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The application of numerical techniques to some problems in plant taxonomyBisby, F. A. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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Taxonomic studies in the genus MenthaHarley, R. M. January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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The chemotaxonomy of the "Geraniales".Galang, Marilyn Marie. January 1965 (has links)
Botany is an old science, one branch of which, taxonomy, antedates recorded history. In fact, the early Chinese, Egyptian, and Assyrian cultures were based, to a degree, on cultivated plants (Porter, 1959). The early developers of systematic botany included Theophrastus (370 - 287 B.C. ), Pliny the Elder (23 - 79 A.D.), and Dioscorides (lst century, A.D.). Theophrastus, the "father of botany," classified plants according to the growth habit. Thus he had four groups: barbs, undershrubs, shrubs, and trees.
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Systematic studies in the balsaminaceae.Zinovʹeva-Stahevitch, Alina E. January 1981 (has links)
Plant collections, field and herbarium studies were used to evaluate classifications of Impatiens. Accepted interpretations of the perianth are questioned; and a program of developmental studies on several categories of inflorescences proposed. The fruit has been incorrectly described. It is of two types, differing in manner of dehiscence. Chromosome numbers are an inadequate taxonomic character because of parallel cytoevolution. Karyotypes were prepared, but it was found that homologues were not distinguishable. A technique for Hy-banding was developed, and homologues in plants of I. leschenaultii Wall. identified. It is proposed that Hy-banding can identify marker chromosomes which will be a more efficient character than complete karyotypes. The classifications of Impatiens are discussed, and it is concluded that one founded on flower-pollinator relationships is the best, although convergence is a problem. The genera of the Balsaminaceae are reviewed. It is concluded that these show only slight deviations from Impatiens, and are rejected.
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'n Taksonomiese studie van die genus Disparago Gaertn. (Asteraceae)Koekemoer, Marinda 18 February 2014 (has links)
M.Sc. / Please refer to full text for abstract
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A cytotaxonomic study of the Polypodium vulgare complex in northwestern North AmericanLang, Frank Alexander January 1965 (has links)
The circumboreal Polypodium vulgare complex consists of a series of closely related ferns of different ploidy levels. Two northwestern North American members of the complex, P. glycyrrhiza D. C. Eaton, and P. hesperium Maxon, have long been a source of taxonomic confusion since little has been known of their relationships within the complex in the Northern Hemisphere.
The present cytotaxonomic investigation of these taxa has shown that they are composed of three cytotypes, two diploid and one tetraploid. P. glycyrrhiza has proved to be uniformly diploid (n = 37) and morphologically, ecologically and geographically distinct from P. hesperium. Investigation of P. hesperium has shown that this taxon, as usually treated by North American taxonomists, is composed of at least two distinct entities, one tetraploid (n = 74), the other diploid (n = 37). These two cytotypes are morphologically and ecologically as well as cytologically separable, and have independent
geographical distributions. The type specimen of P. hesperium is morphologically comparable to tetraploid populations from the interior of British Columbia, and specimens from the type locality have proved to be tetraploid. It is recommended that P. hesperium be reserved for the tetraploid cytotype. The epithet montense is tentatively proposed for the diploid cytotype.
Two morphologically distinct triploid hybrids were found in areas of sympatric occurrence of the three cytotypes. Morphologically these hybrids appear to be P. hesperium x P. glycyrrhiza and P. hes-perium x P. montense. At meiosis both hybrids showed n II • n I, which is interpreted to mean that the montense genome and the glycyrrhiza genome are both present in P. hesperium. P. hesperium sensu stricto appears to be of alloploid rather than autoploid origin since it forms only bivalents at meiosis. P. hesperium is also intermediate in morphology and ecology between P. glycyrrhiza and P. montense. It is postulated that P. hesperium is an allotetraploid derived from a pre-Pleistocene hybridization between r. glycyrrhiza and P. montense or their immediate progenitors. The hypotnesis is also made that P. hesperium originated largely because of climatic changes in the interior of the continent imposed by pre-Pleistocene orogenic activity.
Morphology, ecology and geographical distribution indicate three main lines of differentiation among the diploid cytotypes. These diploids eventually gave rise to polyploid derivatives, probably in the late Tertiary before the advent of Pleistocene glaciation. The intergradation and morphological variability of these taxa are attributed to alloploidy, hybridization and phenotypic plasticity. The morphology, biochemistry, ecology and geographical distribution of the three species is circumscribed and discussed and a pragmatic key provided. / Science, Faculty of / Botany, Department of / Graduate
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Systematic studies in the balsaminaceae.Zinovʹeva-Stahevitch, Alina E. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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The chemotaxonomy of the "Geraniales".Galang, Marilyn Marie. January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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A taxonomic revision of the genus OnosmodiumDas, Teki Lohi. January 1965 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1965 D229 / Master of Science
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Taxonomy of some Mexican PinesLara, Susana Favela January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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