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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.
301

Conservation While Under Invasion: Insights from a rare Hemiparasitic Plant, Swamp Lousewort (Pedicularis lanceolata Michx.)

Record, Sydne 01 September 2010 (has links)
with non-native invasive species is considered a major threat to many rare native species. As such, invasives removals are a common management strategy. Rare native species that interact uniquely with other organisms in their community (e.g., hemiparasitic plants) may be adversely affected by removing invasives. A management plan for a regionally rare hemiparasitic plant in Massachusetts, Pedicularis lanceolata Michx., identified invasives as a threat, but more quantitative evidence is needed to determine how P. lanceolata‟s persistence is influenced by its co-occurrence with native or invasive hosts. This research asks how P. lanceolata is affected by growth with native versus invasive hosts. Chapter I describes the species associated with P. lanceolata throughout its range, comparing areas where it is considered common and rare. Relative abundances of natives, non-native invasives, non-native non-invasives, and species with both native and non-native genotypes growing with P. lanceolata did not differ significantly at sites where the species is considered common in the Midwest compared to sites where the species is considered rare in the east. Chapter II outlines greenhouse and field removal experiments in which the types of host plants growing with P. lanceolata were manipulated. In the greenhouse, P. lanceolata growth, survival, and flowering were lower when it was growing with invasive compared to native graminoids. However, differences in P. lanceolata growth and survival when natives versus non-native were removed in the field varied from year to year due to succession of native shrubs at the site during the study. Chapter III asks how the population growth of P. lanceolata differs in uninvaded and invaded patches using an Integral Projection Model to perform population projections, sensitivity and elasticity analyses, and a life table response experiment. The population growth rate of P. lanceolata in uninvaded patches was lower than in invaded patches due to the succession of native shrubs in uninvaded patches. Chapter IV describes a metapopulation model for the invaded population of P. lanceolata in Massachusetts. The quasi-extinction probability was significantly affected by probabilities of dispersal, positive correlations in vital rates between sites, and catastrophes. These data will be used to update the management plan for P. lanceolata.
302

The emerging value of the viroid model in understanding plant responses to foreign RNAs

Ma, Junfei 09 December 2022 (has links)
RNAs play essential roles in various biological processes. Mounting evidence has demonstrated that RNA subcellular localization and intercellular trafficking govern their functions in coordinating plant growth at the organismal level. Beyond that, plants constantly encounter foreign RNAs (i.e., RNAs from pathogens including viruses and viroids). The subcellular localizations of RNAs are crucial for their function. While numerous types of RNAs (i.e., mRNAs, small RNAs, rRNAs, tRNAs, and long noncoding RNAs) have been found to traffic in a non-cell-autonomous fashion within plants, the underlying regulatory mechanism remains unclear. Viroids are single-stranded circular noncoding RNAs, which entirely rely on their RNA motifs to exploit cellular machinery for organelle entry and exit, cell-to-cell movement through plasmodesmata, and systemic trafficking. Viroids represent an excellent model to dissect the role of RNA 3-dimensional (3D) structural motifs in regulating RNA movement. Using nuclear-replicating viroids as a model, we showed that cellular Importin alpha-4 is likely involved in viroid RNA nuclear import, empirically supporting the involvement of Importin-based cellular pathway in RNA nuclear import. We also confirmed the involvement of a cellular protein (Virp1) that binds both Importin alpha-4 and viroids. Moreover, a conserved C-loop in nuclear-replicating viroids serves as a key signal for nuclear import. Disrupting C-loop impairs Virp1 binding, viroid nuclear accumulation and infectivity. Further, C-loop exists in a subviral satellite noncoding RNA that relies on Virp1 for nuclear import. On the other hand, no viroid can systemically infect the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, suggesting the existence of non-host resistance yet to be understood. Here, we attempted to test whether a gene involved in RNA silencing, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 6 (RDR6), plays a role in non-host resistance in Arabidopsis. I will discuss the data below in detail.
303

Ecological disturbance and restoration effects on plant functional composition and diversity

Glover, Rachael January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
304

Seeing the Urban Forest for its Trees: An Examination of Cleveland, Ohio's Forests from Community Composition to Individual Tree Physiology

Danielson, Sharon Colleen 26 May 2023 (has links)
No description available.
305

Xylan Biosynthesis in Grasses: Uncovering Specific Protein-Protein Interactions (PPIs) between Rice Members of the GT43 and GT47 Families and their Implication in Plant Development

Javaid, Tasleem January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
306

Characterization of Polyamine Transporters from Rice and Arabidopsis

Vaishali Mulangi, Gopala Reddy 22 June 2011 (has links)
No description available.
307

Identification of Genomic Regions Involved in Stress Responsiveness in Flax by Genetic Mapping

Bickel, Cory Lyn 20 April 2011 (has links)
No description available.
308

An assessment of the evolutionary stability of distyly in Hedyotis caerulea (Rubiaceae)

Sampson, Dennis Archie 04 February 2011 (has links)
No description available.
309

Influences of Environmental Variability, Genetics and Plant Size on Variation in Sexual and Clonal Reproduction and Allocation of Resources in Three Wetland Plant Species

Nicholls, Ann M. 18 May 2011 (has links)
No description available.
310

Tree Regeneration Ecology and Herbaceous Layer Dynamics of an Old-growth Central Appalachian Forest

Chapman, Julia I. 21 August 2012 (has links)
No description available.

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