Search results for "LEAF"

showing 10 items of 371 documents

Allium therinanthum (Amaryllidaceae), a new species from Israel

2014

Allium therinanthum, a new species of A. sect. Codonoprasum, is described and illustrated from southern Mt. Hermon (Israel). It is a late-flowering diploid species (2n = 16), growing on calcareous substrates of the mountain belt. It is a narrowly distributed geophyte, showing morphological relationships mainly with A. tardiflorum, a typical autumnal species also occurring in Israel within the pinewoods of Mt. Carmel. The morphology, karyology, leaf anatomy, ecology, conservation status and taxonomical relations are examined for both species. A taxonomic comparison with the most allied late flowering species of the sect. Codonoprasum is provided.

biologyEcologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaBiodiversityPlant ScienceAmaryllidaceaebiology.organism_classificationAlliaceae Allium sect. Codonoprasum karyology late flowering leaf anatomy phenetic tree taxonomyAllium therinanthumBotanyConservation statusTaxonomy (biology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomyPhytotaxa
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First Report of Leaf Spot and Blight Caused by Ralstonia pickettii on Bird of Paradise Tree in Italy

2008

Bird of Paradise tree (Strelitzia alba (L. f.) Skeels) is an ornamental perennial tropical plant grown in southern Italy. In the summer of 2006 and 2007, a widespread, severe leaf disease was observed on seedlings and 1- to 2-year-old plants in two glasshouses located in eastern Sicily. Disease incidence ranged from 10 to 25%. Symptoms on the leaves consisted of dark brown-to-black stripes of varying length and found between the lateral veins. Lesions sometimes coalesced into a large area of necrotic tissue. Symptomatic tissues were ground in a drop of sterile distilled water (SDW) with a scalpel. Suspensions were streaked on King's medium B (KB), nutrient agar, and yeast extract nutrient …

biologyInoculationRalstonia pickettiifood and beveragesSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetalePlant ScienceStrelitziabiology.organism_classificationHorticulturechemistry.chemical_compoundStrelitzia albachemistryBotanyOrnamental plantLeaf spotBlightStrelitzia alba leaf spot Ralstonia pickettiiAgronomy and Crop ScienceNutrient agar
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Abstracts of papers presented at the 9th meeting of the international council for the study of viruses and virus diseases of the grapevine

1989

biologyInsect ScienceEcology (disciplines)Grapevine fanleaf virusPlant ScienceVirus diseasesbiology.organism_classificationVirologyPhytoparasitica
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Stomatal anatomy coordinates leaf size with Rubisco kinetics in the Balearic Limonium

2019

Abstract Trait integration arises through both selection on functional coordination and shared developmental pathways. Different anatomical components must both work well and develop together to generate individuals with the appropriate physiology to survive and reproduce in their environment. In this study, we used a common garden experiment and Bayesian multilevel models to test whether stomatal anatomy coordinates leaf gas exchange, Rubisco kinetics, and leaf size across 10 closely related species of Limonium from the Balearic Islands. The results indicate that the anatomical determinants of maximum stomatal conductance, stomatal density and size, were functionally coordinated with Rubis…

biologyLimoniumfungiBotanyRuBisCOKineticsbiology.proteinfood and beveragesLeaf sizePlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationAoB PLANTS
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Energy metabolism and metabolic rate of the alder leaf beetle Agelastica alni (L.) (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions…

2003

In early fall, adult alder leaf beetles (Agelastica alni L.) retreat, for overwintering, to the top layer of the soil near their forage trees where the ground gets easily waterlogged so that the beetles will be submerged and cut off from atmospheric oxygen. Hence, unlike most other adult insects, alder leaf beetles encounter hypoxia/anoxia in their natural habitat and this may occur at moderate temperature. Exposing beetles to pure nitrogen gas at 20 degrees C had similar behavioral and metabolic effects as submerging them in water, causing rapid immobility and increasing the content of lactate about sevenfold to some 5mgr;molg(-1) body weight during 10h anoxia. Recovery from 10 h hypoxia/a…

biologyPhysiologychemistry.chemical_elementHypoxia (environmental)biology.organism_classificationOxygenAlderAgelastica alniAnimal sciencechemistryAdenine nucleotideInsect ScienceBotanyAnaerobic exerciseOverwinteringLeaf beetleJournal of Insect Physiology
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Effect of rootstock on trunk growth and foliar mineral content in cv. Bianca pistachio (Pistacia vera L.) trees

1998

Trunk cross-sectional area (TCSA) and mineral content were recorded for 4 years in the major Sicilian pistachio cultivar, Bianca, budded in 1991 onto eight in v/fro-propagated clonal rootstocks (Pistacia atlantica and P. integerrima) and one seedling rootstock (P. terebinthus). The trees were grown using standard cultural practices for Sicilian dry-land farming in a fine sandy soil, located inland in Sicily (20 km SW of Palermo, 350 m a.s.l.). From nine trees per rootstock, samples of 10 leaflets from the mid-section of current year shoots were taken yearly in August and analyzed for the main plant mineral elements (N, P, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu and B). The TCSA was measured at the end of…

biologyPistaciaLeaf analysis Pistacia atlantica Pistacia integerrima Pistacia terebinthus Plant nutritionGrowing seasonHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationTrunkHorticultureGeographySeedlingShootPistacia atlanticaCultivarRootstock
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Association of Marginal Leaf Scorch with Sodium Accumulation in Salt-stressed Peach

2000

The effect of specific ion toxicity during salt stress was tested in the present study. The experiment was repeated twice, in 1996 and 1998, with `Nemaguard' peach seedlings and rooted cuttings grown in hydroponics under two NaCl concentrations (50 and 30 mm). Foliage was separated in symptomatic and symptomless leaves and the amount of sodium (Na+) and chloride (C1–) was determined. Significantly higher Na+ content was found in symptomatic than in symptomless leaves in both experiments, whereas in only two of the six cases was Cl– content higher in symptomatic than in symptomless leaves. The Na+ threshold for leaf scorch was somewhere between 4 and 6 mg·g–1 dry weight. Results indicated th…

biologyPrunus persica salinity chloride ion toxicityChemistrySodiumRosaceaechemistry.chemical_elementLeaf scorchHorticulturemedicine.diseaseHydroponicsbiology.organism_classificationSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeCuttingHorticultureDry weightmedicinePlant nutritionFruit treeHortScience
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Viral diseases causing the greatest economic losses to the tomato crop. II. The Tomato yellow leaf curl virus — a review

1996

Abstract Tomato yellow leaf curl geminivirus (TYLCV), transmitted by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) is one of the most devastating diseases of cultivated tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.). TYLCV causes economic losses up to 100% in tomato crop in many tropical and subtropical regions, and is spreading towards new areas. The increasing economic importance of TYLCV has resulted in the need for accurate detection and identification procedures, stimulating intensive research efforts focused on virus biology, diversity, and epidemiology to develop successful control strategies. Breeding for resistance appears to be the best approach to control this disease, but to date only partial…

biologybusiness.industryfood and beveragesWhiteflyHorticulturePlant disease resistancebiology.organism_classificationLycopersiconBiotechnologyCropPlant virusBotanyTomato yellow leaf curl virusGeminiviridaebusinessHybridScientia Horticulturae
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Comparative analysis of leaf shape development inEschscholzia californicaand other Papaveraceae-Eschscholzioideae

2011

Dissected leaves in Papaveraceae-Eschscholzioideae have an architecture frequently encountered in the basal eudicot clade Ranunculales that could represent an ancestral condition for eudicots. Developmental morphology of foliage leaves was investigated using scanning electron microscopy and focusing on primordium formation activity (primary morphogenesis) at the leaf margin. Eschscholzia californica, E. lobii, and Hunnemannia fumariaefolia had a polyternate-acropetal mode of leaf dissection. Segment formation continued around the whole leaf blade periphery. Differences in mature leaf architecture was traced to variations in regional blastozone activity and duration. Epidermal cell size meas…

biologyfungiMorphogenesisfood and beveragesPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationEschscholziaBasal (phylogenetics)RanunculalesBotanyLeaf bladeGeneticsPapaveraceaePrimordiumEudicotsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmerican Journal of Botany
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Transport and partitioning of 13C-photoassimilate between peach fruiting shoots

2008

We used a non-intrusive method (13CO2 feeding) and a manipulative approach to see whether fruiting shoots in peach trees are autonomous or may import carbon from neighboring shoots under forced conditions, and whether the degree of autonomy is influenced by the source-sink relationship on the shoot. In three experiments, leaf to fruit ratio (L:F) of selected fruiting shoots was moderately (2005 and 2006) or strongly (extreme enforcing 2006) altered to either encourage or discourage movement of carbon from 13C-labeled sending shoots (SFS) to receiving fruiting shoots (RFS), both located on the same main scaffold of V-shaped peach trees. At stage I and III of fruit growth, fruit and shoot tip…

branch autonomy carbon isotopes fruiting shoot leaf area Prunus persica sink strength source-sink relations
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