Search results for "Seedling"

showing 10 items of 110 documents

Is seed availability enough to ensure colonization success?

2006

Abstract We tested the hypothesis that seed availability is a limiting factor for plant colonization of road embankments under Mediterranean climate conditions. Experimental sowing on 10 road embankments was carried out to compare the colonization success of plants that successfully colonize the road embankment and species that appear only occasionally in the road embankments. After sowing, we measured plant establishment, biomass production, and reproductive capacity of the species. The species that appear only occasionally in the road embankments had lower emergence rates (l.l ± 0.3%) than species that were successful colonizers (18.8 ± 2.9%). None of the species of the former group survi…

Mediterranean climateBiomass (ecology)Environmental EngineeringbiologyEcologyfood and beveragesSowingManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationAgronomyHydric soilLand reclamationSeedlingEnvironmental scienceColonizationRevegetationhuman activitiesNature and Landscape ConservationEcological Engineering
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Ecotoxicity of halloysite nanotube-supported palladium nanoparticles inRaphanus sativusL

2016

Halloysite nanotubes (HNTs) are natural nanomaterials that are biocompatible and available in large amounts at low prices. They are emerging nanomaterials with appealing properties for applications like support for metal nanoparticles (NPs). The potential environmental impacts of NPs can be understood in terms of phytotoxicity. Current research has been focusing on HNT applications in cell or animal models, while their use in plants is limited so their ecotoxicological impact is poorly documented. To date there are no studies on the phytotoxic effects of functionalized halloysites (functionalized-HNTs). To develop a quantitative risk assessment model for predicting the potential impact of H…

Mitotic indexbiologyChemistryHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisfood and beveragesRaphanus02 engineering and technologyengineering.material010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesHalloysite0104 chemical sciencesNanomaterialsSeedlingGerminationEnvironmental chemistryBotanyengineeringEnvironmental ChemistryPhytotoxicityEcotoxicity0210 nano-technologyEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry
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Short seed-dispersal distances and low seedling recruitment in farmland populations of bird-dispersed cherry trees

2012

Summary In Central Europe, many plant populations are patchily distributed in human-modified landscapes and depend on animal vectors for seed dispersal. To predict seed-dispersal distances and locations of seeds of wild cherry trees (Prunus avium L.) in forest and farmland habitats in a human-modified landscape, we integrate movement data and seed regurgitation times of the Common Blackbird (Turdus merula L.) in a simulation model. We performed feeding trials with Common Blackbirds and wild cherries to determine the distribution of regurgitation times. We captured 32 male blackbirds and equipped them with radio tags to follow their movements in forest and farmland habitats. To simulate the …

Mutualism (biology)EcologyEcologySeed dispersalForagingfood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationPrunusHabitatSeedlingPlant speciesBiological dispersalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Ecology
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Factors affectingin vitro shoot proliferation ofMyrtus communis L.: A comparison of adult and seedling material

1998

Two stocks of shoots growingin vitro, obtained from either seedlings or adult plants, were used to study the effects of material origin, the number of previous subcultures on the establishment medium, the explant type, and the macronutrients on shoot multiplication and elongation inMyrtus communis L., always in the presence of 4.4. μM benzyladenine (BA). Shoot proliferation was influenced mainly by stock origin, with higher responses from the adult material than from the seedling material, and by the number of subcultures, with the largest rates of multiplication and elongation in the first subculture. In the first subculture, the adult material was characterized by high rates of shoot mult…

Myrtus communisfungiHyperhydricityMyrtaceaefood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationMicropropagationSeedlingShootBotanyElongationBiotechnologyExplant cultureIn Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
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Relationship between the seed rain and the establishment of vegetation in two areas abandoned after peat harvesting

1987

In this study the number and species composition of diaspores dispersing into two newly abandoned peat harvesting areas in Finland were investigated. In an area abandoned six years earlier a total of 2978 living seeds m−2, representing 18 species, was captured by using water-filled traps during two summers. In a one-year-old succession area the total number of living seeds m−2 was 2241, representing 16 plant species. The soil seed banks were found to be empty of viable seeds. In neither area there appeared to be any relation between number of dispersing seeds and of plant individuals of the same species in the pioneer vegetation. It is suggested that unfavourable conditions on the soil surf…

PeatGerminationVegetation successionEcologySeedlingPlant speciesfood and beveragesEcological successionSoil surfaceVegetationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcography
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Evidences of adaptive traits to rocky substrates undermine paradigm of habitat preference of the Mediterranean seagrass Posidonia oceanica

2015

AbstractPosidonia oceanica meadows are acknowledged as one of the most valuable ecosystems of the Mediterranean Sea. P. oceanica has been historically described as a species typically growing on mobile substrates whose development requires precursor communities. Here we document for the first time the extensive presence of sticky hairs covering P. oceanica seedling roots. Adhesive root hairs allow the seedlings to firmly anchor to rocky substrates with anchorage strength values up to 5.23 N, regardless of the presence of algal cover and to colonise bare rock without the need for precursor assemblages to facilitate settlement. Adhesive root hairs are a morphological trait common on plants li…

Phyllospadix scouleriMultidisciplinaryAlismatalesbiologyEcologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaAdaptation BiologicalMicrositeEnvironmentbiology.organism_classificationArticleColonisationAlismatidaeSeagrassPhenotypeQuantitative Trait HeritablePropaguleHabitatSeedlingsPosidonia oceanicaBotanyMediterranean SeaMediterranean Sea Posidonia oceanica root hairs substrates seedlingsEcosystemScientific Reports
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Arabidopsis copper transport protein COPT2 participates in the crosstalk between iron deficiency responses and low phosphate signaling

2013

[EN] Copper and iron are essential micronutrients for most living organisms because they participate as cofactors in biological processes, including respiration, photosynthesis, and oxidative stress protection. In many eukaryotic organisms, including yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and mammals, copper and iron homeostases are highly interconnected; yet, such interdependence is not well established in higher plants. Here, we propose that COPT2, a high-affinity copper transport protein, functions under copper and iron deficiencies in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). COPT2 is a plasma membrane protein that functions in copper acquisition and distribution. Characterization of the COPT2 expr…

PhysiologyArabidopsisPlant SciencePlant RootsMembranes Transport and BioenergeticsGene Expression Regulation PlantArabidopsisThalianaHomeostasisArabidopsis thalianaSLC31 ProteinsGene-expressionCation Transport ProteinsChlorosisbiologyRevealsIron DeficienciesMetal homeostasisPlantsPlants Genetically ModifiedUp-RegulationTransport proteinPhenotypeBiochemistrySignal TransductionIronRecombinant Fusion ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaechemistry.chemical_elementSaccharomyces cerevisiaeModels BiologicalPhosphatesEthyleneGeneticsmedicineBIOQUIMICA Y BIOLOGIA MOLECULARFamilyIron deficiency (plant disorder)Arabidopsis ProteinsBiological TransportRoot elongationSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCopperPlant LeavesAcquisitionchemistrySeedlingsStarvationMutationCopper deficiencyCopper
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Transgenerational effects of plant sex and arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis

2013

In gynodioecious plants, females are predicted to produce more and/or better offspring than hermaphrodites in order to be maintained in the same population. In the field, the roots of both sexes are usually colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. Transgenerational effects of mycorrhizal symbiosis are largely unknown, although theoretically expected. We examined the maternal and paternal effects of AM fungal symbiosis and host sex on seed production and posterior seedling performance in Geranium sylvaticum, a gynodioe- cious plant. We hand-pollinated cloned females and hermaphrodites in symbiosis with AM fungi or in nonmycorrhizal conditions and measured seed number and mass, and see…

PhysiologyGeraniumPopulationGerminationPlant ScienceGynodioecyBiologySymbiosisMycorrhizaeBotanySymbiosiseducationeducation.field_of_studyHost (biology)ta1183fungiMaternal effectfood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationPlant LeavesSeedlingsGerminationSeedlingSeedsGeranium sylvaticumLinear Modelsta1181New Phytologist
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A new self-compatibility haplotype in the sweet cherry 'Kronio', S5' attributable to a pollen-part mutation in the SFB gene

2008

‘Kronio’ is a Sicilian cultivar of sweet cherry (Prunus avium), nominally with the incompatibility genotype S 5 S 6 , that is reported to be naturally self-compatible. In this work the cause of its self-compatibility was investigated. Test selfing confirmed self-compatibility and provided embryos for analysis; PCR with consensus primers designed to amplify S-RNase and SFB alleles showed that the embryos were of two types, S 5 S 5 and S 5 S 6 , indicating that S 6 pollen failed, but S 5 succeeded, perhaps because of a mutation in the pollen or stylar component. Stylar RNase analysis indicated active S-RNases for both S 5 and S 6 . The S-RNase alleles were cloned and sequenced; and sequences …

PhysiologyMolecular Sequence DataPlant ScienceFlowersBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionPrunusRibonucleasesChromosome SegregationGenotypeAmino Acid SequencePollinationGeneAllelesCrosses GeneticGeneticsF-Box ProteinsHaplotypeIntronfood and beveragesSelfingSequence Analysis DNAHaplotypesSeedlingsMutationMicrosatellitePrunusPloidy
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β-Aminobutyric Acid (BABA)-Induced Resistance in Arabidopsis thaliana: Link with Iron Homeostasis

2014

International audience; Bêta-Aminobutyric acid (BABA) is a nonprotein amino acid inducing resistance in many different plant species against a wide range of abiotic and biotic stresses. Nevertheless, how BABA primes plant natural defense reactions remains poorly understood. Based on its structure, we hypothesized and confirmed that BABA is able to chelate iron (Fe) in vitro. In vivo, we showed that it led to a transient Fe deficiency response in Arabidopsis thaliana plants exemplified by a reduction of ferritin accumulation and disturbances in the expression of genes related to Fe homeostasis. This response was not correlated to changes in Fe concentrations, suggesting that BABA affects the…

Physiology[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]IronMetaboliteArabidopsisPlant ImmunityBiologyIron Chelating AgentsAminobutyric acidERWINIA-CHRYSANTHEMI INFECTIONchemistry.chemical_compoundMetabolomicsGene Expression Regulation Plant[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyHomeostasisMetabolomicsFERRITIN SYNTHESISBOTRYTIS-CINEREATOMATO PLANTSGeneDisease ResistancePlant DiseasesBotrytis cinereachemistry.chemical_classificationAminobutyratesfungifood and beveragesGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPLANT IMMUNITYDL-3-AMINOBUTYRIC ACIDAmino acidPlant LeavesFerritinPhenotypeBiochemistrychemistryCHELATE REDUCTASESeedlingsDEFENSE RESPONSES[SDE]Environmental Sciencesbiology.proteinPHYTOPHTHORA-INFESTANSBotrytisREFERENCE GENESAgronomy and Crop ScienceMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®
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