Search results for "botany"

showing 10 items of 4586 documents

Does stump removal affect early growth and mycorrhizal infection of spruce (Picea abies) seedlings in clear-cuts?

2012

Abstract Stump removal procedure increases the extent of exposed mineral soil in the clear felled areas. In this study, our aim was to find out whether the early growth and mycorrhization of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) seedlings differ between stump removal and mounding sites. Stumps were harvested from five one-hectare study sites and other five sites were mounded after clear felling. Twenty seedlings were planted on mounds at each study site. Although the height of spruce seedlings did not differ between the treatments after three growing periods, their mean growth was ca. 10% higher at the stump removal sites. The community of ectomycorrhizal (ECM) in the seedling roots did n…

biologyRemoval procedurefungiGrowing seasonForestryPicea abiesbiology.organism_classificationFellingbody regionsEctomycorrhizaHorticultureSeedlingBotanyta1181Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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Phenolic compounds in different olive varieties

2001

Phenolic compounds in different olive varieties were determined by HPLC analysis over 2 years. Demethyloleuropein was found in only two (Coratina and Leccino) of the eight varieties studied, so it could be used as varietal marker. Elenolic acid glucoside and hydroxytyrosol can be considered indicators of maturation for olives. In fact, as the olives ripen, their tenor increases whereas oleuropein decreases. Keywords: Phenolic compounds; olive fruit; oleuropein; demethyloleuropein; 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethanol; elenolic acid glucoside

biologyRipeningGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundGlucosidechemistryOleuropeinOleaceaeBotanyHydroxytyrosolFood sciencePhenolsCultivarGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesElenolic acid
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Effect of calcium dips and chitosan coatings on postharvest life of strawberries (Fragaria x ananassa)

2006

Strawberries (Fragaria x ananassa Duch.) were treated either with 1% calcium gluconate dips, 1.5% chitosan coatings or with a coating formulation containing 1.5% chitosan + 1% calcium gluconate and stored at 20 °C for up to 4 days. The effectiveness of the treatments was assessed by evaluating their impact on the following parameters: fungal decay incidence, loss of weight, firmness, external color, pH, titratable acidity and soluble solids content. Calcium dips were effective in decreasing surface damage and delaying both fungal decay and loss of firmness compared to untreated fruit. No sign of fungal decay was observed in fruit coated with 1.5% chitosan which also reduced fruit weight los…

biologyRosaceaeChitosan coatingtechnology industry and agricultureFragaria x ananassachemistry.chemical_elementRipeningTitratable acidHorticultureCalciumbiology.organism_classificationChitosanchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBotanyPostharvestFood scienceAgronomy and Crop ScienceFood SciencePostharvest Biology and Technology
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Rubus aetnicus Cupani ex Weston and R. canescens DC. (Rosaceae): an analysis

2021

Beek (2016) argued that Rubus aetnicus Cupani ex Weston was the correct name of the taxon that was then called R. canescens DC., and which was previously known as R. tomentosus Borkh. Moreover, R. canescens was stated to be not identical with R. aetnicus, but rather a form of R. × collinus DC. Matzke-Hajek (2016) raised objections to both statements. Therefore, the aim of this study was to thoroughly analyse both names and support this analysis with field work at the type localities and by DNA data. Despite the correspondence at the investigated conservative DNA loci, the investigation showed that the two species are morphologically different and must be conceived as separate taxa. Accordin…

biologyRosaceaeSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaBotanySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicatabatology nomenclature Rubus tomentosusPlant ScienceRubusbiology.organism_classificationNomenclatureEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Selection and long-term cultures of high-yielding Digitalis obscura plants: RAPD markers for analysis of genetic stability

1996

Fifteen wild-growing plants of Digitalis obscura collected in three differents regions were characterized according to their capacities to biosynthesize cardenolides and to proliferate in vitro. Great genotype-dependent variabilities were found in both parameters. Selected genotypes were differentiated using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. Once an elite genotype with high-yielding properties was isolated and micropropagated during 2 years, identity of the donor plant and the regenerants was confirmed by RAPD analysis.

biologyScrophulariaceaeDigitalis obscurafood and beveragesPlant ScienceGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationRAPDTissue cultureMicropropagationBotanyGenotypeGeneticsGenetic variabilityAgronomy and Crop ScienceSelection (genetic algorithm)Plant Science
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Molecular systematics and phytochemistry of Rehmannia (Scrophulariaceae)

2007

Abstract The relationships between the six known species of Rehmannia were investigated. With regard to the content of iridoid glucosides, caffeoyl phenylethanoid glycosides (CPGs) and ionone glucosides, no conclusions could be drawn. Phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequence data (ITS region, trnL-F region and rps 16 intron) reveal a well-resolved topology in which Rehmannia glutinosa and Rehmannia solanifolia and Rehmannia piasezkii and Rehmannia elata are well-supported species pairs. Rehmannia chingii is sister to the rest of the genus, which is congruent with its distribution distant to the other species of the genus.

biologyScrophulariaceaeRehmannia elataIridoid GlucosidesPhenylethanoidRehmannia glutinosabiology.organism_classificationBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryChemotaxonomyBotanyMolecular phylogeneticsRehmanniaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiochemical Systematics and Ecology
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Genetic basis of speed of development in Senecio vulgaris L var. vulgaris, S. vulgaris ssp. denticulatus (O.F. Muell.) P.D. Sell, and Senecio vernali…

1996

The genetic basis of differences in speed of development from germination to first bud formation was investigated in Senecio vulgaris var. vulgaris and S. vulgaris ssp. denticulatus, and also in S. vernalis sampled from Israel and Germany. In the case of S. vulgaris, F2 segregation analysis and the recovery of very late and very early lines from extreme F2 phenotypes showed that differences can be explained by a single major gene model, whereas segregation data from F2 and backcross progenies in S. vernalis are not incompatible with a digenic model of inheritance. Senecio vernalis from Israel and S. vulgaris var. vulgaris reached the different developmental stages in a substantially shorter…

biologySenecio vulgarisfood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationMajor geneRosette (botany)GerminationBackcrossingBotanyGeneticsArabidopsis thalianaSenecio vernalisHeterochronyGenetics (clinical)Heredity
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Quorum Sensing effects on Pseudomonas corrugata plant interaction and antagonistic activity

2010

biologySettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleBioengineeringGeneral MedicinePseudomonas corrugatabiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyQuorum sensingTomato pith necrosiPseudomonas corrugataQuorum sensingBotanyRegulationBiotechnology
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Characterization of Alternaria alternata Isolates from Tangerine Hybrids Affected by Brown Spot in Italy

2011

Alternaria brown spot, caused by Alternaria alternata, is the most important disease of tangerines and their hybrids worldwide, including Italy. The disease represents, for some susceptible citrus cultivar, a limiting factor in profitable cultivation. The results of the characterization of A. alternata isolates obtained from lesions on leaves and fruits of Fortune, Nova and Winola hybrids and Valencia sweet orange, collected in two groves located in Calabria and Sicily, is reported. An endopolygalacturonase gene (endoPG) was sequenced from five representative strains and a phylogenetic tree based on endoPG sequence data of Italian isolates and those of citrus associated Alternaria species d…

biologySettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleendoPG geneHorticulturesmall-spored AlternariaAlternariabiology.organism_classificationAlternaria brown spotfAFLPBrown spottangerine pathotypeHorticulturePhylogeneticsBotanyCultivarPectinaseHybrid
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Typification of the Presl’s name Calamintha canescens (Lamiaceae)

2021

Calamintha canescens is a taxon described in the “Flora Sicula” by K. B. Presl (1826), following the visit made to Sicily a few years earlier (March-July 1817). In the protologue Presl does not report any data on the distribution in Sicily of this taxon that will be almost completely forgotten in later floristic works. Only Nyman (1881) and later Šilić (1979) consider it as a variety respectively of Calamintha nepeta (L.) Savi and C. glandulosa (Req.) Benth. Following the review of a group of critical European taxa belonging to the genus Clinopodium L., lately Melnikov (2016) recovers the ancient taxon Calamintha canescens C. Presl and transfers it to the genus Clinopodium L. Also, the auth…

biologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaBiodiversityPlant ScienceClinopodiumbiology.organism_classificationCalaminthaTaxonomic study Sicilian vascular plants Clinopodium raimondoiBotanyTypificationTaxonomy (biology)LamiaceaeEudicotsEndemismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomyPhytotaxa
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