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Articles 1 - 30 of 43
Full-Text Articles in Botany
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, Dec 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, Dec 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
SFA Gardens Newsletters
No abstract provided.
An Inventory Of Apiculture Land Use Surveys, R C. Burking
An Inventory Of Apiculture Land Use Surveys, R C. Burking
Soil conservation survey collection
Each year the Apiculture Section of the Western Australian Department of Agriculture undertakes a series of surveys relating to flora prospects, land area suitability or wildfire damage to bee pastures. Such surveys may vary according to the requirements both in time and intensity and the report may be presented as a Departmental file comment or be of such significance to warrant a suitable publication. The Department of Agriculture is at present collating numerous surveys and reports undertaken by a variety of Research Officers in various Divisions. Computer data bases have been set up utilising the Records Management System which will …
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent, Pat Kelly
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent, Pat Kelly
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Acer Negundo L., R. Dale Thomas, Dendrology Class, Northeast La U
Acer Negundo L., R. Dale Thomas, Dendrology Class, Northeast La U
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Phyla Nodiflora (L.) Greene, R. Dale Thomas
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent
Arceuthobium Campylopodum Engelm., Daniel L. Nickrent
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
The Effect Of Pre-Sterile Medium Ph Photoperiod And N6-(2-Isopentenyl)-Adenine (2ip) On Shoot Production During Stage Ii Micropropagation Of Rhododendrons, Lori Longo Smith
The Effect Of Pre-Sterile Medium Ph Photoperiod And N6-(2-Isopentenyl)-Adenine (2ip) On Shoot Production During Stage Ii Micropropagation Of Rhododendrons, Lori Longo Smith
Biological Sciences Theses & Dissertations
The number of shoots produced during a six week subculture of two Rhododendron sp., cultivars Rocket and Gibraltar was the same for both 16 and 24 hour photoperiods under cool white fluorescent lights, whereas significantly fewer shoots were produced under a 10 hour photoperiod for ‘Rocket.' Increasing concentrations of N6- (2-isopentenyl)- adenine (2iP) from 0 to 32 μMin Anderson's medium resulted in proportional increases in shoot number. When shoots were cultured in the presence of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and 2iP, shoot multiplication was increased significantly over shoots cultured with 2iF alone. No interaction affecting shoot multiplication was …
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, Sept 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, Sept 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
SFA Gardens Newsletters
No abstract provided.
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 2. June 1986
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 2. June 1986
The Prairie Naturalist
Paul B. Kannowski, Editor
Nikki R. Seabloom, Assistant Editor
Douglas H. Johnson, Book Review Editor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
WINTER ECOLOGY OF BALD EAGLES IN SOUTHCENTRAL NEBRASKA ▪ G. R. Lingle and G. L. Krapu
NATURAL HISTORY OF THE PLAINS POCKET MOUSE IN AGRICULTURALLY DISTURBED SANDSAGE PRAIRIE ▪ K. M. Reed and J. R. Choate
COMMERCIAL SUNFLOWERS: FOOD FOR RED FOXES IN NORTH DAKOTA ▪ A. B. Sargeant, S. H. Allen, and J. P. Fleskes
CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNTS FOR NORTH DAKOTA - 1985 ▪ R. N. Randall
NEST SITES OF DUCKS IN GRAZED MIXED-GRASS PRAIRIE IN NORTH DAKOTA ▪ H. F. …
Fraxinus Americana L., Loy R. Phillippe
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., Loy R. Phillippe
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., Loy R. Phillippe
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Description And History Of The Meeteetse Black-Footed Ferret Environment, Tim W. Clark, Steven C. Forrest, Louise Richardson, Denise E. Casey, Thomas M. Campbell Iii
Description And History Of The Meeteetse Black-Footed Ferret Environment, Tim W. Clark, Steven C. Forrest, Louise Richardson, Denise E. Casey, Thomas M. Campbell Iii
Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs
The black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes) occupied area lies in the western Big Horn Basin, Park County, Wyoming. Cody, a nearby town, shows a record high temperature of 40.5 C and a low of -43.3 C, with 173 days each year below 0 C. Area geology is dominated by Absaroka volcanics. Soils are shallow (0.5 m) and underlain by unconsolidated gravels; well-drained, medium-textured clay-loams (ca 1 m in depth); or clays derived from shale parent materials. Vegetation is characterized by a wheatgrass-needlegrass shrubsteppe type (Agropyron/Stipa/Artemisia). Prior to white settlement, the area hosted a diverse large mammal community. …
Descriptive Ethology And Activity Patterns Of Black-Footed Ferrets, Tim W. Clark, Louise Richardson, Steven C. Forrest, Denise E. Casey, Thomas M. Campbell Iii
Descriptive Ethology And Activity Patterns Of Black-Footed Ferrets, Tim W. Clark, Louise Richardson, Steven C. Forrest, Denise E. Casey, Thomas M. Campbell Iii
Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs
Aspects of the aboveground ethology and activity patterns of the black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigipes) are described for a population in northwestern Wyoming as a first step in building a descriptive ethogram and quantification of activity patterns. We observed at least 237 individual ferrets for 208 hr on 441 occasions from 2 December 1981 through 25 September 1984. Mainenance behaviors (locomotion, alert, grooming, and sunning, defecation and urination, digging, and predation) and social behavior (reproduction, ontogeny, maternal, play, agonistic) are described as well as some ferret-human interactions. Ferret vocalizations are subjectively described. We located ferrets during most months including …
Forestiera Acuminata (Michx.) Poir., R. Dale Thomas, Systematic Botany Class
Forestiera Acuminata (Michx.) Poir., R. Dale Thomas, Systematic Botany Class
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Fraxinus Americana L., Loy R. Phillippe
Acer Saccharinum L., Jennifer Timmel
Morus Rubra L., Sue Nawojski
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, April 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, April 1986, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
SFA Gardens Newsletters
No abstract provided.
Organic Matter Budgets And Models For Four Plant Communities In The Great Dismal Swamp, J. Patrick Megonigal
Organic Matter Budgets And Models For Four Plant Communities In The Great Dismal Swamp, J. Patrick Megonigal
Biological Sciences Theses & Dissertations
Budgets and models of organic matter dynamics were developed for one mesic and three seasonally flooded plant communities in the Dismal Swamp. Components included aboveground parts, belowground parts, litter and soil organic matter (SOM).
Net primary- production was significantly greater on them flooded sites. Comparisons show that the Dismal Swamp is highly productive despite relatively low nutrient inputs.
Budget calculations showed that over 65% of the total input to SOM comes from roots. Leaves contributed about 70% of the aboveground inputs.
The model predicted that species composition, aboveground biomass and turnover rates on the cedar site will become quite similar …
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 1. March 1986
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 1. March 1986
The Prairie Naturalist
Paul B. Kannowski, Editor
Nikki R. Seabloom, Assistant Editor
Douglas H. Johnson, Book Review Editor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INVASION PATTERN MAPPING OF NON-SEEDED SPECIES ON A SHALLOWLY DISTURBED SEEDED SITE ▪ C. E. Grygiel, C. D. Bonham, and E. F. Redente
CHANGES IN THE LICHEN FLORA OF PIPESTONE NATIONAL MONUMENT, MINNESOTA ▪ G. D. Willson and T. W. Vinyard
INTERPOPULATION VARIABILITY IN MOUTHPARTS IN Scaphiopus bombifrons IN NEBRASKA (AMPHIBIA: PELOBATIDAE) ▪ T. L. Potthoff and J. D. Lynch
PLANTS AND INVERTEBRATES IN A PRAIRIE WETLAND DURING DUCK BROOD-REARING J. W. McCrady, W. A. Wentz, and R. L. Linder
OCCURRENCE OF …
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 3 September 1986
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 18, No. 3 September 1986
The Prairie Naturalist
Paul B. Kannowski, Editor
Nikki R. Seabloom, Assistant Editor
Douglas H. Johnson, Book Review Editor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
HABITAT SELECTION AND MOVEMENT PATTERNS IN SANDHILLS RODENTS ▪ C. A. Lemen and P. W. Freeman
THE HERPETOFAUNA OF THE WEAVER DUNES, WABASHA COUNTY, MINNESOTA ▪ P. A. Cochran
MULTIPLE EGG CLUTCH PRODUCTION IN THE GREAT PLAINS TOAD ▪ J. J. Krupa
MAMMALS OF THE KONZA PRAIRIE RESEARCH NATURAL AREA, KANSAS ▪ E. J. Finck, D. W. Kaufman, G. A. Kaufman, S. K. Gurtz, B. K. Clark, L. J. McLellan, and B. S. Clark
AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES IN LEVEL DITCHES AND ADJACENT EMERGENT …
Laboulbeniales On Semiaquatic Hemiptera. V. Triceromyces, Richard K. Benjamin
Laboulbeniales On Semiaquatic Hemiptera. V. Triceromyces, Richard K. Benjamin
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Six species of Triceromyces (Laboulbeniales), including the type, T. balazucii (on Hebridae), parasitic on semiaquatic Hemiptera, were studied at the light-microscopic level. Descriptions are provided for all of the taxa, and features of developmental morphology are described, compared, and illustrated with photographs and line drawings. Four species are described as new: T. hebri (on Hebridae), T. hydrometrae (on Hydrometridae), and T. biformis and T. bullatus (on Mesoveliidae). The species growing on Hebridae and Hydrometridae are monoecious. The two species on Mesoveliidae develop monoecious and dioecious morphs, which occur together on the same host individual. This phenomenon is recognized and described …
Wood Anatomy Of Gesneriaceae, Sherwin Carlquist, David A. Hoekman
Wood Anatomy Of Gesneriaceae, Sherwin Carlquist, David A. Hoekman
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Qualitative and quantitative data are presented for woods of 37 species representing 11 genera; most species included represent a maximal degree of woodiness for the family, and herbaceous groups are mostly omitted. Growth rings are absent or nearly so. Vessel elements have simple perforation plates (except for Kohleria elegans) and alternate circular or oval pits of various sizes on vessel-vessel walls (often laterally elongate, often with gaping apertures, on vessel-parenchyma and vessel-septate fiber interfaces). Grooves interconnect pit apertures in vessels of four genera. Vessels are grouped, usually in radial chains, to a moderate extent. Tyloses are present. Imperforate tracheary …
Wood Anatomy Of Stilbaceae And Retziaceae: Ecological And Systematic Implications, Sherwin Carlquist
Wood Anatomy Of Stilbaceae And Retziaceae: Ecological And Systematic Implications, Sherwin Carlquist
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Wood anatomy of ten species in five genera of the Cape Province (South Africa) family Stilbaceae is reported in quantitative and qualitative terms. Wood anatomy for stem, root, and lignotuber is reported for the monotypic Cape genus Retzia. Stilbaceae and Retziaceae are alike in wood anatomy but differ from Verbenaceae by having scalariform perforation plates with few and wide-bordered bars (simple plates and modified scalariform plates are also present); vessel elements clearly fibriform in shape; very scarce axial parenchyma; and long uniseriate wings on multiseriate rays. When added to endosperm presence and ericoid habit, these features may serve to segregate …
Wood Anatomy Of Myoporaceae: Ecological And Systematic Considerations, Sherwin Carlquist, David A. Hoekman
Wood Anatomy Of Myoporaceae: Ecological And Systematic Considerations, Sherwin Carlquist, David A. Hoekman
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Floristic Botany
Quantitative and qualitative features are presented for 28 collections of three genera (Bontia, Eremophila, Myoporum); data on Oftia are also included since it is sometimes referred to Myoporaceae. Wood of all Myoporaceae represents variation on a basic plan: woods diffuse porous or semi-ringporous; vessels with simple perforation plates; lateral wall pits of vessels alternate and circular, with grooves interconnecting some pit apertures; vessels grouped to various degrees into radial multiples; imperforate tracheary elements all fiber-tracheids with pit cavities 1-5 μm in diameter (wider on contacts with ray cells), nonseptate; axial parenchyma vasicentric scanty plus, in some …