Search results for "subspecies"

showing 10 items of 167 documents

Antagonism and Antimicrobial Capacity of Epiphytic and Endophytic Bacteria against the Phytopathogen Xylella fastidiosa

2022

Olive quick decline syndrome (OQDS), which is caused by Xylella fastidiosa, poses a severe threat to the agriculture of Mediterranean countries and causes severe damage to the olive trees in Italy. Since no effective control measures are currently available, the objective of this study was the screening of antagonistic bacteria that are potentially deployable as biocontrol agents against X. fastidiosa. Therefore, two approaches were used, i.e., the evaluation of the antagonistic activity of (i) endophytic bacteria isolated from two different cultivars of olive trees (Leccino and Ogliarola salentina) and (ii) epiphytic bacteria isolated from the phyllospheres of different host plant species …

biocontrol agentantimicrobial activityfood and beveragesin vitro screeningAgronomy and Crop Sciencesubspecies <i>pauca</i>; in vitro screening; dual culture; biocontrol agents; antimicrobial activitydual culturesubspecies pauca
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Phylogeny of snapdragon species (Antirrhinum; Scrophulariaceae) using non-coding cpDNA sequences

2005

Antirrhinum is an Old World genus of up to 25 perennial taxa, mainly located in the western Mediterranean basin. A molecular analysis of 24 taxa of Antirrhinum was undertaken using cpDNA sequences from the trnT (UGU)-trnL (UAA) 5' exon region. The Kimura two-parameter model was chosen to calculate pairwise nucleotide divergence values between cpDNA sequences, and a bootstrapped neighbor-joining dendrogram was constructed from the nucleotide divergence distance matrix. Eighteen sites were variable across the studied samples and the position of 7 indels, ranging from 1 to 7 bp, was inferred from the sequence alignment. Several trnT-trnL sequences are identical in: some members of subsection K…

biologyAntirrhinumDendrogramSequence alignmentPlant ScienceSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationChloroplast DNAGenusPhylogeneticsBotanyIndelAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsrael Journal of Plant Sciences
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The phylogeny of the European high mountain genus Adenostyles (Asteraceae-Senecioneae) reveals that edaphic shifts coincide with dispersal events.

2013

UNLABELLED PREMISE OF THE STUDY Heterogeneity of edaphic conditions plays a large role in driving the diversification of many plant groups. In the Alps and other European high mountains, many closely related calcicole and calcifuge plant taxa exist. To better understand patterns and processes of edaphic differentiation, the phylogeny of the edaphically variable genus Adenostyles was studied. The genus contains three species, of which A. alpina has five subspecies. Each species and subspecies is largely confined to either calcareous or noncalcareous substrates. • METHODS We analyzed the phylogeny of Adenostyles using DNA sequences of nrITS, nrETS, nuclear chalcone synthase, and three plastid…

biologyEcologyAltitudeCalcicoleEdaphicPlant ScienceSenecioneaeSubspeciesAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationCalcifugeAdenostyles alpinaBiological EvolutionEuropePhylogeographySoilBotanyGeneticsBiological dispersalAdenostylesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemPhylogenyDemographyAmerican journal of botany
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Certhia tianquanensis Li, a treecreeper with relict distribution in Sichuan, China

2002

Certhia tianquanensis Li, 1995, is characterised as a distinct species and is combined withC. discolor in the superspeciesC. [discolor]. This probably relict species occupies an extremely small range, and has so far been found at only four sites in western Sichuan, China. It is characterised by a long tail (likeC. discolor), an extremely short bill (similar toC. nipalensis), the patterning on the underside, with white chin and throat and beige chest and abdomen (likeC. himalayana), a striking voice (clearly different fromC. discolor and all otherCerthia species), and a large genetic distance fromC. d. discolor in the cytochrome-b gene. Unlike its closest relativeC. discolor, C. tianquanensi…

biologyEcologyFaunaTaigaForestrySubspeciesCerthiabiology.organism_classificationGeographyGenetic distanceTaxonomy (biology)Animal Science and ZoologyTreecreeperChinaGlobal biodiversityJournal für Ornithologie
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Additions to the Nepalese oribatid mite fauna, with description of two new species (Acari, Oribatida)

2013

An annotated checklist of identified oribatid mite taxa from Nepal is provided. It includes 45 species/subspecies, 38 genera and 31 families; 34 species/subspecies are recorded for the first time in Nepal. Two new species, Eremaeus anichkini n. sp. (Eremaeidae) and Ghilarovizetes longiporosus n. sp. (Ceratozetidae), are described from soil and litter. An identification key to all known species of the genus Ghilarovizetes is given.urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BE27D886-1294-4E55-AD0B-25CDFC663D71

biologyEcologyGenusInsect ScienceFaunaMiteIdentification keyKey (lock)AcariSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationOribatidaInternational Journal of Acarology
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Where are you from, stranger? The enigmatic biogeography of North African pond turtles (Emys orbicularis)

2014

Abstract The European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis) is a Nearctic element in the African fauna and thought to have invaded North Africa from the Iberian Peninsula. All North African populations are currently identified with the subspecies E. o. occidentalis. However, a nearly range-wide sampling in North Africa used for analyses of mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA provides evidence that only Moroccan populations belong to this taxon, while eastern Algerian and Tunisian pond turtles represent an undescribed distinct subspecies. These two taxa are most closely related to E. o. galloitalica with a native distribution along the Mediterranean coast of northern Spain through southern France …

biologyEmys orbicularisEcologyBiogeographySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaEndangered speciesEmydidaeSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationPhylogeographyTaxonparasitic diseasesReptilia Testudines Emydidae Phylogeography Africa Iberian Peninsula PalaearcticConservation statusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganisms Diversity &amp; Evolution
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Phytochemical Profile and Antioxidant Activity of the Aerial Part Extracts from Matthiola incana subsp. rupestris and subsp . pulchella ( Brassicacea…

2021

As part of a project aimed at investigating the Matthiola taxa endemic to Sicily (Italy), this study focused on Matthiola incana, an edible species used in the traditional medicine of various countries. Herein, the characterization of phenolic and volatile compounds, the antioxidant capacity in vitro (1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazil (DPPH), reducing power and Fe2+ chelating activity assays) and the toxicity test (Artemia salina lethality bioassay) of the hydroalcoholic extracts from the aerial parts of M. incana subsp. rupestris from Mt. Pellegrino (Palermo) and Mt. Erice (Trapani), and of M. incana subsp. pulchella are reported. The results are compared with those previously shown for M. inc…

biologyMatthiola incana010405 organic chemistryChemistryDPPHBioengineeringMatthiolaBrassicaceaeBrine shrimpGeneral ChemistryGeneral MedicineSubspeciesbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesBiochemistry0104 chemical sciences010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundPhytochemicalBotanyMolecular MedicineArtemia salinaMolecular BiologyChemistry &amp; Biodiversity
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An analysis of inter- and intraspecific genetic variabilities in theKluyveromyces marxianusgroup of yeast species for the reconsideration of theK. la…

2002

In the present work, we analyse the sequences of the 5.8S rRNA gene and the two internal transcribed spacers 1 and 2 (5.8S-ITS region), obtained from 39 strains belonging to the species Kluyveromyces aestuarii, K. dobzhanskii, K. lactis and K. marxianus, K. nonfermentans and K. wickerhamii, to solve the phylogenetic relationships among these species and also to determine the possible genetic basis for the delimitation of the two currently accepted K. lactis varieties: lactis, including lactose-positive strains isolated from dairy products, and drosophilarum, comprising lactose-negative strains isolated from insects and plant exudates. The determination of the phylogenetic relationships with…

biologyPhylogenetic treeBioengineeringRibosomal RNASubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryYeastTaxonKluyveromyces marxianusKluyveromycesMolecular phylogeneticsBotanyGeneticsBiotechnologyYeast
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Molecular phylogeny, biogeographic history, and evolution of cave-dwelling taxa in the European harvestman genusIschyropsalis(Opiliones: Dyspnoi)

2015

Abstract We estimated a multigenic molecular phylogeny and reconstructed biogeographic history for the European harvestman genus Ischyropsalis C.L. Koch 1839 (Dyspnoi). To reconstruct historical biogeographic patterns we conducted an algorithmic VIP analysis which revealed patterns consistent with a vicariance-dominated history. The existing morphology-based systematic framework for Ischyropsalis is mostly inconsistent with molecular phylogenetic results, and a new informal system is established that recognizes three main clades and several sub-clades. Species-level analyses revealed two non-monophyletic species (I. pyrenaea Simon 1872 and I. luteipes Simon 1872); subspecies of I. pyrenaea …

biologyPhylogenetic treeBiogeographic modellingZoologyOpilionesSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationMultilocus phylogenyCave evolutionSettore BIO/05 - ZOOLOGIATaxonGenusInsect ScienceDyspnoiMolecular phylogeneticsSpecies treeEcological specializationConvergenceCladeJournal of Arachnology
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Territorial song and song neighbourhoods in the Scarlet Rosefinch Carpodacus erythrinus

2000

Throughout the range of the Scarlet Rosefinch, its territorial song consists of 3–9 (usually 4–5) elements, of which there are 5 different types. The differences lie in the way the pitch of the element changes in time (frequency “slope”) and the width of the frequency band. Within a given type of song, the various elements can be present in almost any combination. Therefore, so many song types can be formed that the songs in even small parts of the species’ area are clearly distinct from one another. Despite this capacity for variation, however, by chance identical songs may be sung in widely separated parts of the area, in some cases by different subspecies. The species has not developed l…

biologyRange (biology)EcologyZoologySubspeciesGenus Carpodacusbiology.organism_classificationBreedErythrinusRosefinchVariation (linguistics)Seasonal breederAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Avian Biology
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