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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rhode Island ; streams ; macrophytes ; macroalgae ; watershed ; drainage ; basin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The Wood River watershed, a small well-defined drainage basin in Rhode Island was monitored seasonally for all macrophytic vegetation and various physical variables. Twenty-four segments, 20 m in length were sampled. Mean stream depth, width and current velocity increased by 3 to 8 fold from 1st- to 4th-order segments. Light penetration was positively correlated with the above variables (p 〈 0.05) and increased by 11 fold from the headwaters to the mouth during September when the riparian canopy was maximum. 74 subgeneric taxa of macrophytes were collected in the Wood River basin, 36% algae, 13% bryophytes, 4% vascular cryptograms and 45% angiosperms. The highest diversity occurred in the 4th-order segments throughout the year. Species numbers were positively correlated with depth, width and light penetration (p 〈 0.05). Vascular plants dominated all orders, but their proportion doubled from 1st- to 4th-order streams. Macrophyte cover was twice as high in the 4th-order segments in June and September as in the other orders. Macrophyte abundance was positively correlated to light penetration and negatively correlated to the ratio of nonvascular: vascular plants (p 〈 0.05). Two distinct clusters were found for the predominant species. The first cluster contained mostly large angiosperms, which were rooted in sediments, while the second cluster was composed of small epilithic algae and bryophytes. The moss, Fontinalis antipyretica, was the most frequent species, occurring in 51% of the samples and in all 4 orders throughout the year.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 63 (2000), S. 1-8 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: adventitious shoot formation ; growth regulators ; tissue culture
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A protocol for rapid shoot organogenesis from petiole explants of the ornamental aquatic plantNymphoides indica L. Thwaites O. Kuntze was developed for use in future mutation breeding and cultivar selection studies. Optimum culture conditions for shoot organogenesis were determined. Effects of factorial combinations of 2-iP, BA or kinetin (0–25 μM) in factorial combination with IAA or NAA (0–25 μM) were examined. On the basis of regeneration frequency (80%) and adventitious shoot number (11.5 shoots per explant), most efficient shoot organogenesis occurred on petiole explants cultured on a basal medium consisting of full-strength MS inorganic salts, 0.56 mM myo-inositol, 1.2 μM thiamine-HCl, 116.8 mM sucrose supplemented with 10 μM BA and 20 μM IAA and solidified with 0.8% TC agar. Formation of adventitious shoots by direct and indirect shoot organogenesis from the same explant was verified by histological sectioning. With the exception of variegated leaf production on a single adventitious shoot produced in the presence of 25 μM kinetin and 15 μM NAA, no visible phenotypic abnormalities were observedin vitro in any of the shoots generated. Solid achlorophyllous adventitious shoots were recovered following culture of this variegated leaf tissue. Plantlets were easily acclimatized toex vitro conditions.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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