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  • Springer  (58,868)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)  (2,505)
  • Springer Science + Business Media
  • American Chemical Society (ACS)
  • 1990-1994  (61,373)
  • 1990  (61,373)
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  • 1990-1994  (61,373)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Carbon partitioning ; Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate ; Needle development ; Needle loss ; Picea abies ; Starch/sucrose/intermediates
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Intermediates involved in carbon partitioning between starch and sucrose [dihydroxyacetone phosphate + glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (TP), 3-phosphoglyceric acid, fructose 6-phosphate (F6P), fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F26BP), in addition to glucose, fructose, sucrose and starch] were analysed in lyophilized needles of Norway spruce (Picea abies L. Karst). Samples were taken from all distinct parts of first and second order branches and the analysed data related to season, needle age, needle position and degree of needle loss (control and class 2 approx. 30%–40% needle loss). Positive and inverse correlations of F26BP, an important regulator of carbon partitioning between starch and sucrose, and F6P or TP existed in all samples. F26BP levels were highest in developing needles and gradually decreased during maturation, which is possibly indicative of changes in the relative sink strength during development (switch from import to export of sucrose). In class 2 needles the amount of F26BP was significantly increased. Together with nearly unaltered levels of sucrose but only slightly decreased amounts of starch the results can be taken as evidence for impaired carbon export in our class 2 samples. The data are discussed with respect to needle development and a possible impact of both air pollutants and mineral deficiency at the location from which the samples were taken.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Deposition ; Dew ; Pine ; Pinus sylvestris ; Spruce ; Picea abies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Dew droplets collected with pipettes from coniferous needles were analysed for their ionic composition. Almost all samples of dew taken from Scots pine trees (Pinus sylvestris) showed significantly higher ion concentrations than those taken from Norway spruce trees (Picea abies). This can be explained by the micromorphology of the needle surface. The higher microscale roughness of the wax layer of a pine needle causes a more efficient flux of atmospheric aerosol particles compared to the spruce needle surface. Dew on coniferous needles is shown to be capable of maintaining pH values below 3 for several hours.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Branch junctions ; Circular vessels ; Pinus ; Quercus ; Vascular differentiation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Regions of spiral vascular tissues and circular vessels occur normally in branch junctions. Their size and frequency increase continuously with age and stem width. This phenomenon is general and was found in all the 15 species studied. The differentiation of narrow spiral vessels with non-functional circular vessels decreases water conductivity through branch junctions leading to hydraulic segmentation of lateral branches from the main stem. Possible hormonal mechanisms controlling circular vascular patterns and narrow vascular elements are discussed.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Seasonal fluctuation ; Needle ; Picea abies ; (Mono) terpene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary This investigation was conducted to obtain information about the fluctuations in composition and amount of needle monoterpenes during the development of spruce needles. Studies conducted with two Norway spruce clones clearly revealed the existence of fluctuations. In juvenile needles, the amounts of the oxygenated terpenes increase constantly with age during the first 2 months of needle growth. The hydrocarbon terpenes dominate within the first weeks, some of them even showing a very distinct first maximum within the first 3 weeks after bud burst. All terpenes, including the oxygenated ones, have a maximum in June/July, which favours the hypothesis of a substitution of the hydrocarbons later on. There are significant changes even in mature needles of Norway spruce. The terpene level of 1-year-old needles of the clonal trees increased from spring to early summer and then dropped again towards winter. In addition, fluctuations in mature needles were shown for a set of ten wild trees. Needles of the same age class, which emerged in 1986, were sampled 4 times from 1986 to 1988. The needle terpene concentrations of the 1 -year-old needles were considerably lower in spring at the time of bud burst than in autumn. The terpene level of older needles thus seems to be influenced by biosynthetic and catabolic activities.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Forest decline ; Needle yellowing ; Chlorophylls ; Carotenoids ; Picea abies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary In a forest decline area (Fichtelgebirge, N.E. Bavaria, FRG), annual time courses of chloroplast pigments in both healthy and chlorotic Norway spruce were studied. The seasonal time courses of green and apparently healthy trees did not generally differ from those reported in the literature for spruce trees of other regions. Chlorophyll content increased from May to October, remained relatively constant or declined slightly during the fall and early winter, and finally decreased markedly from March to early May when pigment is at its minimum before bud break. The annual maximal chlorophyll content increased with needle age from the current year's needles to 4-yearold needles. While carotene content reached its highest concentration in August, the xanthophylls did not peak until February or March. Pigment dynamics of chlorotic trees with lower concentrations, corresponded to those of undamaged trees. Chlorophyll deficits resulted from less pigment formation as well as pigment loss during the growing period. Even when the content of total chlorophyll was low, the ratio of chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b remained almost unchanged. In conjunction with the chlorophyll reductions, a decrease in the chlorophyll/carotenoid ratio and an increase in the xanthophyll/carotene ratio occurred. The periods of needle-chlorophyll reduction did not correlate with those periods of highest concentrations of atmospheric sulphur dioxide, the main air pollutant at the stand. However, chlorophyll formation ceased in the older needle age classes of chlorotic trees when the new flush was sprouting, indicating that nutritional deficiencies affect needle yellowing more than possible direct needle damage by air pollutants.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: ATP ; ADP ; Forest decline ; Needle development ; Picea abies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Pool sizes of ATP and ADP were analysed in freeze-stopped, lyophilised homogenates of needles from Norway spruce [Picea abies (L.) Karst.]. Control experiments in which possible changes in adenylate pools during sample acquisition were investigated did not reveal significant differences between needles taken from branches in situ or within a 30-min period after cutting off a branch. In addition, pool sizes of ADP and ATP were not affected by changes in light intensity (between 60 and 1500 μE*-m-2*s-1), which inevitably occur when samples have to be taken from the upper region of older trees. Levels of ATP and ADP showed considerable seasonal changes (May through October) with the highest ratios of ATP/ADP in developing needles. In general, there was a tendency towards increased ratios of ATP/ADP with increasing needle age. This observation was corroborated by analyses of needles from spruce trees of different age and growing under different conditions. Needles from declining trees or from trees specifically fumigated with low concentrations of ozone and sulphur dioxide had significantly increased ratios of ATP/ADP compared to controls. The results are discussed with respect to physiological responses connected with natural senescence and induced ageing.
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  • 7
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 107-110 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Needles ; Ozone ; Picea abies ; Starch
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Fumigation with 100 μg/m3 and 200 μg/m3 ozone in closed-top fumigation chambers induced starch accumulation in chloroplasts of Norway spruce. This accumulation was probably due to a partial inhibition of the starch translocation at night. The intensity of the effect was dependent on the season and the age of the needles. The accumulation was reversed in winter. It is therefore unlikely that such an effect has much significance for plant health.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Dendrochronology ; Abrupt growth changes ; Periodicities
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Growth ring sequences in conifers and broadleaved trees show abrupt growth reductions persisting for several years. The frequency and duration of such reductions in almost 10000 trees in forest stands of Central Europe, in particular Switzerland, and in the Front Range, Colorado, USA, is related to species, climate and weather, and geographical unit. The growth reductions in the populations investigated are concentrated in certain periods and, in all species examined, essentially related to periods of drought in the spring and summer months. During the years covered by the study (1850–1985), periods of growth reduction occur in Central Europe, the Front Range, Colorado, and also in the Hudson Valley, New York, at irregular intervals of 6–34 years, and on average every 13–14 years. The growth reduction periods normally do not show synchronism between the three areas investigated. Regionally valid growth periodicities can only be definitely determined through the examination of a very large amount of material comprising a number of species growing in different forest stands and on different sites within a major phytosociological unit. Findings from studies on trees in different climatic areas or on few samples scarcely allow reliable comparisons.
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  • 9
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 128-135 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Fruit abscission ; Hibiscus rosa-sinensis ; Microautoradiography ; Phloem transport ; Starch deposition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Flowering cultivars of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis L. were either cross-pollinated or self-pollinated. Fruit set was observed on 52% of the cross-fertilized flowers, while only 4.6% of the self-fertilized flowers were not abscised. Once during fruit and seed growth, the subtending leaf was exposed to 14CO2, and translocation of labelled photoassimilate was recorded by macro- and microautoradiography. Phloem transport into the raphe occurred in both fruits with fertilized and fruits with non-fertilized ovules. Since empty ovules showed some sink strength, it is assumed that growth of vegetative seed-tissue signalizes the retardation of completion of the abscission process. During fruit growth a considerable amount of starch is deposited in the distal layer of the abscission zone. Part of this starch is consumed during growth of cross-fertilized fruits.
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  • 10
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 136-141 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Mesophyll ; Tamarix aphylla ; Tubule bundles ; Vacuoles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Vacuoles of differentiating mesophyll cells of Tamarix aphylla contain an amorphous electron-dense material in which stacks of parallel aligned striations are embedded. Cross-sections of the striations disclosed that they represent profiles of longitudinally sectioned bundles of tubules (tubule outer diameter 9.0 nm, tubule wall thickness 1.8 nm). In advanced mesophyll cell development, the amorphous vacuolar material disappears, whereas the bundles of tubules turn into bundles of double helices (double helix diameter 14.5 nm). Cytochemical treatment of mesophyll cells with the enzymes pepsin and trypsin has revealed that both the bundles of tubules/double helices and the embedding material are constituted of protein. The possible functional role of the vacuolar inclusions is discussed.
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Carbon dioxide ; Conifers ; Ethylene ; Gaschromatography ; Mass spectrometry ; Oxygen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The trees sampled in this study came from two stands of Norway spruce, Picea abies (L.) Karst., near Stockholm, Sweden, differing in mean age and height. Holes were bored perpendicular to the stem surface, and gas samples were taken from the outer part of the sapwood throughout one growing season. Endogenous levels of molecular oxygen (O2), carbon dioxide (CO2) and ethylene in the outer sapwood were determined by combined gas chromatography — mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and GC. O2 concentrations began to decrease as growth started in spring. The lowest levels (〈5%) were recorded around mid-summer. In the younger stand concentrations remained below 5% until September. In October, O2 concentrations in the sapwood were similar to those of air. Concentrations of CO2 were below 1% in spring, but began to rise in May, peaking a month later at approximately 10%. Thereafter a slow decrease occurred until October, by which time levels had returned to those recorded in spring. Ethylene concentrations in the older stand reached 75 ppm early in May, while levels in the younger stand peaked at around 30 ppm later in May. Thereafter ethylene levels in both stands started to decrease down to ppb levels. The correlation between determined gas levels and physiological events associated with the seasonal growth cycle in temperate zones is discussed.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Apical dominance ; Clonal variation ; Nauclea diderrichii ; Plagiotropism ; Vegetative propagation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Nauclea diderrichii (De Wild, and Th. Dur.) Merill (Rubiaceae), an indigenous hardwood of West Africa, is increasingly being grown commercially. This study investigates the potential for vegetative propagation and clonal selection, and raises some fundamental questions about the physiology of apical dominance and of plagiotropism. Rooting ability was high, with up to 100% rooting in 2–4 weeks, when different Indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) concentrations and leaf areas were tested. Auxin applications greatly increased the numbers of roots per cutting. The decapitation of unbranched plants revealed clonal variation in apical dominance and also in the establishment of outright dominance by the two shoots formed from the outgrowth of the axillary buds of the opposite leaves at the top node. Regression analysis of the Dominance Ratio (length of dominant: length of the sub-dominant shoot at the time of achieving dominance) against overall lateral bud activity (r = 0.82), showed that when the two top shoots co-dominate they provide a more powerful source of Correlative Inhibition than when one of the top shoots dominates the other. The imposition of plagiotropism in the axillary bud occurred over a period of a few days as the terminal and axillary buds emerged from the stipule. Growth of accessory buds on intact plants and debranched cuttings was orthotropic. These results are discussed with regard to the role of the leaf in root formation and the understanding of dominance relationships, branching and crown development in trees.
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  • 13
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 179-186 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: 14C translocation ; Microautoradiography ; Phloem loading/unloading ; Picea abies ; Symplastic transport
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Translocation of 14C assimilates was studied on four different transport systems of Picea abies branches after induced activation in January. 14CO2 assimilation of terminal shoots for 48 h at 25° C resulted in phloem loading and basipetal transport of 14C photosynthate into the following, older shoot generations. 14C import was enhanced, when these older shoot generations were kept in the dark. Microautoradiographs of the labelled terminal shoots showed that 14C assimilates were exported from needles via sieve elements of the leaf traces and loaded into the latest increment of the axial secondary phloem. No 14C label appeared in the obliterated sieve cells or in the tracheids. In addition, 14C photosynthate accumulated densely in the chlorophyllous cells of the cortex and in cells of the resin ducts, indicating certain sink activity. In the darkened 2-year-old shoot, imported 14C photosynthate was concentrated in the functional secondary phloem, while some 14C label was unloaded into the latest xylem increment. When 6-year-old shoots were exposed to 14CO2 for 48 h in the light, 14C assimilates accumulated in the phloem of the leaf trace and in the latest increment of the axial secondary phloem. However, a substantial amount of radioactivity was unloaded into ray cells and phloem parenchyma cells. Thus, the presence of functioning phloem in needles and twigs of P. abies during winter allows long-distance translocation and radial distribution of assimilates according to existing source-sink relations.
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  • 14
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 191-197 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Unresponsive stomata ; Stomatal conductance ; Hybrid poplar
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The factors affecting stomatal conductance (gs) of I-214 (Populus euramericana) and a hybrid poplar, Peace (P. koreana x P. trichocarpa), were examined in the field and under controlled environment conditions. Unusual opening of the stomata was observed with Peace leaves at all positions. Ontogenetic changes in gs were similar between these two poplar species in the light. However, the dark/light ratio of gs in Peace poplar varied from 0.58 to 1.23 with the insertion level while that of I-214 poplar was zero except for the third leaf from the top. The gs of I-214 poplar changed with time of the day, varying from 0.74 mol m-2s-1 in the morning to zero at night, while the gs of Peace poplar changed only from the minimum value of 0.23 mol m-2s-1 at night to the maximum of 0.48 mol m-2s-1 in the morning. Under severe water stress, below -1.5 MPa, which decreased the gs of I-214 poplar to almost zero, the gs of Peace poplar remained about onethird of that observed with well-watered leaves. Exposure to a relatively high concentration of O3 caused the gs of I-214 poplar to decrease nearly to zero but had no effect on the gs of Peace. Stomata of Peace poplar were not affected by ABA and the gs did not change even with 10-4 M ABA, while the gs of I-214 decreased to almost zero on the application of this concentration of ABA.
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  • 15
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 225-227 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Buttress roots ; Failure mechanism ; Root delamination ; Wind breakage
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary There are different types of tree failure under wind loading. Here a special mechanism is discussed by which redirectioning of the tensile forces acting in the tree stem causes a lateral force to become effective away from the stem-root transition contour line. This force leads to delamination of the root followed by development of an axial crack running up the stem, until total stem failure by fibre buckling on the compression side of the stem completes the destruction. It is shown that buttress roots could reduce the danger associated with this failure mechanism.
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  • 16
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Chlorophyll fluorescence quenching ; Malus ; Photosynthesis ; Water stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary A convenient system for the rapid simultaneous measurement of both chlorophyll fluorescence quenching using a modulated light system, and of CO2, and water vapour exchange by leaves is described. The system was used in a study of the effects of water deficits on the photosynthesis by apple leaves (Malus x domestica Borkh.). Apple leaves were found to have low values of steady-state variable fluorescence, and the existence of significant fluorescence with open traps (Fo) quenching necessitated the measurement and use of a corrected Fo in the calculation of quenching components. Long-term water stress had a marked effect on both gas-exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence quenching. Non-photochemical quenching (qn) in particular was increased in water-stressed leaves, and it was particularly sensitive to incident radiation in such leaves. In contrast, rapid dehydration only affected gas exchange. Relaxation of qn quenching in the dark was slow, taking approximately 10 min for a 50% recovery, in well-watered and in draughted plants, and whether or not the plants had been exposed to high light.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Carbon allocation ; 14C labelling ; Long-term experiments ; Scots pine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary 14CO2 at ambient concentration was administered to a section of an upper branch of 8-year-old Scots pines and the import of radiocarbon into the stem and roots was determined after various chase periods. 14CO2 fixation was performed in October when export of carbon into the stems and roots was maximal. In the short-term experiments the trees were harvested 1 h, 2 days and 5 days after a 3-h 14C pulse, while chase periods of 5 or 8 months were used in the long-term experiments. Loss of 14C was initially substantial, and even after a 5-day chase had not come down to a rate which indicated decrease only by respiration. After 5 days, more than 10% of the recovered radiocarbon (53% of the 14C translocated into the stem) had entered the roots and approximately the same amount was found in the stem. Extension of the chase period beyond 5 months did not result in a further significant loss of 14C by respiration, and the bulk of the label could be localized in the cell-wall fraction. No substantial redistribution of radiocarbon prior and subsequent to the formation of the new shoots could be observed, thus indicating that the stored material was utilized for thickening the stem and roots. Radioautography of stem cross-sections revealed a narrow helical strip of 14C from the feeding branch to the root in the phloem region. In the tree harvested after bud break the utilization of the 14C-labelled material stored in the stem for the production of the first layers of earlywood and the corresponding phloem was apparent.
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  • 18
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Bavaria ; Genetic variation ; Needle ; Picea abies ; (Mono)terpene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary As genetic diversity is an important cause of variation in needle monoterpenes of conifers, the tree-to-tree variation was studied for Picea abies (L.) Karst. at eight different locations in three mountainous regions of southern Germany (Bavaria). The tree-to-tree variation, expressed by the coefficients of variation, is high, ranging between 50% and 70%. The maximum concentrations per tree are up to 10 times higher than the minimum ones. The trees from all locations show similar patterns of variation, which is significant when investigating the influence of external parameters like air pollution or infestation by pathogens. By means of cluster analysis five types of terpene patterns were clearly revealed. Two main groups were distinguished by their proportion of myrcene, and they are further divided into subgroups. The patterns are stable throughout different needle ages and dates of sampling. Apart from one location, there is no obvious geographical arrangement of the five patterns. The fact that no relationship exists between the genotypical classification and the total concentrations agrees well with the hypothesis that most of the variability based on the relative amounts is due to genetic variation, whereas the variation based on the absolute amounts reflects environmental factors.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Endodermis ; Larix decidua ; Mycorrhiza ; Picea abies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The differentiation of the endodermis of mycorrhizal roots of Picea abies and Larix decidua was investigated by means of light and transmission electron microscopy and with fluorescence techniques. The initiation and differentiation of the Hartig net were recorded. Differences between the two tree species were found, as were differences between the two tree species and angiosperms. The Casparian band developed immediately after the origin of endodermal cells from the meristem in mycorrhizae of both tree species. In L. decidua only the primary endodermis was present in most mycorrhizal laterals. The secondary structure of the endodermis was restricted to main roots and proximal parts of larch mycorrhizae. In P. abies mycorrhizae, however, the secondary stage of the endodermis developed soon after the primary endodermis and was characterized by regular alternation of short, active passage cells and elongated, rapidly degenerating cells, the inner surface of which was covered by a thick suberin layer. Hartig net development started in P. abies short roots only after the differentiation of endodermis into the secondary stage, whereas in L. decidua, the Hartig net was already initiated at the primary endodermal stage. Differences were specific for tree species.
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Calcium ; Fagus sylvatica ; Magnesium ; Manganese ; Mineral content ; Potassium ; Seasonalvariation ; Xylem sap
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary In a 35-year-old calcareous beech forest stand five beech trees (Fagus sylvatica L.) were felled every 2 weeks, and xylem sap was obtained by means of water displacement from the lowest trunk sections, each 100 cm in length. From mid-October 1988 to mid-October 1989 a total of 130 trees were investigated. The seasonal variations of the Ca, Mg, K and Mn contents, as well as those of pH, show four characteristic phases. Additionally, distribution of the mineral contents along the trunk was studied in four trees. The seasonal increase and decrease of xylem sap mineral contents along the trunk is shown for the characteristic phenophases. The Ca, Mg, K, and Mn contents of xylem saps were determined by means of atomicabsorptionspectrophotometry.
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  • 21
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 88-98 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Cambium ; Growth respiration ; Maintenance respiration ; Phenology ; Sapwood
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Woody-tissue respiration was measured on five different dates at three to five locations on each of 12 30-year-old Abies amabilis trees. On any given date, temperature-corrected respiration per unit surface area varied 10 to 40-fold between sampling locations. In stems, the two major components of respiration were growth respiration and sapwood maintenance respiration, which were of roughly equal importance during the growing season. There was no evidence of significant cambial maintenance respiration, suggesting that a stand with high bole surface area would not automatically have high respiration. Respiration in branches was much greater than in boles of comparable volume and growth rates, and was significantly correlated with branch height. Branch respiration may include an another significant component in addition to the two seen in bole respiration, possibly associated with carbohydrate mobilization and transport or with CO2 efflux from the transpiration stream.
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Epicuticular wax structure ; Needle development ; NH3 ; Air pollution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Changes in epicuticular wax morphology of Pseudotsuga menziesii needles were studied with scanning electron microscopy throughout the growing season in current-year and older needles in 20 trees from two sites, Kootwijk and Garderen (The Netherlands). Fusion of crystalline wax rods leading to a reticulate structure and ultimately to degradation of the regular three-dimensional porous structure started several weeks after bud break and reached a high level at the end of the first growing season. The increase in amorphous (solid) wax showed a similar, but slightly slower development. In 1- and 2-year-old needles the degradation of crystalline wax and increase in amorphous wax had progressed only slightly further. The rates of change in crystalline wax morphology were very similar for sun-exposed and shaded needles, for the two sites, and for the two tree vitality classes included in the samples. The development of epiphyllous fungi also appeared to be largely needle age dependent. The effects of NH3 on needle wax morphology were studied in young trees used in fumigation experiments. Short-term fumigation (approx. 5 weeks) did not affect wax morphology in current-year needles, but 1-year-old needles which had been exposed to different concentrations from bud break onwards showed a severe degradation of the crystalline wax, regardless of the NH3 concentration used. In 2-yearold needles the effect of NH3 could not be traced and was overshadowed by the natural ageing process. Ambient O3, SO2 and NOx levels did not effect epicuticular wax morphology. It is suggested that the variation recorded for the two forest stands does not show effects of local pollution levels.
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  • 23
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Microvacuolation ; Poplar cortical cell ; Protein-lipid body ; Seasonal variation ; Vacuole fusion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Electron microscopic studies revealed that major cytological changes in the cortical cells of poplar (Populus euramericana cv. gelrica) began to occur in early September in conjunction with the metabolic transition from the growing to the wintering stage. During this transition, the cells became temporarily rich in endoplasmic reticulum, polysomes and vesicles. As the conspicuous formation of organelles progressed, the large vacuoles became smaller and filled with osmiophilic materials. Undefined organelles (protein-lipid bodies) also increased in number. From late October until March, organelles involved in protein synthesis were sparsely distributed in the cells, indicating that the number of these organelles is probably linked to the seasonal cycle of protein synthesis. In early February, after release from dormancy, fusion of vacuoles proceeded in the cells. The inclusion of organelles and a gradual decrease in the amount of osmiophilic materials in the vacuoles occurred at this stage. Subsequently, the structure of the cells continued to undergo changes to accommodate growth, which occurred in early May.
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  • 24
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 142-149 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Net respiration ; Male cones ; Female cones ; Respiration model
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The effect of light on the efflux of CO2 from reproductive structures and vegetative buds of Pinus contorta (Dougl.) was measured 12 times during the life cycle of female cones and three times towards the end of the life cycle of male cones. The net efflux of CO2 from female cones, vegetative and male cone-bearing buds decreased exponentially with increasing quantum flux density. A simple model was derived relating temperature and quantum flux density to the net CO2 efflux from female cones. This model was used to estimate the net respiratory losses from female cones from a few weeks after pollination until the cones senesced with the light regime normally experienced at Edinburgh (56° N). It was estimated that during that period the net respiration rate of female cones was 25% less than their dark respiration rate. This model was also used to estimate the net respiratory losses from an estimated crop of female cones in two forest stands and the simulation model MAESTRO was used to estimate the CO2 assimilated by the needles on the trees over the same days. These simulations suggest that female cones normally respire carbon equivalent to only a small proportion (〈3%) of a tree's daily assimilated CO2.
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  • 25
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    Trees 4 (1990), S. 155-163 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Water relations ; Conductance ; Water potential ; Tropical trees ; Turgor pressure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Diurnal courses of stomatal conductance, leaf water potential, and the components of tissue water potential were measured in six canopy species in an elfin cloud forest. High values of stomatal conductance were measured on cloudy days and during early morning and late afternoon of sunny days. Decreases in stomatal conductance with increases in vapour pressure deficit may have been a response to avoid further water deficits and suggested a stomatal response to changes in relative humidity. Daily transpiration varied between 470 and 1014 g m-2 day-1 during cloudy days and between 532 and 944 g m-2 day-1 during clear days. Stomatal conductance may have also responded to changes in leaf water potential, which was minimum at noon. The minimum tissue water potential measured in the field was -1.8 MPa in Myrcianthes fragrans, and the minimum turgor pressure was 0.49 MPa also in M. fragrans. There was a correlation between the osmotic potential and the minimum tissue water potential, suggesting that osmotic potential plays a major role in the maintenance of turgor in these species, in spite of the great variability in the elastic properties of leaf tissues. Turgor pressure decreased during the day following the course of water potential but never approached the turgor loss point, as it has been measured in some lowland rain forest trees. This is a strong indication that elfin cloud forest trees do not suffer severe water deficits, and that small tree stature is not directly related to water shortage.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Ginkgo biloba ; Secretory cavities ; Anacardic acids ; Leucoplasts ; Secretion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The differentiation of the secretory cavities of Ginkgo stem and the structural organization of the epithelial cells were followed by light and electron microscopy. The mode of formation of the cavities is schizo-lysigeneous. Functional complexes of leucoplasts and associated endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes are assumed to be the site of synthesis and translocation of the lipophilic secretory product. Most of the endoplasmic reticulum membranes are paired. The content of the cavities was directly collected and analysed by low- and high-resolution mass spectrometry. The cavities contain anacardic acids and cardanols, which are long-chain phenol lipids not characteristic of Ginkgo. The relationship between the plastid/ER complexes and the production of these secondary metabolites is discussed.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Mansonones ; Phytoalexins ; Ophiostoma ; Ulmus ; Dutch elm disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The accumulation of mansonones E and F was investigated in Ulmus americana L. seedlings 5 weeks after inoculation with three aggressive and three non-aggressive isolates of Ophiostoma ulmi (Buism.) Nannf. The three non-aggressive isolates stimulated significantly more mansonone E and F accumulation than the three aggressive isolates of O. ulmi. Mansonone induction also varied within both the aggressive and the non-aggressive groups. Aggressive and non-aggressive isolates were recovered in equal frequencies from the inoculation wounds, whereas the aggressive isolates were recovered more frequently than the non-aggressive isolates 15 cm and 25 cm up the seedlings' stem. Vascular browning in the outer xylem of the seedlings correlated with mansonone E and F accumulation. Mansonone accumulation in U. americana seedlings is therefore associated with vascular browning and a reduction in fungal spread.
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Enzymes ; Needle age ; Norway spruce ; Organic acids ; Ozone
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The effect of ozone, needle age, and season on the pH of homogenate and acid contents of Scots pine and Norway spruce needles is presented. In addition enzyme activities of cytochrome C-oxidase (cyt. C-ox), phosphoenolpyruvate-carboxylase (PEPC), shikimic acid-dehydrogenase (SHDH) and malate-dehydrogenase (MDH) were measured in Scots pine needles. In freshly sprouted spruce needles the level of quinic acid is high and the pH of the needle homogenate is low. Shikimic acid starts at low levels, increases with increasing needle age and becomes dominant, whereas the quinic acid content decreases. Malic acid has a marked seasonal trend; no trend was found in citric acid. Ozone (200 μg/m3) decreased shikimic acid and quinic acid, whereas pH, malic acid and citric acid increased. Ozone (100 μg/m3) had a similar effect, except in the current-year spruce needles. In Scots pine needles ozone led to increased enzymatic activities of cyt. C-ox, PEPC and SHDH, and a decrease in the activity of MDH. This effect was more pronounced in summer than in autumn, but the visible damage was greater in autumn. These effects can be found with other stresses and are not specific for ozone.
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  • 29
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Cloud water ; Deposition ; Acidity ; Sitka spruce
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Enhancement of the acidity of water on conifer needles, caused by evaporation even during the presence of cloud, is investigated. Field measurements of the acidity of droplets on polypropylene surfaces, shaped like needle bearing conifer shoots, and on Sitka spruce shoots, showed that surface droplet acidity varied significantly over a few hours, due to many causes. The acidity of the droplets commonly reached 800 μeq/l (pH = 3.1) and occasionally 1000 μeq/l (pH = 3.0). Increases in H+ ion concentration due to evaporation of pure water from the droplets occurred particularly around the end of cloud events. It was concluded that variation of H+ concentration of water on conifer needles due to evaporation during the presence of cloud is likely to be less important than that due to the other reasons. In particular the increase in H+ concentration from the reduction in droplet volume, due to evaporation, after the end of a cloud event is likely to be the most significant.
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  • 30
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Picea abies ; Nutrition ; Nutrient ratios ; Forest decline
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary During the summer of 1986, three year-classes of foliage were sampled from approximately 30-year-old Norway spruce [Picea abies (L.) Karst.] trees at 12 sites from S. W. Germany to N. Scotland. At sites in Germany, where trees were showing symptoms of ‘decline’, samples were taken from trees with ‘good’ crown condition and ‘poor’ crown conditon. The distinction between ‘good’ and ‘poor’ was made on the basis of international protocols for defining crown density and foliar discoloration. There was a wide range in nutrient content (percent dry weight) in apparently healthy trees. Current year foliage had ranges of mean values per site: S(0.07–0.13%), N(0.9–1.4%), K(0.5–0.9%), Ca(0.2–0.7%), and Mg (0.05–0.1%). Ranges were greater for 2-year-old foliage: S(0.09–0.18%), N(1.0–1.8%), K(0.4–0.7%), Ca(0.2–1.4%), and Mg(0.03–0.09%). At sites with trees having ‘poor’ crown condition, there were significantly smaller concentrations of Mg and Ca, and larger concentrations of K in 2-year-old foliage from ‘poor’ trees, compared with adjacent ‘good’ trees. Ratios of nutrient content were more significantly related to crown condition within sites than individual nutrients, especially in older needles. ‘Poor’ crowns were associated with larger ratios of N∶Mg, K∶Mg, S∶Mg, K∶Ca and smaller ratios of S∶K and N∶K. A ‘risk index’ is defined for trees showing no visible ‘decline’ symptoms, based upon nutrient content and nutrient ratios, which may be useful in identifying sites liable to experience deterioration in crown condition. With the exception of one German site, where few ‘poor’ trees were observed, the index increases from Scottish sites to English sites to Dutch sites to German sites. The index is empirical, and not necessarily related to potential effects of air pollution. The time dependence of foliar nutrient content may also be useful in diagnosis. At sites with trees having ‘poor’ crown condition, even apparently healthy trees showed a lack of increase in calcium content with needle age, decreases in nitrogen content and very large decreases in magnesium content with needle age. The results show the importance of sampling several year classes of foliage from Norway spruce trees in determining the nutrient status of the tree.
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 117-118 
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 1-1 
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 2-7 
    ISSN: 1432-2315
    Keywords: Volume rendering ; Voxel ; Adaptive refinement ; Adaptive sampling ; Ray tracing
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: Abstract Volume rendering is a technique for visualizing sampled scalar functions of three spatial dimensions by computing 2D projections of a colored semi-transparent gel. This paper presents a volume-rendering algorithm, in which image quality is adaptively refined over time. An initial image is generated by casting a small number of rays into the data, less than one ray per pixel, and interpolating between the resulting colors. Subsequent images are generated by alternately casting more rays and interpolating. The usefulness of these rays is maximized by distributing them according to measures of local image complexity. Examples from two applications are given: molecular graphics and medical imaging.
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  • 34
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 50-50 
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  • 35
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 74-78 
    ISSN: 1432-2315
    Keywords: Scaling fonts ; Low-resolution bitmap fonts ; Linear feature extraction
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    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: Abstract In certain cases a font, as defined by a set of small raster images, can be scaled by first extracting the linear features that define each character. These can be treated as graphical vectors and scaled, translated, and rotated in an arbitrary fashion. The visual precision of this method depends on the size of the original front templates.
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 119-119 
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    The visual computer 6 (1990), S. 125-133 
    ISSN: 1432-2315
    Keywords: Ray-tracing ; Anti-aliasing ; Coherence ; Bound
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    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: Abstract A complete detection of whether aliasing occurs in a given pixel is possible by using the concept of bounded rays and raybound tracing. A coherent set of rays can be bounded by bounding both their origins (by a sphere) and directions (by a circle on a unit sphere). By tracing bounds of rays in a pixel, along the direction of reflection, refraction or to light sources, it is possible to obtain an upper bound on the degree of aliasing in the pixel. Ray bound tracing is possible against various shapes and with various shading algorithms.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1432-234X
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Pilidium larvae at different developmental stages have been investigated for the occurrence of glyoxylic acid induced fluorescence in catecholamines (CA), and serotonin-like (5-HT) and neuropeptide FMRFamide-like (FMRFamide) immunoreactivity (ir). The distribution of CA, 5-HT-ir and FMRFamide-ir cells and processes was compared with the location of nerve processes as found by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In the pilidium larvae the marginal and oral nerves contain CA and 5-HT-ir processes and 5-HT-ir unipolar cells. The posterior suboral nerve contain CA and 5-HT-ir processes, whereas in the anterior suboral nerve neither CA nor 5-HT-ir and FMRFamide-ir were observed. The lateral helmet nerve contains FMRFamide-ir processes and unipolar cells. In the epidermis CA and 5-HT-ir multipolar cells were found. The juvenile “worm” that develops inside the pilidium larva was found to contain only 5-HT-ir. A pair of lateral cords extent the whole length of the juvenile and anteriorly they form the anterior ventral cerebral commissure. Also, from the anterior part of the lateral cords projects a pair of circumrhynchodeal processes which dorsally form the dorsal cerebral commissure. A pair of proboscis processes originate from the circumrhynchodeal processes and extend the whole length of the probosics. From the dorsal cerebral commissure cephalic processes project rostrally and ventrally. Only unipolar 5-HT-ir cells were observed, and they were located along the lateral cords into which their processes extend.
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  • 39
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The interpyramidal muscles of the lantern of Diadema setosum have been studied as an example of such muscles in regular echinoids. The light- and electron microscopic study proves that the interpyramidal muscle is nothing but a continuous, highly folded myoepithelium. Although it is a powerful and specialized comminator muscle its histological organization (a pseudostratified myoepithelium) is rather simple when compared with other echinoderm myoepithelia. It consists of only two cell types: 1) a single layer of well-developed myocytes and 2) monociliated adluminal cells that totally cover the myocytes and touch the basal lamina by thin basal processes. The interpyramidal muscle grows by addition of new folds to its upper region. Consecutive stages of the myoepithelial differentiation are found in each of the young folds. The origin of the cells which are necessarily added to the growing epithelium is unknown. The growth rate of the muscle is in accordance with the enlargement of the lantern ossicles. The respective data are discussed in detail.
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  • 40
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    Notes: Summary The very first mineral deposits appearing in regenerating fractured adambulacral spines of Asterias rubens are minute polyhedrons that cover the surface of fractured trabeculae. Polyhedrons fuse together forming a fold from which a microspine differentiates. Microspines develop into long linear trabeculae which send out lateral processes at regular length intervals. Lateral processes from adjacent trabeculae fuse together, bridging the trabeculae and giving the regenerate the typical meshwork structure of stereom. Most of the regenerate is built up according to this growth pattern which ensures its longitudinal growth. Simultaneously, the initial fascicular stereom of the stub sends out short radial processes which branch into upward and downward directed subprocesses. The latter fuse with their equivalents located above or below, building up longitudinal rows of stereom meshes. These rows then bridge together by additional branched or unbranched lateral processes, so forming a new stereom layer which progressively covers the whole stub. Up to three new layers of stereom are formed in this way at the stub periphery. These become continuous with the stereom layers of the regenerate by fusion of reciprocal subprocesses, so ensuring the continuity between the stub and the regenerate. In both structures the first stage of mineralization results in an open stereom. Stereom thickening occurs in a second stage of mineralization (that is chronologically separated from the formation of the open stereom) and results in the differentiation of the original stereom fabrics (i.e. fascicular stereom). Regeneration of removed spines starts with the formation of a new spine base made of labyrinthic stereom. The development of the latter mostly relies on short branched and unbranched processes which fuse with each other or with predifferentiated meshes. After completion of its base, the regenerating spine lengthens and thickens similarly to the regenerating fractured spines. The diversity of the stereom growth processes observed in the present work may be reduced to the combination of one to three elementary events, viz. the development of long linear processes, of short unbranched processes and of short branched processes. A survey of the literature allows the suggestion that the implementation of these elementary events is sufficient to describe most types of stereom morphogenesis.
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  • 41
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 281-293 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Representatives of all avian orders were studied in order to establish that the tendon-locking mechanism (TLM), consisting of local specialization of the flexor tendons and the adjacent portion of the flexor tendon sheath, is by no means rare, but rather, constitutes the prevalent condition in a large majority of the avian species sampled. The areas of tubercles on the tendons and the adjacent sheath plications intermesh with one another thereby forming a true tendon-locking mechanism that maintains the distal and other interphalangeal joints of the digits in the flexed position. The TLM seems to function not only in perching, but in a wide variety of other activities of the avian foot including swimming, wading, prey-grasping, clinging, hanging, and tree climbing. The basic structural components of the mechanism are remarkably similar in the divergent avian groups adapted for these activities. Ultrastructural detail of the TLM was studied by means of scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Interdigital variation in distribution of the TLM in all of the digits of individuals were made as were comparisons of the interspecific distribution of the TLM. An analysis of the biomechanics involved in engaging the elements of the TLM and how they produce locking of the flexed joints of the digits includes a consideration of the roles of the podothecal pads, ungual flexor processes, and the elastic flexor and extensor ligaments of the toes. The components of the TLM are differentiated in early fetal development establishing that the TLM components are not acquired adventitiously in response to such factors as posthatching mechanical stresses.
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  • 42
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 295-301 
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The buds ofRadiospongilla cerebellata are formed asexually. Budding can be induced experimentally by injuring the sponge. The first sign of budding is a slight elevation of some surface areas, which proceed to rise rapidly so that they soon protrude conspicuously from the surface of the sponge. As a bud develops, the broad base joining it to the mother sponge narrows to a stalk, which finally breaks. The free buds drift in the water for 15–20 min and then settle, forming new sessile sponges. The buds, 1.5–2.5 mm in diameter, have an internal organization identical with that of the mother sponge. They are enclosed in a layer of pinacoderm perforated by dermal pores. Under the pinacorderm there is a shallow subdermal space, which is in communication with the incurrent canals leading to the choanocyte chambers. The water sucked into these chambers proceeds into the excurrent canal system and emerges from the sponge through the oscular tube. Spicules projecting radially from the bud bear apical tufts of microscleres. The skeletal spicules of the buds, like their choanocyte chambers, are smaller than those in the mother sponge. The chambers expand to their mature size by choanocyte mitosis. Buds and sponges are colored green by intracellular symbiotic algae of the genusChlorella.
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  • 43
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    Notes: Summary A detailed study of the ultrastructure and RFamide immunoreactivity (RF-IR) in the flatwormsMicrostomum lineare andDiphyllobothrium dendriticum has been made with the immunogold technique. The present ultrastructural study confirms the localization of RF-IR cells observed by light microscopic immunocytochemistry. The RF-IR is demonstrated in small, electron-dense vesicles in neuronal cell bodies and processes. RF-IR is not detected in the rough endoplasmatic reticulum or the Golgi system of the nerve cells. The targets of RF positive fibres are nerve fibres, muscles and glands. Gold labelling occurs in classic synapses, which points to a role in neurotransmission. RF-IR is also observed in nerve terminals lacking the characteristics of synapses. These release sites occur close to muscle fibres in the intestine and body musculature ofM. lineare. Thus, an additional, paracrine action of the neuropeptide is suggested.
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  • 44
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    Notes: Summary The statocyst of otoplanids is enveloped by a bipartite capsule which consists of two different extracellular matrices. This capsule encircles three different types of aciliary cells: several peripherally located flattened parietal cells, one central statolith forming cell (lithocyte) and two clusters of accessory cells. Intracapsular lumina exist which are different from extracapsular intercellular spaces. The accessory cells most probably represent those structures that are mainly involved in nervous conduction. These cells extend cytoplasmatic processes towards different peripheral regions of the statocyst where processes of outer nerve cells penetrate the capsule. The statocyst does not seem to represent a more evolved equilibrium receptor system but may function as a relatively simple aciliary sense organ suitable for positive geotactic behaviour. The otoplanid statocyst corresponds to statocysts in other lithophorous proseriates but not to statocysts in other taxa of the free-living Plathelminthes. The monophyly of a taxon Lithophora within the Proseriata is corroborated by this autapomorphic characteristic.
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 319-328 
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    Notes: Summary The fine structure of the glands of the lycophora larva ofGyrocotyle urna is described. There are four pairs of different glands which can be differentiated by the ultrastructure of their vesicles, their location and their gland pores. Their cell bodies are located at the transition from the median to the posterior third of the larva. Gland ducts formed by extensions of the gland cells run anteriorly and terminate at the anterior tip of the larva. In the cytoplasm of the terminal duct regions peripheral microtubules are found. The structure and function of the glands inGyrocotyle is discussed with regard to the evolution of cestodes and other Neodermata.
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  • 46
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    Notes: Summary Trophi of the rotiferBrachionus plicatilis were prepared by dissolving rotifer tissues and lorica with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dithiothreitol (DTT) and were examined by scanning electron microscopy in order to obtain information on the functional morphology of these structures. The trophi are not composed of distinct parts but form a continuous structure of rigid pieces and connecting membranous regions. The membranous components allow movements of the rigid parts against each other and/or restrict the extent of such movements. The main hinge for the movement of the trophi is the membranous connection between the two rami; movements of rami and unci occur together since these parts are tightly connected by two narrow membranes in the subuncus region. The subunci seem to constitute masticating devices which act against grooved ridges of the rami and might make it feasible to disintegrate nutrient particles to as small as 1 μm. Crushing of coarser nutrients might be performed by the opposite surfaces of the two rami.
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  • 47
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    Notes: Summary InLumbricus terrestris the wall of the pharynx is built up from obliquely striated longitudinal and circular muscle layers. The occurrence of perikarya and nerve bundles showing green fluorescence suggests the presence of aminergic innervation in the pharynx. A significant number of chemical synapses were detected in the neuropil among axon terminals. The junctional gap is generally 100–300 nm wide in type I junctions which resemble the cholinergic motor endplates of vertebrate skeletal muscle. A narrow junctional gap of about 25 nm is characteristic of the “close contacts” in the type II neuromuscular junction. Agranular spherical vesicles, together with small and large dense-cored granules, fill in these axon terminals.
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  • 48
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    Notes: Summary The embryonic development and ultrastructure of three pairs of vesicle-organs, ectodermal in origin, in the heads ofSepia officinalis, Loligo vulgaris andLoligo forbesi hatchlings is studied. Between the two pairs of organs located in the anterior part and the pair in the posterior head region, different structures and ultrastructures develop during embryogenesis. The function of the anterior pairs can not be determined. The posterior pair are presumed to be rhabdomeric, photosensitive organs because of the presence of bipolar sensory cells. At their apical, luminal surface numerous long, irregular microvilli protrude — similar to the neurons of various simple rhabdomeric photoreceptors in invertebrates.
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  • 49
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    Notes: Summary Each second brain nerve consists of only one single fibre terminating at two different types of touch receptors in the oral region. The two nerves are the dendrites of two perikarya in the forebrain and are the master neurons for ciliary reversal in the stigmata, which is a two-neuron reflex. By axoaxonal synapses they control one motor neuron in the midbrain, i.e. the command neuron for ciliary reversal in both rings. This cell sends one axon branch in each third nerve to the cilia cells. In the left nerve this fibre is closely associated with a coarsely granulated accessory fibre, which apparently regulates the ciliary beat. The third nerves also contain one fibre each from another motor neuron in the hindbrain. These fibres make synaptic contacts at some specialized epidermal cells in the lateral trunk behind the ciliary rings. A few previously unknown nerves in the dorsal forebrain innervate epidermal cells. It is likely that the complicated epidermal motor innervation regulates the secretory activity of the oikoplasts or of the epidermal cells in constructing a new house, including the necessary complicated filters and food trapping mechanisms.
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    Zoomorphology 110 (1990), S. 17-26 
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The morphology of theAplysia buccal nerves and connectives has been studied by electron microscopic analysis. In these nerves the fine structure of the elements (connective sheath, glia, axons and their vesicular and cytoplasmatic content) is similar to that of other molluscan nerves. Some features seem to be comparable to other invertebrate groups such as Crustacea and Annelida. The axons have been divided into four classes on the basis of their calibre, and each type has been counted in all the nerves. The number of axons relating to identified buccal neurons is discussed. Finally, some speculations about relationships between buccal ganglia and peripheral regions connected by buccal nerves are proposed.
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    Zoomorphology 110 (1990), S. 37-45 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Two types of spherical forms of this normally flattened organism appear sporadically in our cultures. Hollow spheres have an outer wall of flagellated ventral epithelium. The large fiber cells protrude into the central cavity which can include a closed compartment of flagellated dorsal epithelium. Cells of the outer wall that withdraw their flagellum and leave the epithelium are phagocytozed by fiber cells. Solid spheres consist of an outer layer of dorsal epithelium and densely packed fiber cells in the interior that may also include a closed compartment of ventral epithelium cells. Closely apposed fiber cells may form special cell contacts or pores connecting the cells.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 1-16 
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    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary Quality of life for most citizens of industrialized countries (ICs) means an abundance of consumer goods and enjoyment of culture; for the underprivileged citizen of a developing country (DC) it means food, shelter and health care for immediate survival. Development aid to help the latter has become big business and much care is required to ensure that assistance really reaches the deserving recipients. Wood science in contributing to the wise utilization of the forest can help both. The urban and rural poor of DCs may benefit through improved access to affordable and salubrious wooden homes, furniture and other utensils, combined with sound forest management to maintain their ecological environment. Well-to-do members of ICs provide the stimulus and market support for research leading to innovations. They will reap the reward of living in homes and public buildings made of and furnished with a natural material, wood, which will acquire increasing emotional value in the coming crowded centuries. Wood, if it can meet the challenge of providing competitive goods of acceptable quality, is well placed to become a preferred material. In this sense, wood science is capable of enhancing the quality of life of many members of the human family.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 78-78 
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 79-101 
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    Notes: Summary Biotechnology implies the technical exploitation of biological processes. One of nature's most important biological processes is the degradation of wood and other lignocellulosic materials to carbon dioxide, water, and humic substances. Consequently, there should be possibilities to apply biotechnology to wood conversion. This article summarizes briefly the knowledge relating to the enzymic degradation of cellulose, hemicelluloses, and lignin. However, it is mainly focused upon biotechnological processes in commercial use or in various stages of development for the pulp and paper industry. Areas covered are ethanol and protein production, water purification, development of new bleaching techniques, microbial delignification (biopulping), and development of “biosensors” for analysis of pulp fiber surfaces.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 111-112 
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 113-121 
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    Notes: Summary While assessing the corrosive properties of some eucalypts, it has been observed that timbers belonging to the “stringybark” group appear to be more corrosive than others. Research has been carried out therefore on the main stringybark species and major commercial brands of steel which are used for the manufacture of bandsaw blades. This study demonstrated that stringybark wood is considerably more corrosive than expected. The average corrosiveness of stringybarks is shown to be some 126% greater than that of other eucalypts. Such high corrosiveness is detrimental in woodworking, papermaking and building industries and can generally create serious problems in many wood-metal situations.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 123-129 
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    Notes: Summary One of the applications of acoustic emission (AE) technology in the forest products field is likely to be in monitoring and/or controlling the drying of wood. This report describes experiments designed to monitor the acoustic emission patterns from the lower surfaces of small red oak test beams which were undergoing failure in tension perpendicular to the grain. Similar patterns are likely to develop in wood which surface checks during drying. When the wood was green, the emission patterns from beams under test were well defined and could be used to predict the onset of cracking before the surfaces under tension were visibly cracked. These patterns were quite similar to the acoustic response of brittle, glassy polymers under stress. Additional experiments on partially dried test beams showed that the clearly predictable emission patterns disappeared and the general level of acoustic emissions increased. This increase in emissions may correspond to shrinkage, at the cell level, of the partially dried beams.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 143-157 
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    Notes: Summary We present experimental data on hydrolysis of wood in high temperature short residence time (HTST) and low acid concentration conditions. Effects of temperature, acid concentration, particle size and liquid/solid ratio are discussed. A kinetic model is proposed which accounts for effects of temperature and acid concentration. This kinetic model is used to predict performance of a twin-screw extruder as a hydrolyser which consists of ideal mixed flow or plug flow reactor units in series.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 190-190 
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 181-189 
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    Notes: Summary 4- and 5-parameter rheological models were used to pedict deflections at from 7 to 10 years from 24 weeks data. Comparison with actual deflection confirmed the unsuitability of the 4-parameter model as a predictive tool, while the range in prediction errors over 20 specimens for the 5-parameter model was +23% to -26%. The standard error, though not the mean prediction error was reduced by approximately one half by extending the data accumulation period to 39 weeks. Thus the 95% confidence limits in predicting deflections at 2,555 days (7 years) from 39 weeks data was +13% to -20% for all data, and +6% to -19% for data at 20 °C, 65% r.h.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 191-200 
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    Notes: Summary Nitrogen contents have been determined at different depths from the surface of dried pine (Pinus sylvestris) and spruce (Picea abies) lumber. The effects of factors such as time of felling, storage of the timber, and drying process for the lumber, have been studied. Part of the selected lumber was characterized by surfaces which were yellowish after drying. At such surfaces, to a depth of about 2 mm, a high accumulation of nitrogen was always found. Yellowing is enhanced in lumber from wet-stored timber but also occurs in other lumber. Some possible contributive factors are suggested. More research in this field is proposed. The nitrogen gradients in outer sapwood without a yellow surface and in inner sapwood and in heartwood were much weaker. The effect which enrichment of nitrogenous compounds at surfaces may have on timber with regard to its disposition towards moulding is discussed. Although attention is drawn to the fact that strong nutrient gradients may occur, it must be emphasised that in most lumber nutrient gradients are weak and probably without practical consequence for its susceptibility towards fungal attack.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 211-224 
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    Notes: Summary Anatomical investigations on six species ofCalamus demonstrate that fibre wall thickness and fibre percentage within the vascular bundles vary more than the vascular bundle size and number per unit area. Both fibre wall thickness and fibre percentage decrease consistently from the basal (order) to the top (younger) internodes of the stem and from the periphery to the centre at a given internode. The increase of wall thickness with age is more pronounced in fibres than in cortical and ground parenchyma. The thickening of the fibre wall with increasing stem density results from the deposition of additional lamellae. This appears to impart stiffness and determines the breaking behaviour of rattan both within the stem and among the species. The fracture mode of the fibres depends on the fibrillar orientation, which differs between broad and narrow lamellae.
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    Notes: Summary This study investigated the effect of Atropellis canker,Atropellis piniphila (Weir) Lohman and Cash, and stalactiform blister rust,Cronartium coleosporioides Arth., on the bending strength and stiffness of lumber from lodgepole pine,Pinus contorta Dougl. var.latifolia Engelm. The modulus of rupture, was unaffected by either disease. However, the modulus of elasticity (MOE) of lumber from infected trees, as determined by the Cook Bolinders and static bending tests, was significantly reduced from those of healthy trees. This impact should affect the use of lumber from infected trees when serviceability criteria govern the design of a structure. Should MOE-based, machine stress-rating of lumber become standard in the future, there may be an adverse, stress-related impact of these diseases on lumber value.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 247-261 
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    Notes: Summary In a previous paper (Mårtensson 1988 a), results of tests performed on hardboard in tension under cyclic humidity were presented and comparison with a suggested constitutive model was made. This paper presents the result of further work that has been carried out concerning modelling of the behaviour of tempered hardboard subjected to moisture loading combined with mechanical loading. Tests were made both in compression and bending. The tests in compression were of two types, conventional creep tests during moisture cycling and quasi-relaxation tests during moisture cycling. The model was quantified on the basis of the previous tension tests and the compression tests, in both cases creep tests, and was then checked independently against the other types of test. Interaction between moisture change and mechanical loading was found to be significant during the first moisture cycle but much smaller during subsequent cycles. Experimental and numerical analysis of composite structural elements was also performed, showing that internal stresses of significant magnitude are developed as a result of variations in moisture. Such stresses can be predicted with reasonable accuracy using the proposed model. This can be of great value in design and development of wood products and wooden structural elements.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 277-288 
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    Notes: Summary The structural change of lignin during heating of wood was investigated quantitatively by a method combining nucleus exchange and nitrobenzene oxidation. Lignin modification during heating was mainly a diphenylmethane type condensation. About 40 and 75% of noncondensed units in protolignins were converted to diphenylmethane type units by heating of dry and wet wood meals up to 220 °C, respectively. On the other hand, during heating of modified lignin (dioxane lignin) various types of modifications in addition to diphenylmethane type condensation occurred. Lignin modification via the diphenylmethane type condensation was proposed as a new route for its utilization.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 263-276 
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    Notes: Summary The objectives of this work were to begin developing an experimental system for studying the demethylation of lignin by brown-rot fungi and to examine the influence of selected culture parameters. As substrate for demethylation, we used partially 3-O-demethylated lignin that had been isolated earlier from brown-rotted spruce wood; we remethylated with14CH3I, giving a lignin with both [3-14C]methoxyl and [4-14C]methoxyl groups. This lignin was added to pine wood flakes, which were incubated with selected brown-rot fungi, and the evolved14CO2 was trapped and measured. Of eight fungi examined,Gloeophyllum trabeum andWolfiporia cocos gave the highest rates of mineralization of the14C-methoxyl carbons. With the former but not the latter fungus, methoxyl mineralization was over twice as fast in an atmosphere of O2 than in air. Amending the cultures with ammonium tartrate suppressed mineralization to some extent. Further studies withG. trabeum showed that glutamate lowered the rate of mineralization and that glucose and glycerol sharply suppressed it. Addition of Fe2+ and Mn2+ slightly increased the rate of mineralization. Our results suggest that in unsupplemented cultures the rate-limiting step in methoxyl mineralization is the initial demethylation. Thus the two likely initial C1 products, methanol and formaldehyde (as14C compounds), were mineralized much more rapidly than the methoxyl carbon of the lignin (as was formic acid), and no low molecular weight labeled intermediates from the [14C]-methoxyl lignin accumulated in the cultures. Our results also provide evidence that the spruce lignin was partially polymerized byG. trabeum. Mineralization of the methoxyl carbon of a synthetic [3-14C]-methoxyl lignin was slower than that of the spruce lignin, suggesting either that the synthetic lignin was more recalcitrant or that the [4-14C]methoxyl group in the [3,4-14C]-methoxyl spruce lignin was attacked more readily.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 305-310 
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    Notes: Summary The ashes of some medicinally used tropical woods were characterised. These were Afzelia africana, Alstonia congensis, Antiaris africana, Terminalia ivorensis, Azadirachta indica, Ricinodendron heudelotti, Chlorophora excelsa and Daniellia ogea. The ashes were obtained by treating wood in a muffle furnace, after which the ashes dissolved in distilled water. The very alkaline solutions obtained were analysed for Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, Cl-, SO 4 2- and PO 4 3- . Due to wide medicinal application of these wood species experiments were made to determine the cations and anions which may be active ingredients in the compounds (drugs) used in the treatment of differet ailments.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 327-337 
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    Notes: Summary A finite element model is developed to predict the dynamic behavior of nonuniform lumber in stress-grading machines of the constant deflection type. Simulations carried out with the model showed that speed largely effects the accuracy with which grading machines can identify low-point modulus of elasticity (E) oflumber. Tests conducted at 15 and 315 m/min on lumber members containing a low E zone confirmed model predictions. However, as demonstrated in this study, machine ability to detect low-point E at high speed can greatly be improved from filtering the load signal measured by the machine.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 345-354 
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    Notes: Summary Wood-cement panels have commanded renewed interest during the last decade because of their potential application in the building industry. Several methods to classify wood of various species regarding its compatibility with cement have been established in the literature based on hydration measurements in Dewar flasks. These ranking methods lack consistency in the classification of species because the hydration conditions vary among laboratories. Three techniques for evaluating wood-cement compatibility were established and compared. The best technique is based on a wood-cement compatibility factor which is the ratio of the area under the wood-cement hydration heat rate curve to that of neat cement. The area is calculated on 24-h basis starting from the initial cement set time. This area ratio method ranks species over a 100% scale and accounts well for species that are totally incompatible.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 374-376 
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 17-22 
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    Notes: Summary A modification of the Zimmermann and Jeje (1981) latex paint infusion technique was utilized to determine vessel length distributions in N. fusca (Hook.f.) Oerst., N. menziesii (Hook.f.) Oerst. and N. solandri var. cliffortioides (Hock.f.) Poole. In all thirty trees examined, the majority of vessels were less than 2 cm long; with 97% of the vessels shorter than 6 cm in N. menziesii and N. solandri, with the same percentage being shorter than 8 cm in N. fusca. The longest individual vessels recorded were 24 cm for N. menziesii, 22 cm for N. solandri and 33 cm for N. fusca. The longest vessels in all three species occurred in the earlywood and also exhibited the largest diameters.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 23-63 
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    Notes: Summary Lignin biosynthesis via shikimate-cinnamate pathways in plants, and the biosynthetic differences of guaiacyl-and syringyl lignins between gymnosperms and angiosperms have been elucidated by tracer experiments using 14C labeled precursors and the following enzyme reactions. The formation of guaiacyl lignin but not syringyl lignin in gymnosperms was attributed to the following factors; absence of ferulate-5-hydroxylase, poor affinity of O-methyltransferase toward 5-hydroxyferulate, and lack of activation and/or reduction of sinapatc. A mechanism of lignin-carbohydrate complexes formation in wood cell walls was elucidated based on the reaction of the quinone methide of guaiacylglycerol-β-guaiacyl ether with sugars, and the analysis of DHP-polysaccharide complexes. The main cleavage mechanisms of side chains and aromatic rings of lignin model compounds and synthetic lignin (DHP) by white-rot fungi and their enzymes, lignin peroxidase and laccase have been elucidated using 2H, 13C and 18O-labeled lignin substructure dimcrs with 18O2 and H2 18O. Side chains and aromatic rings of these substrates were cleaved via aryl cation radical and phenoxy radical intermediates, in reaction mediated only by lignin peroxidase/H2O2 and laccase/O2.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 65-78 
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    Notes: Summary The temperature distribution in particle mats during hotpressing and steam-injection pressing was numerically analyzed with the finite clement method under various conditions. Calculated results agreed comparatively well with the observed results (Hata) in either method of pressings, which proved that the analytical theory was useful to predict the temperature behavior of particle mats during hotpressing and steam-injection pressing. In hotpressing, the core temperature increase was propotional to the temperature of the hotplatens and was inversely proportional to the square of the mat thickness. The effects of the mat density and of the density distribution along the mat thickness on the core temperature curves were negligibly small. In steam-injection pressing, with increases of mat thickness the injection time necessary for raising core temperature up to 100 °C increased. For the core temperature of a 500-mm-thick mat, it will take about 180 seconds to reach 100 °C. Core temperature immediately after steam injection increased with an increase of steam pressure of steam pressure for both 20-and 40-mm-thick mats. While thinner mat results in higher maximum temperature achieved by steam injection, the increase of mat core temperature by steam-injection is not significantly influenced by mat density.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 103-110 
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    Notes: Summary The influence of pre-steaming on the drying rate, wood anatomy and shrinkage of regrowth Eucalyptus pilularis (blackbutt) was determined. Pre-steaming increased the drying rate by 7–16%. This resulted from a mobilisation and partial removal of heartwood extractives, probably allowing greater access of water molecules to cell walls, and therefore increased radial and tangential diffusion. Longitudinal permeability is unlikely to be significantly increased by pre-steaming, as tyloses appeared unaltered. Volumetric shrinkage was unchanged.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 131-142 
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    Notes: Summary Growth stresses originate in maturation strains, induced in cambial layers during the differentiation and the maturation of new cells, impeded by the mass of the whole trunk. To predict stresses in a stem, one must add successive incremental stresses at successively created points of the growing trunk. Usual measurements of released strains at the surface of a stem do not give the evolution of maturation strains with growth. As the assumption that states that maturation strains are constant since the beginning of secondary growth leads to singularities near the pith, an empiric pattern of variation of maturation strains along the radius is proposed, using observations about relationships between released longitudinal strain and microfibril angle. Furthermore, assuming an elastic, orthotropic behavior law and a cylindrical, sufficiently long stem, residual stresses are computed and discussed. For hardwoods, far enough from the pith, patterns of computed longitudinal and tangential stresses agree with distributions already stated by other authors although these stress components are limited near the pith. Computed radial stresses have lower levels than commonly admitted. On the other hand, stress-distributions in young softwoods are found very different, especially near the pith where the longitudinal component appears tensile and the tangential one compressive.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 159-169 
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    Notes: Summary Cellulose can be depolymerized by thermo-mechanical treatment at high temperature using ethylene glycol as solvent. A fraction of the cellulose is solubilized and the solid residual fraction consists of highly ordered cellulose with very low degree of polymerization and exhibits very high accessibility to enzymatic attack. Chemical characterization by thermal and spectroscopic techniques has shown that no chemical degradation occurs during depolymerization even if structural reorganization has been observed. Comparison with cellulose depolymerization byaqueous acid hydrolysis processes has shown the superior characteristics of the solvolytic process. The latter yields depolymerized cellulosic residues with increased accessibility to cellulases hydrolysis whereas the acid hydrolysis process even at very mild conditions results in functional modifications of the depolymerized cellulosic residue.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 171-180 
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    Notes: Summary The dilute acid pretreatment in a plug flow reactor and alkali pretreatments with caustic solutions at different conditions followed by enzymatic hydrolysis resulted in drastically improved glucose yields for aspen and hybrid poplar. The acid pretreatment conditions must be carefully chosen to open the cellulosic structure allowing rapid diffusion of enzyme. The effectiveness of pretreatment is chiefly based on the enlargement of the pore size suitable for enzyme molecules.
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 210-210 
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
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  • 79
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary The effect of pre-steaming on moisture gradients, drying stresses and sets, and face checking was determined for Eucalyptus pilularis Sm. The effect of reconditioning on drying stresses and sets was also observed. Pre-steaming reduced moisture gradients from centre to surface by 12.2 percentage units during the first eight days drying, and by 5.2 percentage units over the full duration of the run. Face checking occurred during presteaming, but total length of checks at the end of drying was only 53% that of unsteamed boards. The decrease in moisture gradients and face checking implied that stress and set gradients were also reduced, although this could not be statistically confirmed. Reconditioning relieved drying stresses and sets.
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  • 80
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 233-245 
    ISSN: 1432-5225
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary The degree of influence of rotatory inertia and shear deformation on natural frequency determinations is discussed. It is found that for material such as wood, which has a relatively high ratio of bending modulus to shear modulus, these effects need to be taken into account even for supposedly ‘slender’ beams. The discussion covers the four most common types of support condition, namely simply supported, free-free, clamped-free and clamped-clamped ends. As a perfectly rigid clamped condition can never be achieved in practice, especially for relatively ‘soft’ material like wood, consideration is extended to also include partially-clamped beams.
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  • 81
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 289-294 
    ISSN: 1432-5225
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary Beams of a composite made from wood and fibreglass layers glued with a phenolic adhesive were tested in three point bending. Experimental results indicate an increase in mechanical properties in comparison with equivalent beams without fibreglass. An interesting modification is obtained in the mode of fracture. Values of the modulus of elasticity for the adhesive, fibreglass and wood were obtained in separate loading tests and used to derive the modulus of the composite using a general relationship for layered systems. Good agreement was found between theoretical and experimental values of modulus.
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  • 82
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 295-295 
    ISSN: 1432-5225
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
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  • 83
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 297-304 
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary Wood of 9.5 year old plantation grown Eucalyptus grandis Hill (Maiden) was removed at stump-height (10–25 cm above ground level) from two groups of trees — one receiving no silvicultural treatment, the other being ploughed, thinned and treated with fertilizer, weeding and insecticide. Silviculturally treated samples had higher u1 and v1 chromaticity coordinates and a lower total reflectance (i.e. colour was redder, more saturated and darker). Although perceivable mean colour differences occurred between outer and inner heartwood, chromaticity coordinates and total reflectance were not significantly different. In the outer heartwood a redder, more saturated wood colour was produced in trees having faster growth rates.
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  • 84
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 311-326 
    ISSN: 1432-5225
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary Brief presteaming of green, increment-core segments of mountain ash (E. regnans F. Muell) produced small but significant changes in a number of moisture-shrinkage parameters. Both total volumetric shrinkage and recoverable collapse were significantly greater in presteamed samples, the increase in collapse being largely attributable to an increase in moisture content after reconditioning (Mr). The change in shrinkage after reconditioning also was significantly related to changes in Mr. The change in Mr was interpreted as reflecting altered permeability in presteamed material and was shown to be negatively related to estimated residual collapse. Initial moisture content and per cent saturation showed a highly significant decrease after presteaming, while green volume showed a small but significant increase. Neither the estimated intersection point, unit shrinkage nor the R-ratio were significantly different after presteaming. However, the unit shrinkage-specific gravity relationship was changed by presteaming such that it more closely complied with Stamm's approximation.
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  • 85
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 339-344 
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary The extractives of clear and sticker stained sapwood from sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) were isolated and screened for low molecular-weight phenols, which could be involved in the formation of sticker stain. Scopoletin (7-hydroxy-6-methoxycoumarin) was identified as the major low molecular-weight free phenol in the samples studied. This compound, which has not previously been reported in extractives from maple wood, was quantified in stained and clear samples. Additionally, the two major fatty acids present were identified as palmitic acid and linolenic acid, and the two major sterols as stigmasterol and sitosterol.
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  • 86
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    Wood science and technology 24 (1990), S. 355-373 
    ISSN: 1432-5225
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Summary Active vibration control is a key to the improvement of the cutting performance and productivity of band saws. In this paper a new method is presented for active control of band saw vibration. The transfer function of a closed-loop system consisting of the band saw, a feedback control law and the dynamics of the sensing and force actuation devices is derived. Analysis of the root loci of the closed-loop system gives two stability criteria. Stabilizing controller design is carried out for both collocation and dislocation of the sensors and actuators. It is found that vibration in all the modes can be damped through use of only one sensor and one actuator and that the control algorithms presented are realizable in practice. The theory presented is experimentally verified.
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  • 87
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 173-177 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The sexual development of Ephydatia fluviatilis involves a ciliated parenchymula-larva. The mature larva leaves the body of the “mother” sponge through the excurrent canal system and arrives eventually in the outside world by way of the osculum. At this stage the types of cells found in the adult sponge are already present in the larva. The released larva swims around for a while and then, after a period of between 3 and 48 hours, it attaches, usually with the anterior, larval cavity-bearing pole, onto the substratum. While it is attaching and spreading itself out, the larva undergoes a metamorphosis. The most notable stages of this metamorphosis are as follows: (a) disintegration of the ciliated epithelium from the anterior pole of the larva and its substitution by a pinacocyte epithelium, (b) splitting of the larval cavity and (c) integration of the remains into the developing canal system together with the creation and further development of the organic features of a functioning sponge.
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  • 88
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The perivisceral coelom of the sea cucumber Parastichopus californicus is connected to the lumen of the hindgut by as many as 200 short transrectal ducts. Each duct is lined by a pseudostratified epithelium composed of: (i) monociliated, tonofilament-containing cells, (ii) myoepithelial cells, (iii) bundles of neurites, and (iv) granule-containing cells. In most places the lumen of each duct is lined by the monociliated, tonofilament-containing cells. The myoepithelial cells are predominantly basal in position and circular in orientation, but some border the lumen and parallel the long axis of the duct. The epithelium of a duct consists of the same types of cells as occur in the peritoneum covering the rectum and differs markedly from the nonciliated, cuticularized epithelium that lines the lumen of the rectum. Based on ultrastructural characteristics, the transrectal ducts represent evaginations of the peritoneum overlying the rectum and are thus “coelomoducts” sensu Goodrich. The possibility is discussed that perivisceral coelomoducts of holothuroids function in regulating coelomic volumes.
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  • 89
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 179-188 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The present study examines spermiogenesis, and in particular the formation of the acrosome, in ten species of chitons belonging to four families. This study emphasizes the formation of the acrosome but brings to light several other structures that have received little or no mention in previous studies. The process of spermiogenesis is essentially similar in each species, although Chaetopleura exhibits some significant differences. In early spermiogenesis the Golgi body secretes numerous small pro-acrosomal vesicles that gradually migrate into the apical cytoplasm. The chromatin condenses from granules into fibres which become twisted within the nucleus. A small bundle of chromatin fibres projects from the main nuclear mass into the anterior filament; this coincides with the appearance of a developing manchette of microtubules around the nucleus that originates from the two centrioles. Radiating from the distal centriole is the centriolar satellite complex, which is attached to the plasma membrane by the annulus. The distal centriole produces the flagellum posteriorly and it exits eccentrically through a ring of folded membrane that houses the annulus. Extending from the annulus on one side of the flagellum, in all but one species, is a dense fibrous body that has not been previously reported. The proximal centriole lies perpendicular to the end of the distal centriole and is attached to it by fibro-granular material. Pro-acrosomal vesicles migrate anteriorly through the cytoplasm and move into the anterior filament to one side of the expanding nucleus. Eventually these vesicles migrate all the way to the tip of the sperm, where they fuse to form one of two granules in the acrosome. In mature sperm the nucleus is bullet-shaped with a long anterior filament and contains dense chromatin with occasional lacunae. The mitochondria vary in both number and position in the mature sperm of different species. Both centrioles are housed eccentrically in a posterior indentation of the nucleus, where the membranes are modified. The elongate flagellum tapers to a long filamentous end-piece that roughly corresponds to the anterior filament and may be important in sperm locomotion for hydrodynamic reasons. An acrosome is present in all ten species and stained positively for acid phosphatase in three species that were tested.
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  • 90
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 201-209 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The ultrastructure of the epidermal layer of both the oral and arm podia of the brittle star Ophiocomina nigra is described. Despite external differences, little variation occurs in their internal structure. The podial epidermis, which is overlain by a three-layered cuticle, consists of five cell types: support, mucous, sensory, adhesive secretory and monociliated ‘neurosecretory-like’ cells. Areas of specialisation are superimposed on this basic plan. These comprise four cells forming cohesive units, made up of two adhesive secretory, one sensory and one monociliated ‘neurosecretory-like’ cells. The two adhesive secretory cells may be identical or vary in the structure of their secretory packets. The sensory cells are of the normal type bearing a short cilium with a 9+2 microtubular arrangement. The monociliated ‘neurosecretory-like’ cells contain many small dense vesicles and a short sub-cuticular cilium of irregular microtubular structure. Together, they appear to form a sensory-secretory complex which functions in adhesion both for feeding and locomotion. A system in which the secretion of the monociliated ‘neurosecretory-like’ cell may control adhesive secretion is proposed.
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  • 91
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The thoracic salivary gland of the worker honeybee was investigated by dissection, light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. The glands are paired and each lateral half consists of two parts, a smaller external and a larger internal lobe. The lobes are composed of densely packed secretory tubes and ducts, the tubes of which often show ramifications. A reservoir is packed within the anterior medial part of the gland. The secretory tubes are composed of two types of cells, secretory cells, which are most frequent, and parietal cells. Secretory cells are characterized by a basal labyrinth, abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, dark secretory vesicles, light vesicles of different sizes, and apical microvilli. Parietal cells are smaller and have a characteristically lobed nucleus and no secretory vesicles. Between the cells there are intercellular canaliculi. In the center of each tube there is an extracellular space with a central cuticular channel. The abundance of rough endoplasmic reticulum and the rare occurrence of smooth endoplasmic reticulum implies a saliva with proteins but rarely with pheromones. Between the secretory tubes there are frequently neuronal profiles which are partly in contact with the secretory cells. Thus a nervous control of this gland is, in contrast to previous investigations, clearly demonstrated. The axonal endings contain dark neurosecretory vesicles as well as light synaptic vesicles. Large parts of the glands are surrounded by a thin tissue sheath which has a smooth surface towards the secretory tubes and shows irregular protrusions towards the outer side. This sheath is considered to be a tracheal air sac, and due to its large extension is probably of importance for the hemolymph flow in the thorax.
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  • 92
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The auditory systems of several species of singing and acoustically communicating grasshoppers, as well as of silent grasshoppers, were compared with respect to the external structure of the tympana, thresholds of the tympanal nerve response and projection areas of tympanal nerves within the metathoracic part of the ventral nerve cord. Extracellular recordings from the tympanal nerves, using suction electrodes, revealed that singing and silent grasshoppers hear within the frequency range tested, from 2 to 40 kHz. However, differences in sensitivity were observed in those silent species with tympana of modified structure. Cobalt-backfills of the tympanal nerves revealed a clearly discernible auditory neuropil in the anterior ring tract of the metathoracic ganglion in all animals. A comparison of the volumes of neuropilar areas calculated from serial sections of the entire ganglion showed a gradation: the volumes were biggest in singing species, slightly smaller in silent species with a well-developed tympanum, and smallest in the species with modified tympana. These findings support several authors who suggested that auditory organs evolved earlier than acoustic communication.
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  • 93
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The intercentriolar body in the biciliary spermatids of Nematoplana coelogynoporoides and its changes during spermiogenesis are described. Different functional aspects of the body, for example its presumed role as microtubule-organising centre and its influence on cell elongation, are discussed.
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    Zoomorphology 109 (1990), S. 273-279 
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Histochemical studies of the opercularis muscle of the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) and the tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum) provide evidence that the opercularis muscle of anurans is a specialized, tonic portion of the levator scapulae superior muscle. Staining results for myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), combined with measurements of muscle fiber diameters, demonstrate that the opercularis/levator scapulae superior muscle mass of both the tiger salamander and bullfrog consists of an anterior tonic portion, a middle fast oxidative-glycolytic (FOG) twitch portion, and a posterior fast-glycolytic (FG) twitch portion. In R. catesbeiana the tonic fibers represent 57.3% of the fiber total and (because they have relatively narrow diameters) about 29% of the cross-sectional area of the muscle mass, and form that part of the muscle (=opercularis muscle) that inserts on the operculum. In Ambystoma the tonic fibers represent only 8.8% of the fiber total and represent about 4% of the cross-sectional area. In the tiger salamander, the entire levator scapulae superior muscle inserts on the operculum and therefore represents the opercularis muscle. The bullfrog differs from the tiger salamander, therefore, in that the anterior tonic part of the opercularis/levator scapulae superior complex is greatly enlarged and the insertion on the operculum is limited to these tonic fibers. No evidence of a columellar muscle was found in R. catesbeiana. Previous reports of one in this species and in other anurans may be based on the tripartite nature of the opercularis/levator scapulae superior muscle mass. The middle FOG portion of the muscle may have been considered a muscle distinct from the anterior tonic portion (=opercularis muscle) and the posterior FG portion.
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  • 95
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    Notes: Summary The muscle organization of the body wall in two species of Haplotaxida is described.Haplotaxis gordioides andPelodrilus leruthi show significant differences in the longitudinal muscle layer. The observations suggest that inH. gordioides, the muscle fibres could foreshadow the flat circomyarian organization of microdrile muscles, while theP. leruthi organization recalls the pinnate arrangement of megadrile body wall.
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    Zoomorphology 110 (1990), S. 9-15 
    ISSN: 1432-234X
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Spermatogenesis of the marine spongeHalichondria panicea begins with the break up of choanocyte chambers, choanocytes constituting the origin of spermatogonia. The transition from choanocytes to spermatogonia is direct, without cell division. Already the spermatogonia are flagellated. The ensuing large aggregates of spermatogonia are enclosed by spermatocyst-building cells. Further development takes place within the spermatocysts, mostly arranged in fields which, however, lack any developmental gradient. Within a single spermatocyst development is mostly synchronous. Spermatogonia transform into first order spermatocytes directly. The transition from spermatid to spermatozoon is characterized by an unusual prolongation of the chromatin, often resulting in a helical form of the chromosome material and a strong enlargement of the mitochondria which align with the nucleus, leading to an irregular shape of the spermatozoon. Another exceptional feature is the virtual absence of a Golgi apparatus during all stages of spermatogenesis. TheH. panicea investigated here contained only male reproductive elements, thus appear to be gonochorists. Some features of the spermatogenesis ofH. panicea, such as dissolving choanocyte chambers, the enclosure of spermatogonia by spermatocyst-building cells and the formation of a synaptonemal complex in first order spermatocytes occur in other sponge species as well; however, the early presence of flagella in spermatogonia, the absence of the Golgi apparatus and the later irregular development of nuclei, mitochondria and the spermatozoa themselves represent features hitherto not observed in sponges.
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    Marine biology 106 (1990), S. 169-174 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effect of temperature on yolk utilization, initial growth and behaviour of larvae of four species of marine fishes, i.e.,Acanthopagrus schlegeli, Engraulis japonica, Pagrus major andParalichthys olivaceus, was investigated under laboratory conditions at Hiroshima in 1989. The yolk sac was absorbed earlier with increasing temperature for all species. Morphological characters such as pectoral fin appearance, mouth opening and eye pigmentation differed from species to species over the range of experimental temperatures, and the sequence of development of these characters varied with temperature even within the same species. Temperature did not have a large influence on the maximum growth of unfed larvae, but had a clear effect on the time to starvation, occurring earlier at higher temperatures. Larval behaviour as indicated by time spent moving was also influenced by temperature; behavioural activity was greater at higher temperatures for all species examined. The effect of temperature on the early stage of larval life is discussed in terms of behavioural and morphological developments, as well as on yolk utilization, and its influence on larval survival in nature and under rearing conditions is evaluated.
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  • 98
    ISSN: 1432-1793
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    Notes: Abstract Whilst the role of chemoreception in juvenile crustacean feeding behaviour has received considerable attention, the chemosensory responses of larval planktonic crustacean stages have been neglected. The present study investigated the acceptability of processed, microparticulate and microencapsulated diets and the possible role of chemoattractants for larval and juvenile stages ofHomarus gammarus (Linnaeus) and juvenile stages ofPalaemon elegans (Rathke). Larval and juvenile lobster were obtained from MAFF (Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Conwy, UK), and juvenileP. elegans were collected from the Menai Straits (Gwynedd, UK) during the summer months of 1985/1986. During the larval stages, food capture results from chance encounter, and the role of low molecular-weight chemoattractants appears to be in the determination of the edible from the inedible. Dietary conditioning behaviour in decapod larvae, which has until now not been investigated, enables the larvae to discriminate more rapidly between particles of different digestibilities. The digestibility and assimilation efficiency displayed on artificial diets in the present study suggest that lobster larvae possess limited enzymatic capabilities, although later stages are more efficient and display longer food-retention time. Growth (0.114 mm d−1) and survival (80.0%) of lobster larvae fed natural diets were significantly better (F=14.8;P=0.001, andF=54.0,P=0.001, respectively) than of individuals fed artificial diets. Although pre-digested artificial diets (ingredients pre-treated with pancreatin) resulted in higher survival (74 and 63%) compared to microencapsulated diets (37%), there was no significant growth difference between the artificial diets tested.
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  • 99
    ISSN: 1432-1793
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The mantle dermal formations (MDFs) ofHypselodoris webbi (D'orbigny, 1839), andH. cantabrica (Bouchet and Ortea, 1980) are globular sub-epidermal structures located in the cephalic and caudal regions. Histologically they consist of an accumulation of vacuolate cells surrounded by a basal lamina and an outer muscular capsule. Chemical analysis ofH. webbi MDFs reveals the presence of high concentrations of longifolin, a well known deterrent furanosesquiterpenoid that had been previously isolated from this species. In the present paper it is demonstrated that the great majority of longifolin accumulated in the mantle ofH. webbi is stored in the MDF vacuolar cells. This finding strongly suggests that such structures act as chemical weapons against predation, mainly protecting vital organs such as the head, rhinophores and gills.
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    Marine biology 106 (1990), S. 305-308 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Two new indices are presented which reflect quantitatively the changes to be expected in an ecological community under stress, as previously described by R. M. Warwick. The indices summarize information which he presented graphically, and permit analyses of trends and inferential tests. We suggest that these indices should be tested with a wide variety of ecological time-series data in order to evaluate the feasibility of inferring ecological stress from static data.
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