77 research outputs found

    Research Notes : United Kingdom : Assessment of the behavior of perennial Glycine genotypes in tissue culture

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    Perennial Glycine species exhibit a number of characteristics of agronomic potential including daylength neutrality, tolerance to heat, drought, cold (Marshall and Broue, 1981) and salinity (Newell and Hymowitz, 1982), and resistance to soybean cyst nematode (Riggs and Hamblen, 1962, 1966), yellow mosaic virus (Singh et al., 1974), powdery mildew (Mignucci and Chamberlain, 1978) and rust (Burdon and Marshall, 1981). Each of these features would be useful if introgressed into the soybean genepool. However, to date, it has only been possible to produce a few sterile hybrids using conventional crossing followed by embryo rescue (see Newell et al., 1987)

    Historical Reconstruction Reveals Recovery in Hawaiian Coral Reefs

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    Coral reef ecosystems are declining worldwide, yet regional differences in the trajectories, timing and extent of degradation highlight the need for in-depth regional case studies to understand the factors that contribute to either ecosystem sustainability or decline. We reconstructed social-ecological interactions in Hawaiian coral reef environments over 700 years using detailed datasets on ecological conditions, proximate anthropogenic stressor regimes and social change. Here we report previously undetected recovery periods in Hawaiian coral reefs, including a historical recovery in the MHI (∼AD 1400–1820) and an ongoing recovery in the NWHI (∼AD 1950–2009+). These recovery periods appear to be attributed to a complex set of changes in underlying social systems, which served to release reefs from direct anthropogenic stressor regimes. Recovery at the ecosystem level is associated with reductions in stressors over long time periods (decades+) and large spatial scales (>103 km2). Our results challenge conventional assumptions and reported findings that human impacts to ecosystems are cumulative and lead only to long-term trajectories of environmental decline. In contrast, recovery periods reveal that human societies have interacted sustainably with coral reef environments over long time periods, and that degraded ecosystems may still retain the adaptive capacity and resilience to recover from human impacts

    Characteristics of Acacia mangium shoot apical meristems in natural and in vitro conditions in relation to heteroblasty

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    PDF version of the authors can be published in January 2013International audienceMorphological and histocytological characteristics of Acacia mangium shoot apical meristems (SAMs) were assessed in natural and in vitro conditions in relation to heteroblasty. In the natural environment, SAMs with a mature-phyllode morphology were much bigger, contained more cells with larger vacuolated area, or vacuome, and lower nucleoplasmic ratios than those from the juvenile type (Juv). In these latter, nuclei appeared more voluminous, evenly and lightly stained, with clearly distinguishable nucleolei and less abundant chromocenters. In vitro, where reversions from mature to juvenile morphological traits do occur unpredictably, heteroblasty was less obvious in the SAM characteristics examined. In vitro SAMs corresponding to the juvenile and mature types showed similarities with outdoor Juv SAMs, but could be distinguished from these latter by a much larger vacuome that might be induced by the culture conditions. These findings encourage pursuing the investigations at the chromatin and nucleolus level in SAM zones where heteroblasty-related differences have been detected

    Research Notes : United Kingdom : Assessment of the behavior of perennial Glycine genotypes in tissue culture

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    Perennial Glycine species exhibit a number of characteristics of agronomic potential including daylength neutrality, tolerance to heat, drought, cold (Marshall and Broue, 1981) and salinity (Newell and Hymowitz, 1982), and resistance to soybean cyst nematode (Riggs and Hamblen, 1962, 1966), yellow mosaic virus (Singh et al., 1974), powdery mildew (Mignucci and Chamberlain, 1978) and rust (Burdon and Marshall, 1981). Each of these features would be useful if introgressed into the soybean genepool. However, to date, it has only been possible to produce a few sterile hybrids using conventional crossing followed by embryo rescue (see Newell et al., 1987).</p
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