نتایج جستجو برای: quercus spp

تعداد نتایج: 57431  

Journal: :Mycologia 2011
Gábor M Kovács Tímea K Balázs Francisco D Calonge María P Martín

Desert truffles belonging to Terfezia are well known mycorrhizal members of the mycota of the Mediterranean region and the Middle East. We aimed to test (i) whether the morphological criteria of Terfezia species regularly collected in Spain enable their separation and (ii) whether the previously hypothesized edaphic/biotic specificity of one group could be confirmed by study of a larger number ...

2003
DAVID A. WHITE

The woody communities of seven of the most intact bottomland hardwood forests of southeastern Louisiana are described. The seven forests are on old levee ridges associated with past distributaries of the Mississippi River. The communities were divided by diameter size class into overstory (~10.0 cm dbh) and understory (3.0 cm 2 10.0 cm dbh). The overstory (27 species) and understory (24 species...

Journal: :American journal of botany 2005
Satya Maliakal-Witt Eric S Menges J S Denslow

Habitat-specialist species may be restricted to a narrower range of microhabitats than habitat-generalist species. We addressed this hypothesis by comparing microhabitats of two pairs of congeners that differ in habitat specificity and co-occur in one distinct habitat type, Florida rosemary scrub. We characterized microhabitats of rosemary scrub specialists, Polygonella basiramia and Lechea cer...

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2007
D J Crook M K Fierke A Mauromoustakos D L Kinney F M Stephen

In the Ozark Mountains of northern Arkansas and southern Missouri, an oak decline event, coupled with epidemic populations of red oak borer (Enaphalodes rufulus Haldeman), has resulted in extensive red oak (Quercus spp., section Lobatae) mortality. Twenty-four northern red oak trees, Quercus rubra L., infested with red oak borer, were felled in the Ozark National Forest between March 2002 and J...

2005
James E. Carrel

Florida Scrub is a hotspot of biological diversity containing many endemic species such as burrowing wolf spiders (Geolycosa species), that are threatened by habitat destruction. This study investigated why two spicies, G. xera archiboldi (McCrone) and G. hubbelli Wallace, are significantly underrepresented in fire-maintained scrubby flatwoods, a widespread scrub habitat on the Lake Wales Ridge...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2005
J Cavender-Bares P Cortes S Rambal R Joffre B Miles A Rocheteau

Freezing sensitivity of leaves and xylem was examined in four co-occurring Mediterranean oaks (Quercus spp.) grown in a common garden to determine whether freezing responses of leaves and xylem were coordinated and could be predicted by leaf lifespan. Freezing-induced embolism and loss of photosynthetic function were measured after overnight exposure to a range of subzero temperatures in both s...

2017
Csengele E. Barta Bethany Bolander Steven R. Bilby Jeremy H. Brown Reid N. Brown Alexander M. Duryee Danielle R. Edelman Christina E. Gray Chandler Gossett Amie G. Haddock Mackenzie M. Helsel Alyssa D. Jones Marissa E. Klingseis Kalif Leslie Edward W. Miles Rachael A. Prawitz

Mature oak (Quercus spp.) leaves, although abundantly available during the plants' developmental cycle, are rarely exploited as viable sources of genomic DNA. These leaves are rich in metabolites difficult to remove during standard DNA purification, interfering with downstream molecular genetics applications. The current work assessed whether in situ dark adaptation, to deplete sugar reserves a...

Journal: :American journal of botany 1998
S G Mayes M A McGinley C R Werth

We investigated clonal population structure and genetic variation in Quercus havardii (sand-shinnery oak), a deciduous rhizomatous shrub that dominates vegetation by forming uninterrupted expanses of ground cover over sandy deposits on the plains of western Texas, western Oklahoma, and eastern New Mexico. Isozyme electrophoresis (15 loci coding 11 enzymes) was used to recognize and map clones a...

1999
Jerry A. Mohr Cathy Whitlock Carl N. Skinner

Pollen and high-resolution charcoal data from Bluff Lake and Crater Lake, California, indicate similar changes in climate, vegetation and fire history during the last 15 500 years. Pollen data at Bluff Lake suggest that the vegetation between c. 15 500 and 13 100 cal. BP consisted of subalpine parkland with scattered Pinus and Abies. After 13 100 cal. BP a relatively closed forest of P. montico...

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