from the Balearic Islands (Spain) and several rela…

2021

A nomenclatural revision of the genus Hieracium in the Balearic Islands (Spain) is presented and the typification of five names: H. aragonense Scheele, H. balearicum Arvet‑Touvet, H. elisaeanum Arvet-Touvet ex Willkomm, H. majoricanum Arvet-Touvet and H. microscapum Arvet-Touvet, is discussed. The names are lectotypified using specimens preserved at COI, GRM, and P herbaria. Several comments for the names H. cataractarum Arvet-Touvet & Huter and H. praecox subsp. brachypus Freyn in Porta & Rigo are also provided.

Balearic islandsHieraciumbiologygovernment.political_districtPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationHerbariumGenusBotanygovernmentTypificationTaxonomy (biology)EudicotsNomenclatureEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhytotaxa
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SSU rDNA Characterization of Lymnaeid Snails Transmitting Human Fascioliasis in South and Central America

1997

The small subunit (18S) rRNA gene sequences of the lymnaeid morphs I and II (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Basommatophora: Lymnaeidae) transmitting human fascioliasis in the high endemic zone of the northern Bolivian Altiplano and of Lymnaea cubensis from Mexico and Guadeloupe island (Caribbean) have been obtained by direct polymerase chain reaction PCR cycle sequencing and silver staining methods and compared to that of the 6 most common European Lymnaeidae species. Results allow us to establish definitively the distinction between the lymnaeids from the northern Bolivian Altiplano and L. cubensis. Lymnaea cubensis is a valid species distributed in North and Central America but absent in the north…

BasommatophorabiologyEcologyFasciola giganticaZoologybiology.organism_classificationLymnaeaLymnaeidaeType speciesParasitologySubgenusRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGalba truncatulaThe Journal of Parasitology
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When do different C4 leaf anatomies indicate independent C4 origins? Parallel evolution of C4 leaf types in Camphorosmeae (Chenopodiaceae).

2014

Broad-scale phylogenetic studies give first insights in numbers, relationships, and ages of C 4 lineages. They are, however, generally limited to a model that treats the evolution of the complex C4 syndrome in different lineages as a directly comparable process. Here, we use a resolved and well-sampled phylogenetic tree of Camphorosmeae, based on three chloroplast and one nuclear marker and on leaf anatomical traits to infer a more detailed picture of C4 leaftype evolution in this lineage. Our ancestral character state reconstructions allowed two scenarios: (i) Sedobassia is a derived C3/C4 intermediate, implying two independent gains of C4 in Bassia and Camphorosma; or (ii) Sedobassia is a…

Bassia prostrataBassiabiologyPhylogenetic treePhysiologyLineage (evolution)BiogeographyWaterPlant ScienceChenopodiaceaebiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionCarbonModels StructuralPlant LeavesPhylogeneticsGenusBotanyParallel evolutionPhotosynthesisPlant Vascular BundlePhylogenyJournal of experimental botany
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"Drosophila behaviour: concepts and tools" from arousal to memory in fruitflies.

2003

0376-6357 (Print) Journal article

Behavioral NeurosciencebiologyAnimal Science and ZoologyGeneral MedicineDrosophila (subgenus)Psychologybiology.organism_classificationCognitive psychologyArousalBehavioural processes
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The status of the species Beijerinckia fluminensis Dobereiner and Ruschel 1958. Request for an Opinion.

2011

In a previous article [Oggerin M., Arahal, D. R., Rubio, V. & Marin, I. (2009). Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 59, 2323–2328], it has been shown that strain Beijerinckia fluminensis UQM 1685T and its derived equivalent B. fluminensis CIP 106281T do not conform to the description of the type strain of Beijerinckia fluminensis Döbereiner and Ruschel 1958. Indeed, both strains were identified as members of the species Rhizobium radiobacter and exhibited marked phenotypic and genotypic differences with members of the genus Beijerinckia. It was concluded that both strains, and any other equivalents derived from them, do not descend from the nomenclatural type. Since then, our attempts to find old…

BeijerinckiaDNA Bacterialfood.ingredientGenotypeEcologyMolecular Sequence DataGeneral MedicineSequence Analysis DNABiologyMicrobiologyfoodGenus BeijerinckiaBeijerinckiaceaeRNA Ribosomal 16SBotanyTaxonomy (biology)Beijerinckia fluminensisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBrazilPhylogenySoil MicrobiologyInternational journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology
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A new classification of the South African endemic family Bruniaceae based on molecular and morphological data

2011

The classification of Bruniaceae is reviewed based on molecular (matK, ITS, rbcL) and morphological data, and the tribes and genera are redefined as monophyletic, morphologically diagnosable lineages. The family is subdivided into three tribes and six genera with 81 accepted species, Linconieae (Linconia), Audouinieae {Audounia [inch Tittmannia', Thamnea [incl. Pseudobaeckea teres]), and Brunieae (Berzelia [inch Brunia p.p.], Staavia [incl. Raspalia staavioides], and Brunia [incl. Nebelia, Pseudobaeckea p.p., Raspalia p.p., Lonchostoma, Mniothamned'). A key for the new classification, a short description of each genus and an updated nomenclature of all the species are provided. Two new trib…

BerzeliaVegetation classificationIdentification keyZoologyPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationMonophylyEvolutionary biologyGenusTaxonomy (biology)EndemismNomenclatureEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTAXON
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Isolation and Molecular Docking of Cytotoxic Secondary Metabolites from Two Red Sea Sponges of the Genus Diacarnus

2021

BiochemistryGenusChemistryCytotoxic T cellGeneral ChemistryIsolation (microbiology)CytotoxicityChemistrySelect
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Consequences of the discovery of Stenasellus (Crustacea, Isopoda, Asellota) 2 in the underground waters of Oman (Arabian Peninsula)

1999

An overview of the present knowledgeof the family Stenasellidae (Asellota: Aselloidea) is presented, focusing on the success of recent investigations of the underground waters of Oman (S.E. Arabian Peninsula). We take up the discovery of four new species of the genus Stenasellus: small species adapted to interstitial biotopes and larger ones typical of karstic aquifers. These species cohabit in ecotones between interstitial and karstic water systems. The putative presence of stenasellids in hypogean waters of Yemen and South Iran is suggested. The taxonomic status of the genus Stenasellus auct. needs to be reconsidered in the future. A scenario to explain the origin and the presence of thes…

Biotopegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyDesert climateAquiferBiologybiology.organism_classificationKarstIsopodaPeninsulaGenusAnimal Science and ZoologyAsellotaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsContributions to Zoology
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Über spezialisierte Verbreitungseinrichtungen anatolischer Galieae

1971

Summary Some annual species of the Rubiaceae native in Anatolia are specialized in their methods of seed dispersal. Contrary to other members of the genus, the frucitficence of Cruriata articulata with its persisting bracts falls to pieces which act as ‘surface:rollers’ transported by the wind. Valantia hispida and Callipeltis cucullaria are heterodissmeniate. Some of the mericarps arc dispersed by different agents, the other ones stay attached to the plant, showing a form of atelechory, a common phenomenon in arid regions. Other aberrant forms of dissemination are studied.

BractRubiaceaeEcologyEcologySeed dispersalCallipeltisPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationAridboatsboats.ship_classGenusBotanyArticulataEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsValantia hispidaFlora
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Terricaulis silvestris gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel prosthecate, budding member of the family Caulobacteraceae isolated from forest soil

2020

The family Caulobacteraceae comprises prosthecate bacteria with a dimorphic cell cycle and also non-prosthecate bacteria. Cells of all described species divide by binary fission. Strain 0127_4T was isolated from forest soil in Baden Württemberg (Germany) and determined to be the first representative of the family Caulobacteraceae which divided by budding. Cells of strain 0127_4T were Gram-negative, rod-shaped, prosthecate, motile by means of a polar flagellum, non-spore-forming and non-capsulated. The strain formed small white colonies and grew aerobically and chemo-organotrophically utilizing organic acids, amino acids and proteinaceous substrates. 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicated…

BuddingStrain (chemistry)prosthecateGeneral MedicineTerricaulisBiologyFlagellumbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNA0127_4MicrobiologyTerricaulis silvestrisgenomic DNAProsthecate bacteriaGenusBotanylipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBacteriaInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology
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