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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Dogielinotus loquax Barnard, a common intertidal macroinvertebrate on exposed ocean beaches near Grays Harbor, Washington, USA, is distributed from mid to mean high tidal levels, with a mean density of 1 830 m-2 in 1975–1976. Location of maximum density within the intertidal zone is related to surf intensity and varies seasonally. The species is iteroparous and has an average sex ratio of 1:1. Temperature constraints on growth and egg development rates apparently influence the timing of reproduction. Two dominant recruitments occur per year, one in early spring (the summer generation) and another in late summer (the overwintering generation). The sampling design and density estimates permitted estimation of the mortality rate for the summer generation. Shorebird predation is suspected to affect summer generation abundance.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Plant, cell & environment 8 (1985), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3040
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The spectra of incoming daylight and shadelight in a mature oak woodland were measured at intervals during the canopy cycle, and mean transmittance spectra were derived. Transmittance was spectrally neutral at ca. 0.55 during the light phase but, following leaf emergence, transmittance of PAR (400–700 nm) fell to ca. 0.1. Simultaneously, the red : far-red transmittance ratio fell to circa 0.6. Both showed little change during the summer and autumn until senescence, indicating that the optical properties of the canopy were surprisingly stable. There was no evidence that cloud cover influenced mean canopy transmittance, although transient sunflecks introduced great variability which, in combination with sampling bias, might explain previous contradictory reports. The red : far-red fluence rate ratio in the woodland showed a temporary increase in late summer, a result of a small increase in the red : far-red ratio of incoming daylight during this period. Reflectance and transmittance spectra and pigment content of sun and shade leaves were measured. Leaf transmittance spectra showed changes correlated with those of the canopy, and were related to changes in pigment content.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Plant, cell & environment 7 (1984), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3040
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract. Although daylength has a major effect on flowering and several other aspects of plant development, the actual environmental time signals for the beginning and the end of day are obscure. An intensive spectroradiometric study was carried out in three contrasting environments: namely, unshaded sites, a mature oak woodland and a sugar beet crop. Spectral photon distributions were obtained describing numerous twilight phases and intervening photoperiods throughout the year. From each, absolute photon fluence rates, photon fluence rate ratios and phytochrome photoequilibria were calculated. Although substantial changes in spectral composition occurred during twilight, they were less capable of providing reliable and accurate time signals than the absolute fluence rate; this was especially apparent beneath the canopies. Thus, spectral changes are unlikely to be valuable in photoperiodic perception. The results are discussed in relation to the possible involvement of the known plant photoreceptors in photoperiodism.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular genetics and genomics 253 (1996), S. 65-73 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Keywords Dictyostelium discoideum ; Heavy metal resistance ; Extrachromosomal DNA ; Gene amplification
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Wild-type Dictyostelium discoideum cells grow- ing on non-toxic levels of nickel chloride or cobaltous chloride accumulate 2–3.5 times as much nickel and at least 1.5 times as much cobalt as cobB mutants. The cobB trait is dominant, confers unstable cobalt and nickel resistance and is correlated with the presence of up to 50 copies of a linear extrachromosomal DNA, approximately 100 kb in length, derived from linkage group III. Independent cobB mutants can be obtained by selection on medium containing either cobalt or nickel. The amplified DNA can be transferred to wild-type strains by electroporation. Strains with mutations at a second cobalt resistance locus, cobA, accumulate the same amount of cobalt, but more nickel than wild-type strains. Our results are consistent with the cobA mutant phenotype being due to internal sequestration of cobalt, and the cobB mutant phenotype being due to reduced net uptake of cobalt and nickel. Energy-dependent nickel export was detectable in wild-type and cobB mutant strains but its role in heavy metal resistance has not yet been proved.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Planta 133 (1977), S. 169-177 
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Cell fractionation ; Cucurbita ; Histochemical staining ; Phosphotungstate-chromate staining ; Phytochrome ; Plasma membrane
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The phosphotungstic acid-chromic acid (PTA-CrO3) stain, putatively specific for the plasma membrane of plants, has been used in an attempt to monitor the distribution of this membrane in a 20,000 x g particulate fraction from Cucurbita hypocotyl hooks. On discontinuous sucrose gradients, the relative distributions of the phytochrome and PTA-CrO3-positive vesicles present in this fraction appear to be correlated. When intact tissue is stained, however, other components, in addition to the plasma membrane, react positively to the stain. These components include prolamellar-body membranes, lipid droplets, and ribosomes. This lack of specificity calls into question the reliability of the technique for the unequivocal identification and accurate quantitation of plasma-membrane fragments in isolated particulate fractions. The present data do not, therefore, provide unambiguous evidence that phytochrome is associated with plasma membrane in tissue homogenates from Cucurbita.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology 63 (1999), S. 646-653 
    ISSN: 1432-0800
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Medicine
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Apical cell ; Azolla ; Cell cycle ; Cell lineage ; Meristem (root) ; Root development
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The root of the water fern Azolla is a compact higher-plant organ, advantageous for studies of cell division, cell differentiation, and morphogenesis. The cell complement of A. filiculoides Lam. and A. pinnata R.Br. roots is described, and the lineages of the cell types, all derived ultimately from a tetrahedral apical cell, are characterised in terms of sites and planes of cell division within the formative zone, where the initial cells of the cell files are generated. Subsequent proliferation of the initial cells is highly specific, each cell type having its own programme of divisions prior to terminal differentiation. Both formative and proliferative divisions (but especially the former) occur in regular sequences. Two enantiomorphic forms of root develop, with the dispositions of certain types of cell correlating with the direction, dextrorse or sinistrorse, of the cell-division sequence in the apical cells. Root growth is determinate, the apical cell dividing about 55 times, and its cell-cycle duration decreasing from an initial 10 h to about 4 h during the major phase of root development. Sites of proliferation progress acropetally during aging, but do not penetrate into the zone of formative divisions. The detailed portrait of root development that was obtained is discussed with respect to genetic and epigenetic influences; quantal and non-quantal cell cycles; variation in cell-cycle durations; relationships between cell expansion and cell division: the role of the apical cell; and the limitation of the total number of mitotic cycles during root formation.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Azolla ; Microtubules ; Microtubule-organising centre ; Pre-prophase band ; Root (microtubules)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Complexes of microtubules, vesicles, and (to varying degrees) dense matrix material around the microtubules were seen along the edges of cells in root apices of Azolla pinnata R.Br. (viewing the cells as polyhedra with faces, vertices and edges). They are best developed after cytokinesis has been completed, when the daughter cells are reinstating their interphase arrays of microtubules. They are not confined to edges made by the junction of new cell plates with parental walls, but occur also along older edges. Similar matrices and vesicles are seen amongst phragmoplast microtubules and where pre-prophase bands intersect the edges of cells. It is suggested that the complexes participate in the development of cortical arrays of microtubules. The observations are combined with others, made on pre-prophase bands and on the substructure of cortical arrays lying against the faces of cells, to develop an hypothesis on the development of cortical microtubules, summarised below: Microtubules are nucleated along the edges of cells, at first growing in unspecified orientations and then becoming bridged to the plasma membrane. Parallelism of microtubules in the arrays arises by inter-tubule cross-bridging. Lengths of microtubule are released from, or break off, the nucleating centres and are moved out onto the face of the cell by intertubule and tubule-membrane sliding, thus accounting for the presence there of short tubules with randomly placed terminations. The nucleating zones along cell edges might have vectorial properties, and thus be able to control the orientation of the microtubules on the different faces of the cell. Also, localised activation could generate localised arrays, especially pre-prophase bands in specified sites and planes. Two possible reasons for the spatial restriction of nucleation to cell edges are considered. One is that the geometry of an edge is itself important; the other is that along most cell edges there is a persistent specialised zone, inherited at cytokinesis by the daughter cells when the cell plate bisects the former pre-prophase-band zone.
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Azolla ; Cell division ; Microtubules ; Pre-prophase band ; Root (microtubules)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Pre-prophase bands of microtubules were found in every category of cell division, symmetrical and asymmetrical, in the cell lineages of the root apex of Azolla pinnata R.Br. and A. filiculoides Lam., and in the transverse divisions in the cell files of the roots. They are also found in the asymmetrical cell division that gives rise to trichoblasts in roots of Hydrocharis dubia (B1). Backer. It is possible, in a variety of cell types in roots of Azolla, to predict within a fraction of a micrometre where a new cell wall will be located. In every such case the midline of the 1.5–3-μm-wide pre-prophase band anticipates this location. Each of the daughter cells thus inherits approximately half of the former pre-prophase band site. Images interpreted as stages of formation of the band were obtained, its microtubules replacing the interphase cortical arrays. In one highly asymmetrical division, band formation precedes migration of the nucleus to the site of mitosis. The asymmetrical division that gives rise to root hairs passes acropetally along every cell in the dermatogen layer, and preprophase bands were seen up to 8 cells in advance of the last completed division. Here, and in the zone of formative divisions, the band is present for much longer than the duration of mitosis. The ubiquity of the band in the Azolla root tip is discussed in relation to the literature, and a working hypothesis is presented that takes into account current knowledge of occurrence, development and function of the band.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Chenopodium ; Photoperception ; Phytochrome ; Shade avoidance ; Stem extension
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of far-red light given against a background of white light on the stem-extension kinetics of three-week-old, light-grown Chenopodium album seedlings were investigated. Under white light alone, the stems (cotyledon-to-apex) extended almost exactly logarithmically with time. Under these conditions the increase in log [stem length in mm] per hour was approx. 3.7·10-3, equivalent to about 1% per h during both skoto-and photoperiods. Supplementary far-red given throughout each photoperiod massively stimulated extension. The calculated logarithmic extension rate, however, slowly returned to that of the controls, following an initial large increase. This is predicted by a model in which far-red light linearly increases the extension rate of individual internodes which arise at an exponentially increasing rate. The behaviour of the model is also consistent with critical experiments in which far-red was given as a pre-treatment or transiently, as well as with other published data. Far-red stimulation of logarithmic extension rate in successive photoperiods was closely and linearly correlated with calculated phytochrome photoequilibrium. Daily short periods of supplementary far-red were especially potent in accelerating extension; the plants seemed least responsive at the end of the photoperiod.
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