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Characterisation of ms35, a critical gene for anther dehiscence in Arabidopsis thalianaSozen, Emel January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Comparative ethology and evolution of communicatory behaviour in the lorline parrot genus Trichoglossus (Vigors & Horsfield)Serpell, James Andrew January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Ecological and Evolutionary Factors Affecting Population Persistence of a Globally Threatened Wetland Plant, Polemonium Vanbruntiae (Polemoniaceae)Hill Bermingham, Laura 13 February 2009 (has links)
Ecological and evolutionary factors affecting threatened and endangered species may compromise a population’s ability to persist through time. Here, I determined how plant mating system, pollination biology, pollen source, habitat type, and white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) herbivory affected the persistence of a rare wetland endemic plant, Polemonium vanbruntiae (Eastern Jacob’s ladder). In contrast to several of the more common species of Polemonium, I found no pollen limitation in populations of P. vanbruntiae. The lack of pollen limitation was best explained by the capacity for P. vanbruntiae to self-fertilize. However, pollinators play an important role as inter- and intra-plant pollen vectors in this system because female reproductive fitness was greatly reduced when pollinators were excluded. These results support the reproductive assurance hypothesis, whereby the ability to self assures fertilization for plants in small populations. A mixed-mating strategy, including the ability for clonal reproduction, may explain the ability for this rare species to persist in small, fragmented populations. However, mixed mating strategies may incur both costs and benefits. The ability to self-fertilize may provide reproductive assurance that when pollinators and/or potential mates are scarce. Yet, selfing is potentially costly when the result is a reduction in offspring quantity and quality. I found that the relative performance of selfed offspring was lower than outcross offspring in terms of germination and offspring vigor. When pollen is received from a distant site, offspring exhibit heterosis with increased vigor in terms of more leaves, larger leaf area and height. Although I was unable to follow offspring survival to flowering, enhanced germination success and more vigorous growth suggest that gene flow among populations may increase plant vigor and enhance genetic variation within small, isolated populations of P. vanbruntiae. For long-lived organisms such as perennial plants, it is often difficult to determine which environmental factors will have the largest effects on long-term population dynamics. I incorporated the effects of habitat type and white-tailed deer herbivory into a population viability model for P. vanbruntiae to determine the effects of both habitat and herbivory on long-term ramet dynamics. Polemonium vanbruntiae ramets in wet meadow habitats are expected to increase at a faster rate than ramets in the forest seep habitats, but P. vanbruntiae is expected to increase over time in both habitat conditions. White-tailed deer preferentially browsed adult ramets, primarily those occurring in forest seep sites. Deer browsing significantly decreased the predicted population growth rate under stochastic conditions, although P. vanbruntiae ramets are expected to increase at a slow rate in the future under herbivore pressure. Herbivory also increased the extinction risk to a detectable level. Deer browsing shifted the potential for younger life histories stages to change future population growth. Instead, survival and stasis of large vegetative ramets became the vital rates having the largest potential impact on future population growth. Thus, active long-term management of deer populations appears necessary for the guaranteed persistence of populations of rare, endemic herbs such as P. vanbruntiae.
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Proteolytic enzymes in grass pollen and their relationship to allergenic proteinsSaldanha, Rohit Gregory, Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
Pollen grains are ubiquitous triggers of allergic asthma and seasonal rhinitis. Proteolytic enzymes in pollen as well as other sources are capable of disrupting airway epithelial integrity in vivo and in vitro. This provides a plausible mechanism for the initiation of sensitisation of the respiratory immune system to inhaled pollen allergens, comparable to that suggested for Group 1 allergens from house dust mites and cat dander, which are known to possess intrinsic proteolytic activity. This thesis explores the relationship between pollen allergens and proteolytic enzymes. It describes the different strategies used for the characterisation, purification and identification of immunogenic and proteolytic proteins in the complex mixtures of pollen diffusates. The peptidases in the diffusates of Kentucky blue grass, ryegrass and Bermuda grass pollens were characterised by a sensitive fluorescence assay and gelatin zymography. Among these, Bermuda grass pollen demonstrated the presence of a serine peptidase at Mr ~30,000 Da, which corresponded to an intense band by Western blotting using a monoclonal antibody to the timothy grass (Phleum pratense) group 1 allergen, Phl p 1. Purification of this enzyme from Bermuda grass was complicated by the low levels of the enzyme present in the diffusate, as well as by its autohydrolysis. Partial purification of the serine peptidase activity by affinity chromatography using Concanavalin A Sepharose demonstrated that the diffusate contained a trypsin-like peptidase, detected by the fluorescent assay, in addition to the ~30,000 Da serine endopeptidase, detected on gelatin zymography. Proteomic analysis of the ~30,000 Da protein using one- and two-dimensional electrophoresis and mass spectrometry identified it as the major pollen allergen of Bermuda grass, Cyn d 1. The studies reported here provide, for the first time, evidence that a pollen allergen may possess intrinsic proteolytic activity. This activity may play a role in the initiation of airway inflammation and allergic sensitisation.
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Pollination, fruit set and identification studies in pear / by M. Mehdi Sharifani.Sharifani, M. Mehdi January 1997 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 190-211. / xvi, 211 leaves, [24] leaves of plates : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Research was carried out to evaluate pollination efficiency, gene flow by pollen and fruit set in Packham Triumph cultivar pear trees located in a mixed planting of pear cultivars in a commercial orchard in the Coromandel Valley region of South Australia. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Horticulture, Viticulture and Oenology, 1999
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Pollination, fruit set and identification studies in pearSharifani, M. Mehdi. January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 190-211. Research was carried out to evaluate pollination efficiency, gene flow by pollen and fruit set in Packham Triumph cultivar pear trees located in a mixed planting of pear cultivars in a commercial orchard in the Coromandel Valley region of South Australia.
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Palynology of the red branch member of the woodbine formation (Upper Cretaceous) in Bryan County, Okklahoma /Hedlund, Richard Warren, January 1962 (has links)
Diss.--Norman, Okla.--University of Oklahoma, 1962. / Bibliogr. p. 118-127.
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Palynology and paleoecology of the iron post coal (Pennsylvanian) of Oklahoma /Gibson, Lee B., January 1962 (has links)
Th. doct.--Geology--University of Oklahoma, 1961. / Bibliogr. p. 213-221.
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Lower upper cretaceous plant microfossils from Minnesota /Pierce, Richard LeRoy, January 1961 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Thesis--Minneaopolis--University of Minnesota, 1958. / Bibliogr. p. 75-81. Index.
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The spores and pollen of the Potomac group of Maryland /Brenner, Gilbert Jay, January 1962 (has links)
Th. Ph. D.--Geology--Pennsylvania state university, 1962.
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