521 research outputs found

    Prospectus, October 31, 1979

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    FROM POLIDENT TO EFFERVESCENT: DOWNTOWN TO BE VINTAGE; Week in Review: Across the globe, In the nation, Throughout the state, Around the town; Poltergeists bump at night; Elam wins state CC; Correction…; Wilson thanks Ziggy fans; Briefs: Forum discusses survey, Brazilian pianist at Monticello Nov. 4, Debate: has America failed?, Art field trip features Toulouse-Lautrec, NHB sponsors student awards, One woman is \u27nine Women\u27, EMT workshop at PC Nov. 17, Parkland presents Survival Program; Weekly Calendar; Preppy yet potent: Heads progress the hard way; Letters to the Editor: Rep. Johnson opposes veto; When weather break thieves break in; Foreigners complain again; Treaters shouldn\u27t \u27trick\u27; Amittyville: fact or fiction?; Survey handed out next week; Classifieds; Checks cashable in Nov.; College Day at PC Nov. 7; Model govt. needs plans; Earn less than $6,000? Elgible for higher grant; Parkland offers Folkore; Harmful materials to be discusses; Knee surgery ousts Short; Home no help for golfers; You\u27ve waited long enough: shape up; Soccer club wins; Freddy heading toward poverty; Fast Freddy Contesthttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1979/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Revealing natural relationships among arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: culture line BEG47 represents Diversispora epigaea, not Glomus versiforme

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    Background: Understanding the mechanisms underlying biological phenomena, such as evolutionarily conservative trait inheritance, is predicated on knowledge of the natural relationships among organisms. However, despite their enormous ecological significance, many of the ubiquitous soil inhabiting and plant symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF, phylum Glomeromycota) are incorrectly classified. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we focused on a frequently used model AMF registered as culture BEG47. This fungus is a descendent of the ex-type culture-lineage of Glomus epigaeum, which in 1983 was synonymised with Glomus versiforme. It has since then been used as ‘G. versiforme BEG47’. We show by morphological comparisons, based on type material, collected 1860–61, of G. versiforme and on type material and living ex-type cultures of G. epigaeum, that these two AMF species cannot be conspecific, and by molecular phylogenetics that BEG47 is a member of the genus Diversispora. Conclusions: This study highlights that experimental works published during the last >25 years on an AMF named ‘G. versiforme’ or ‘BEG47’ refer to D. epigaea, a species that is actually evolutionarily separated by hundreds of millions of years from all members of the genera in the Glomerales and thus from most other commonly used AMF ‘laboratory strains’. Detailed redescriptions substantiate the renaming of G. epigaeum (BEG47) as D. epigaea, positioning it systematically in the order Diversisporales, thus enabling an evolutionary understanding of genetical, physiological, and ecological traits, relative to those of other AMF. Diversispora epigaea is widely cultured as a laboratory strain of AMF, whereas G. versiforme appears not to have been cultured nor found in the field since its original description
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