Search results for "Palermo Mountain"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Floristic survey of the former royal hunting reserve of Renda, near Palermo (Sicily, Italy)

2021

A mountainous area in western Sicily, where relic wood vegetation is still preserved notwithstanding past and present human pressure, is here analysed in order to prepare a checklist of its vascular flora. Field investigations allowed to compile a floristic inventory including 601 infrageneric taxa belonging to 304 genera and 80 families. Some remarks on the biological and chorological spectra are presented, and some measures to protect flora and vegetation are suggested, too.

Palermo Mountainhuman impactGeographyendemic specieSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataMediterranean floraGeneral MedicineArchaeologyAlien specieFloristicsrelic vegetationBiodiversity Journal
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Hypercalcified sponges from the Upper Triassic (Norian-Rhaetian) reefs of Sicily

2015

The sponge-dominated Upper Triassic (Norian-Rhaetian) reefs of Sicily yielded the most abundant hypercalcified sponge taxa compared with other time equivalent reefs in the world. Chambered sponges (“Sphinctozoa”) are the most abundant group among the hypercalcified sponges. All together almost 150 species of hypercalcified sponges (including sphinctozoans, inozoans, chaetetids, disjectoporids and spongiomorphids) were recognized in the Norian-Rhaetian reefs occurring in different localities in Sicily. 93 species (30 new, 28 as sp. indet.) of sphinctozoans, belonging to 18 families (2 new: Polytubithalamiidae, Globucatenulaiidae) and 35 genera (4 new: Globucatenula, Polytubithalamia, Rostros…

Sponges Sphinctozoa Inozoa Chaetetids Disjectoporids Spongiomorphids Triassic Norian-Rhaetian Cozzo di Lupo Palermo Mountains Madonie Mountains Sicily.Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologia
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Brassica trichocarpa (Brassicaceae), a new species from Sicily

2013

A new species of Brassica from Sicily, namely B. trichocarpa, is described and illustrated. This suffrutex was found on a calcareous peak of a mount near Palermo, where it is represented by a single population occupying a really small surface. It is well differentiated from the other perennial species belonging to B. sect. Brassica mainly in having hairy ovary and very short, thickened, hairy, not torulose fruits. Its relationships and taxonomical position within this group are examined too. An analytical key of the current taxa belonging to the genus Brassica sect. Brassica is also provided. 

education.field_of_studybiologyPerennial plantPopulationOvary (botany)BrassicaBrassicaceaePlant ScienceBiodiversityBrassicalesbiology.organism_classificationTracheophytaMagnoliopsidaTaxonGenusBotanyBrassicaceaeBrassica Brassicaceae endemic species Palermo mountains SicilySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataKey (lock)educationPlantaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomy
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