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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Identifikace genotypů mezirodových hybridů Festulolium pomocí flow-cytometru

Čegan, Radim January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
2

Vliv druhu a odrůdy na hospodářské charakteristiky trávníkového drnu ve vinici

Kvasnovský, Michal January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
3

Ecotypic variation, adaptation, and persistence of Idaho fescue on degraded central Oregon rangelands

Goodwin, Jay Rodney 24 August 1993 (has links)
Graduation date: 1994
4

The development of new inoculation techniques and viability tests for Neotyphodium endophytes

Gillanders, Timothy James January 2007 (has links)
Neotyphodium endophytes (Claviceptaceae) are asexual filamentous fungi found living between the cells of many cool season forage grasses including tall fescue, meadow fescue and perennial ryegrass. They produce a range of alkaloids, including ergovaline and lolitrem B, which have been shown to be directly associated with the livestock disorders fescue toxicosis and ryegrass staggers syndrome, while others, including peramine and the lolines, have been linked to increased insect and drought resistance of the grass host. In the past decade, the Neotyphodium strains AR1, MaxQ and MaxP were selected because they did not produce the alkaloids associated with livestock disorders. Subsequently, artificial associations were established between them and commercial forage grass cultivars. The slow growth rate of Neotyphodium endophytes in vitro and the low success rate of the present methods for establishing artificial associations between endophytes and grass hosts are limiting the rate at which new novel endophytes can be incorporated into plant breeding programs and eventually commercialised. In this thesis, the type and concentration of the growth medium was shown to affect radial growth rate, colony appearance and mycelial morphology of three strains of Neotyphodium endophytes. The floret inoculation of meadow fescue with the U2 strain of N. uncinatum using several techniques involving liquid culture was attempted but was unsuccessful in creating any artificial associations. Neotyphodium endophytes are unstable in stored seed. In New Zealand, it is critical that pastures are infected with protective Neotyphodium endophytes to ensure that they will not be destroyed by exotic pests. The present methods for determining the percentage of viable endophyte infection of a seed lot are too slow for efficient use in the commercial seed industry. In this thesis, primers specific to the â-tubulin gene of N. coenophialum, N. lolii and N. uncinatum were designed and successfully used to detect these species in planta. However, using these primers to develop a method to accurately determine the viable endophyte infection rate of a seed lot using RT-qPCR was unsuccessful.
5

The development of new inoculation techniques and viability tests for Neotyphodium endophytes

Gillanders, Timothy James January 2007 (has links)
Neotyphodium endophytes (Claviceptaceae) are asexual filamentous fungi found living between the cells of many cool season forage grasses including tall fescue, meadow fescue and perennial ryegrass. They produce a range of alkaloids, including ergovaline and lolitrem B, which have been shown to be directly associated with the livestock disorders fescue toxicosis and ryegrass staggers syndrome, while others, including peramine and the lolines, have been linked to increased insect and drought resistance of the grass host. In the past decade, the Neotyphodium strains AR1, MaxQ and MaxP were selected because they did not produce the alkaloids associated with livestock disorders. Subsequently, artificial associations were established between them and commercial forage grass cultivars. The slow growth rate of Neotyphodium endophytes in vitro and the low success rate of the present methods for establishing artificial associations between endophytes and grass hosts are limiting the rate at which new novel endophytes can be incorporated into plant breeding programs and eventually commercialised. In this thesis, the type and concentration of the growth medium was shown to affect radial growth rate, colony appearance and mycelial morphology of three strains of Neotyphodium endophytes. The floret inoculation of meadow fescue with the U2 strain of N. uncinatum using several techniques involving liquid culture was attempted but was unsuccessful in creating any artificial associations. Neotyphodium endophytes are unstable in stored seed. In New Zealand, it is critical that pastures are infected with protective Neotyphodium endophytes to ensure that they will not be destroyed by exotic pests. The present methods for determining the percentage of viable endophyte infection of a seed lot are too slow for efficient use in the commercial seed industry. In this thesis, primers specific to the â-tubulin gene of N. coenophialum, N. lolii and N. uncinatum were designed and successfully used to detect these species in planta. However, using these primers to develop a method to accurately determine the viable endophyte infection rate of a seed lot using RT-qPCR was unsuccessful.
6

Využití vybrané terénní metody pro stanovení mineralizace půdních organických látek v extrémních klimatických podmínkách

Alba Mejía, Jhonny Edison January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
7

Vliv sucha na kolonizaci rostlin mykorhizními houbami a na mykoparazitické houby

Kabrhelová, Zuzana January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
8

Pentobarbital Sleep Time in Mouse Lines Selected for Resistance and Susceptibility to Fescue Toxicosis

Arthur, Kimberly Ann 01 July 2002 (has links)
In previous work with mouse lines selected for resistance (R) and susceptibility (S) to fescue toxicosis, R mice had higher activities of Phase II liver enzymes glutathione S-transferase and uridine diphosphate glucuronosyl-transferase than S mice. Objectives of this study were: 1. to determine whether selection for toxicosis response had also caused divergence between lines in hepatic Phase I enzyme activity (as assessed by sleep time following sodium pentobarbital anesthesia), 2. to determine whether sleep time differences between lines were modulated by fescue toxins or enzyme inducers in the diet, and 3. to determine whether sleep time differences among individual mice were correlated with the impact of a toxin-containing diet on their post-weaning growth. In experiment 1, five dietary treatments were assigned to 24 male mice in each line: rodent food control, E+ (50% endophyte-infected fescue seed, 50% control), E+P (E+ with 1000 ppm phenobarbital), E- (50% endophyte-free fescue seed, 50% control), and E-P (E- with 1000 ppm phenobarbital). After four weeks on these diets, mice were challenged with a sleep time test. All mice were then switched to a pelleted rodent food diet. Each mouse then received a second sleep time test, a random 1/4 of the population after one, two, three, and four weeks on the standard diet. Results demonstrated that, regardless of dietary treatment, R mice had a shorter sleep time than S mice, suggesting higher activity of liver Phase I microsomal enzymes. Mice that were fed phenobarbital had significantly shorter sleep time than those whose diets did not include this microsomal enzyme inducer. Time interval between the first and second sleep time did not significantly impact the second sleep time, confirming line differences in the absence of toxins and inducers and with advancing age. In experiment 2, male and female R and S mice were fed an E- diet for 2 weeks, then an E+ diet for 2 weeks, followed by a pelleted rodent food diet for 2 weeks. Mice were then administered a sleep time test. Their growth rate response to fescue toxicosis was quantified as the proportional reduction in gain during two weeks on the E+ diet, compared to gain on E- during the previous two weeks. Sleep time was significantly influenced by line but not by sex or the line x sex interaction. As in Experiment 1, S mice slept longer than their R counterparts. The residual correlation between reduction in gain associated with the E+ diet and sleep time was only 0.04. Thus, under these experimental conditions an individual animal's Phase 1 enzyme activity did not predict how severely its growth rate would be depressed by a toxin-containing diet. Based upon these and previous studies, divergent selection for toxicosis response in mice was successful partially by causing divergence between lines both in Phase I and Phase II liver detoxification enzyme activities. If a heritable, practical, and economical criterion could be identified to quantify such differences in livestock species, then selection for toxicosis resistance might contribute to the solution of this important problem for American agriculture. / Master of Science
9

Note concerning Festuca henriquesii (Gramineae) in northern Portugal

Hale, William H.G. January 1989 (has links)
No
10

Patterns of Genetic Variation in <i>Festuca hallii</i> (Vasey) Piper across the Canadian Prairie

Qiu, Jie 30 July 2009
<i>Festuca hallii</i> [(Vasey) Piper] (plains rough fescue) is a dominant native grass species in the Fescue Prairie region of North America that has undergone dramatic range reduction in the past century. This research is undertaken to address the related issues associated with the effectiveness of sampling in capturing genetic diversity, the influence of habitat fragmentation on genetic variation, the geographic variation of seed germination characteristics, and the comparative genetic variation of differential germination. It was found that the tiller samples revealed slightly larger among-population variation than the seed samples. The fescue plant was genetically diverse, as revealed by the proportion of polymorphic bands, the mean band frequency, and the within-population variation. The genetic variation was not highly differentiated with only 6.5% of the total AFLP variation residing among populations. Mantel test revealed a significant correlation between genetic and geographic distances and a spatial autocorrelation up to 60 km among populations was detected. Base temperatures (<i>T<sub>b</sub></i>, minimal or base temperature permitting germination) of the 15 populations fell into a narrow range within 2.2°C with an average of 1.1°C. High final germination percentage was reached at a wide temperature range from 5 to 20°C with the highest germination percentage at 10°C. Germination rate index increased with increasing temperature from 5 to 20°C. <i>T<sub>b</sub></i> was positively correlated with latitude and negatively with longitude and the thermal time requirement for 50% germination was negatively correlated with latitude. The AFLP variation and germination responses were significantly associated with environmental attributes related to moisture, indicating local adaptation. However, the AFLP variation and germination was not significantly associated with the estimated population size and geographic distance to the nearest neighbor, suggesting that fragmentation has not generated considerable genetic and germination impact on the fescue populations. Marked differences in estimates of mean band frequency were observed for various groups of germinating seeds under different test temperatures. Comparisons of AFLP variation among 27 groups of seeds representing population, germination timing and test temperature indicates seed genotypes respond slightly differently to environmental variation, resulting in significant but small impact of germination timing and temperature on the genetic diversity of populations. These findings are significant not only for understanding and predicting the ecological adaptation of the species, but also for formulating effective restoration strategies for remnant populations.

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