نتایج جستجو برای: lemna gibba l

تعداد نتایج: 618651  

Journal: :Plant physiology 1980
O Tanaka C F Cleland

Both salicylic acid and ferricyanide induce flowering in the long-day plant Lemna gibba L., strain G3 under 8- and 9-hour short days. In both cases the effect is daylength-dependent. Salicylic acid is ineffective on daylengths less than 8 hours and ferricyanide is ineffective on daylengths less than 5 hours. When both substances are given together a striking synergistic interaction is observed,...

1997
SERGEY N. KRYLOV XIAO-DONG HUANG LORELEI F. ZEILER D. GEORGE DIXON BRUCE M. GREENBERG

A quantitative structure–activity relationship model for the photoinduced toxicity of 16 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) to duckweed (Lemna gibba) in simulated solar radiation (SSR) was developed. Lemna gibba was chosen for this study because toxicity could be considered in two compartments: water column and leaf tissue. Modeling of photoinduced toxicity was described by photochemical r...

Journal: :Plant & cell physiology 2006
Kumiko Miwa Masayuki Serikawa Sayaka Suzuki Takao Kondo Tokitaka Oyama

The Lemna genus is a group of monocotyledonous plants with tiny, floating bodies. Lemna gibba G3 and L. paucicostata 6746 were once intensively analyzed for physiological timing systems of photoperiodic flowering and circadian rhythms since they showed obligatory and sensitive photoperiodic responses of a long-day and a short-day plant, respectively. We attempted to approach the divergence of b...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1978

Journal: :Ecosystems 2021

Abstract Both non-rooted submerged vegetation dominated by coontail ( Ceratophyllum demersum) and floating duckweed Lemna gibba ) can maintain their stable dominance in small ponds channels. We examined the competitive interactions between them how sustain its state against plants a range of nutrient concentrations. Coontail were co-cultured static semi-static microcosm experiments, impact on n...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1969
C F Cleland W S Briggs

The application of gibberellic acid (GA(3)) to the non-rosette long-day plant Lemna gibba G3 at concentrations from 0.1 to 100 mg/l did not induce flowering on short days and inhibited flowering on long days at concentrations of 1 mg/l and higher. On both short and long days GA(3) concentrations above 1 mg/l caused a decrease in frond size and fresh and dry weight, but an increase in the rate o...

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