Arabidopsis AtPRX34 Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree
... I, Therése C. de Castro, hereby declare that this dissertation, which is hereby submitted for the degree Magister Scientiae at the University of Pretoria, contains my own independent work and has not been previously submitted by me for any degree at this or any other tertiary institute. ...
... I, Therése C. de Castro, hereby declare that this dissertation, which is hereby submitted for the degree Magister Scientiae at the University of Pretoria, contains my own independent work and has not been previously submitted by me for any degree at this or any other tertiary institute. ...
Poisonous Plants - Lamb
... Plants Poisonous to Eat Poisonous Wildflower and Woodland Plants Baneberry - Red baneberry (Actaea rubra), and White baneberry (Actaea pachypoda) are woodland wild flowers of the Buttercup Family that grow in mesic rich woods. These perennials are about 2 ft. tall, have 2-3 parted leaves, and are t ...
... Plants Poisonous to Eat Poisonous Wildflower and Woodland Plants Baneberry - Red baneberry (Actaea rubra), and White baneberry (Actaea pachypoda) are woodland wild flowers of the Buttercup Family that grow in mesic rich woods. These perennials are about 2 ft. tall, have 2-3 parted leaves, and are t ...
IOSR Journal of Agriculture and Veterinary Science (IOSR-JAVS)
... on the phenological characters in gladiolus. The treatment GA₃ at 200 ppm showed the minimum days (9.06 days) for emergence of shoot followed by (9.40 days) in GA₃ at 150 ppm whereas, the maximum days for emergence of shoot (16.60 days) was recorded in BA at 150 ppm. Similar findings were also repor ...
... on the phenological characters in gladiolus. The treatment GA₃ at 200 ppm showed the minimum days (9.06 days) for emergence of shoot followed by (9.40 days) in GA₃ at 150 ppm whereas, the maximum days for emergence of shoot (16.60 days) was recorded in BA at 150 ppm. Similar findings were also repor ...
Philodendron bipinnatifidum
... [Produces spines, thorns or burrs? No] "STEM: erect, decumbent and sprawling or semi erect, branching sparingly in basal parts, up to 3- 5m tall, 5- 13 cm diam.; adventitious roots dimorphic in epiphytic plants, anchor roots of smaller diam. attaching plant to host tree, feeder roots of larger diam. ...
... [Produces spines, thorns or burrs? No] "STEM: erect, decumbent and sprawling or semi erect, branching sparingly in basal parts, up to 3- 5m tall, 5- 13 cm diam.; adventitious roots dimorphic in epiphytic plants, anchor roots of smaller diam. attaching plant to host tree, feeder roots of larger diam. ...
Bio-Botany - Textbooks Online
... Other colorless forms ingest small food particles and carryout intracellular digestion (holozoic nutrition). If green species of Euglena are kept in darkness they lose their chloroplasts and become colourless and survive saprotrophically. Chloroplasts return when the organisms are returned to light ...
... Other colorless forms ingest small food particles and carryout intracellular digestion (holozoic nutrition). If green species of Euglena are kept in darkness they lose their chloroplasts and become colourless and survive saprotrophically. Chloroplasts return when the organisms are returned to light ...
ACTA BIOLOGICA CRACOVIENSIA SERIES BOTANICA Vol. 51
... 6703 BD Wageningen, The Netherlands, e-mail: mtm.willemse@xs4all.nl Sexual plant reproduction; biology of lower plants HONG-YUAN YANG. Key Laboratory of MOE for Plant Developmental Biology, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China, e-mail: hyyang@whu.edu.cn Experimental manipulation of sexual plant cel ...
... 6703 BD Wageningen, The Netherlands, e-mail: mtm.willemse@xs4all.nl Sexual plant reproduction; biology of lower plants HONG-YUAN YANG. Key Laboratory of MOE for Plant Developmental Biology, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China, e-mail: hyyang@whu.edu.cn Experimental manipulation of sexual plant cel ...
Selecta one FlowerTrials 2016 presentation
... FlowerTrials®. The magazine features trend themes, showing ideas for an emotional approach when displaying plants. Several theme worlds like “homeland” or “easy gardening” will be displayed at the FlowerTrials®. The potential for communication of standalone varieties like Pink Kisses® und NightSky® ...
... FlowerTrials®. The magazine features trend themes, showing ideas for an emotional approach when displaying plants. Several theme worlds like “homeland” or “easy gardening” will be displayed at the FlowerTrials®. The potential for communication of standalone varieties like Pink Kisses® und NightSky® ...
22-1
... Transports water and minerals from the soil to the leaves Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ...
... Transports water and minerals from the soil to the leaves Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ...
General Features of Gymnosperms
... assemblage of plants whose foliage was fern-like in general appearance yet it possessed a primitive type of seed. This group of plants was named "seed ferns" or "pteridosperms". Undoubted gymnosperms had come into existence during the Lower Carboniferous (about 355 million years back) and had reigne ...
... assemblage of plants whose foliage was fern-like in general appearance yet it possessed a primitive type of seed. This group of plants was named "seed ferns" or "pteridosperms". Undoubted gymnosperms had come into existence during the Lower Carboniferous (about 355 million years back) and had reigne ...
Shahzad MA, Jan SU, Afzal F, Khalid M, Gul A, Sharma I, Sofo A
... back by beginning to gather and cultivate plants and domesticate animals. In this way the foundations for agriculture were laid as an important part of life. A great development has taken place since then, but still a large population is suffering from hunger in different countries. Land degradation ...
... back by beginning to gather and cultivate plants and domesticate animals. In this way the foundations for agriculture were laid as an important part of life. A great development has taken place since then, but still a large population is suffering from hunger in different countries. Land degradation ...
Growing Bonsai
... proportion if chosen for bonsai. Sycamores also develop leaves that are too large. Certain species of both maple and oak trees usually respond well to bonsai culture and develop leaves that are in proportion. Among the plants with small leaves and needles are spruce, pine, zelkova, pomegranate, and ...
... proportion if chosen for bonsai. Sycamores also develop leaves that are too large. Certain species of both maple and oak trees usually respond well to bonsai culture and develop leaves that are in proportion. Among the plants with small leaves and needles are spruce, pine, zelkova, pomegranate, and ...
Altered gravitropic response, amyloplast sedimentation and
... However, later in development it was apparent that sgr5-4 axillary shoots initially grow out at a wider angle from the primary stem compared with wild type, although they eventually reorient their growth in an upward direction (Fig. 2b). A similar phenotype has been reported in previously characteri ...
... However, later in development it was apparent that sgr5-4 axillary shoots initially grow out at a wider angle from the primary stem compared with wild type, although they eventually reorient their growth in an upward direction (Fig. 2b). A similar phenotype has been reported in previously characteri ...
Florida 4-H Horticulture Identification and Judging Study Manual
... Plants are arranged alphabetically by common names. Common names are used for the convenience of persons not accustomed to using scientific names. Scientific names are in parentheses immediately following common names. Scientific names are the same throughout the world with plant scientists and seld ...
... Plants are arranged alphabetically by common names. Common names are used for the convenience of persons not accustomed to using scientific names. Scientific names are in parentheses immediately following common names. Scientific names are the same throughout the world with plant scientists and seld ...
Banana Growing in the Florida Home Landscape
... cultivars listed in Table 1 and Table 2. However, many of them are not adapted to Florida's climate and are not readily available. Cultivars have many local names making identification of specific clones difficult by common name. To help avoid this, common names along with their A/B constitution and ...
... cultivars listed in Table 1 and Table 2. However, many of them are not adapted to Florida's climate and are not readily available. Cultivars have many local names making identification of specific clones difficult by common name. To help avoid this, common names along with their A/B constitution and ...
The Effect of Externally Applied Electrostatic Fields, Microwave
... externally applied electrical energy upon plants and other organisms. Although investigations involving both small and large amounts of energy directed at the targets are considered, a particular emphasis of this review is the feasibility of each type of electrical stimulation for weed control. Elec ...
... externally applied electrical energy upon plants and other organisms. Although investigations involving both small and large amounts of energy directed at the targets are considered, a particular emphasis of this review is the feasibility of each type of electrical stimulation for weed control. Elec ...
Banana Growing in the Florida Home Landscape
... cultivars listed in Table 1 and Table 2. However, many of them are not adapted to Florida's climate and are not readily available. Cultivars have many local names making identification of specific clones difficult by common name. To help avoid this, common names along with their A/B constitution and ...
... cultivars listed in Table 1 and Table 2. However, many of them are not adapted to Florida's climate and are not readily available. Cultivars have many local names making identification of specific clones difficult by common name. To help avoid this, common names along with their A/B constitution and ...
Beyond pine Cones: An Introduction to Gymnosperms
... ferns (pteridosperms), which are known only from the fossil record. These were the first plants to reproduce by seeds, despite looking deceptively like ferns. (True ferns reproduce from spores rather than seeds.) Early seed plants bore their seeds directly on leaves or branches, without any speciali ...
... ferns (pteridosperms), which are known only from the fossil record. These were the first plants to reproduce by seeds, despite looking deceptively like ferns. (True ferns reproduce from spores rather than seeds.) Early seed plants bore their seeds directly on leaves or branches, without any speciali ...
Module 2
... 92. Identify the poisonous medicinal plants consisting cardiac glycosides according to description – "The perennial grassy plant, growing to about 30 cm tall, which leaves are feathry. Flowers is solitary, actinomorphic, yellow": A. Greater celandine B. * Spring adonis C. Love-in-a-mist D. Horse So ...
... 92. Identify the poisonous medicinal plants consisting cardiac glycosides according to description – "The perennial grassy plant, growing to about 30 cm tall, which leaves are feathry. Flowers is solitary, actinomorphic, yellow": A. Greater celandine B. * Spring adonis C. Love-in-a-mist D. Horse So ...
17mb - NTFP Info.us
... recreational and personal collecting opportunities but also profitability in products that come from various plants, lichens, fungi, algae, and micro-organisms. These special forest products are the basis of many botanical, floral, woodcraft, and decorative industries; they also contribute significa ...
... recreational and personal collecting opportunities but also profitability in products that come from various plants, lichens, fungi, algae, and micro-organisms. These special forest products are the basis of many botanical, floral, woodcraft, and decorative industries; they also contribute significa ...
Unit 4.indd - The New Indian Model School, Dubai
... would be the constituents of this ‘Core’. The Core skills are the most significant aspects of a learner’s holistic growth and learning curve. The International Curriculum has been designed keeping in view the foundations of the National Curriculum Framework (NCF 2005) and the experience gathered by ...
... would be the constituents of this ‘Core’. The Core skills are the most significant aspects of a learner’s holistic growth and learning curve. The International Curriculum has been designed keeping in view the foundations of the National Curriculum Framework (NCF 2005) and the experience gathered by ...
Level 2 Certificate in Horticulture
... Candidates following distance-learning courses towards this examination should contact and enrol through the Examinations office at their local approved centre. If candidates require further information, they should contact RHS Qualifications on 01483 226500. ...
... Candidates following distance-learning courses towards this examination should contact and enrol through the Examinations office at their local approved centre. If candidates require further information, they should contact RHS Qualifications on 01483 226500. ...
the distribution of a male sterile form of ti
... 20 species in this genus have a Southern Hemisphere distribution, with the greatest diversity concentrated in Australia and New Zealand (Conran 1998). The exact area of origin of C. fruticosa is unknown. It is thought to have originated in Southeast Asia and then to have been domesticated in New Gui ...
... 20 species in this genus have a Southern Hemisphere distribution, with the greatest diversity concentrated in Australia and New Zealand (Conran 1998). The exact area of origin of C. fruticosa is unknown. It is thought to have originated in Southeast Asia and then to have been domesticated in New Gui ...
20. Glass House 2, HAWORTHIA. Glass house GH2 has our Genus
... to look at. Culturally this genus does not present any problems. A porous humus soil mix, with freely draining texture is all that is needed. In this climate they tend to go dormant during extreme cold or dry hot months. During dormancy one should be careful about watering and the soil should not be ...
... to look at. Culturally this genus does not present any problems. A porous humus soil mix, with freely draining texture is all that is needed. In this climate they tend to go dormant during extreme cold or dry hot months. During dormancy one should be careful about watering and the soil should not be ...
japonicum - Natuurtijdschriften
... date, this author did not give a good description pathogen, which he mistook for a Fusidium. After the appearance ...
... date, this author did not give a good description pathogen, which he mistook for a Fusidium. After the appearance ...
Plant Sale - Herb of the Year 2017
... Various sizes. Full sun. Need good drainage. Avoid overhead watering. Keep organic mulch away from base of plants. Use inorganic mulch instead. Varieties available: L. angustifolia ‘Buena Vista’, ‘Hidcote’, ‘Royal Velvet’, and ‘Munstead’; L. x intermedia varieties ‘Dutch’, ‘Fred Boutin, ‘Vera’, ‘Gro ...
... Various sizes. Full sun. Need good drainage. Avoid overhead watering. Keep organic mulch away from base of plants. Use inorganic mulch instead. Varieties available: L. angustifolia ‘Buena Vista’, ‘Hidcote’, ‘Royal Velvet’, and ‘Munstead’; L. x intermedia varieties ‘Dutch’, ‘Fred Boutin, ‘Vera’, ‘Gro ...
History of botany
The history of botany examines the human effort to understand life on Earth by tracing the historical development of the discipline of botany—that part of natural science dealing with organisms traditionally treated as plants.Rudimentary botanical science began with empirically-based plant lore passed from generation to generation in the oral traditions of paleolithic hunter-gatherers. The first written records of plants were made in the Neolithic Revolution about 10,000 years ago as writing was developed in the settled agricultural communities where plants and animals were first domesticated. The first writings that show human curiosity about plants themselves, rather than the uses that could be made of them, appears in the teachings of Aristotle's student Theophrastus at the Lyceum in ancient Athens in about 350 BC; this is considered the starting point for modern botany. In Europe, this early botanical science was soon overshadowed by a medieval preoccupation with the medicinal properties of plants that lasted more than 1000 years. During this time, the medicinal works of classical antiquity were reproduced in manuscripts and books called herbals. In China and the Arab world, the Greco-Roman work on medicinal plants was preserved and extended.In Europe the Renaissance of the 14th–17th centuries heralded a scientific revival during which botany gradually emerged from natural history as an independent science, distinct from medicine and agriculture. Herbals were replaced by floras: books that described the native plants of local regions. The invention of the microscope stimulated the study of plant anatomy, and the first carefully designed experiments in plant physiology were performed. With the expansion of trade and exploration beyond Europe, the many new plants being discovered were subjected to an increasingly rigorous process of naming, description, and classification.Progressively more sophisticated scientific technology has aided the development of contemporary botanical offshoots in the plant sciences, ranging from the applied fields of economic botany (notably agriculture, horticulture and forestry), to the detailed examination of the structure and function of plants and their interaction with the environment over many scales from the large-scale global significance of vegetation and plant communities (biogeography and ecology) through to the small scale of subjects like cell theory, molecular biology and plant biochemistry.