ABSTRACT BOOK the Mediterranean Palynological Societies Symposium 2019 the Joint Symposium of the APLF, APLE and GPP-SBI Bordeau

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ABSTRACT BOOK the Mediterranean Palynological Societies Symposium 2019 the Joint Symposium of the APLF, APLE and GPP-SBI Bordeau ABSTRACT BOOK The Mediterranean Palynological Societies Symposium 2019 The joint symposium of the APLF, APLE and GPP-SBI Bordeaux, July 9-10-11, 2019 SPONSORS 1 Table of contents Page Aeropalynology 7 Ambrosia pollen and Amb a 1 allergen emission dynamics in Central Anatolia of Turkey, Aydan Acar S¸ahin et al. ............................................ 8 Aerobiology of Quercus and plane tree pollen, allergic sensitization and its putative contribution to pollinosis in Evora,´ Portugal, Celia´ M Antunes et al. ........................ 9 Atmospheric concentrations and intradiurnal pattern of fungal airborne spores in Tetouan´ (NW of Morocco), Fadoua Bardei et al. ................................... 10 Logistic regression models to predict daily levels of Poaceae and Amaranthaceae airborne pollen, Jor- dina Belmonte et al. ........................................... 11 Below cloud scavenging on nine types of pollen by different rain conditions, Carlos Blanco- Alegre et al. ............................................... 12 Etude de la pluie pollinique dans le massif de l’Edough (Annaba, Algerie),´ Soumaia Boughediri et al. ..................................................... 13 Pollution du pollen par des particules, Marie Choel¨ et al. ........................ 14 Effect of land cover and wind on airborne Olea pollen, Francesco Ciani et al. ............. 15 Impact of ornamental urban trees on the pollen records in the city of Florence (Italy), Francesco Ciani et al. ................................................ 16 Parietaria major allergens vs Urticaceae pollen in the air we breathe, Concepcion De Linares et al. 17 Detection and quantification of airborne Alt a 1, Concepcion De Linares et al. ............ 18 Allergenic load on the atmosphere of Porto city during 2018, Mar´ıa Fernandez-Gonz´ alez´ et al. ... 19 Cross reaction detection between aeroallergens of Alnus and Betula, Mar´ıa Fernandez-Gonz´ alez´ et al. ..................................................... 20 Mobile application of airborne particles and potential sources in Extremadura network of Aero- biology, Santiago Fernandez-Rodr´ ´ıguez et al. ............................. 21 Light Detection and Ranging on Building Modelling Information as tool for urban planning by green infrastructure of Cupressaceae spp, Santiago Fernandez-Rodr´ ´ıguez et al. ........... 22 The effects of climatic change on the airborne pollen presence in the Mediterranean area, Giuseppe Frenguelli ................................................ 23 Fungal spore calendar at the Middle-West of Spain: a preliminary study., Sergio Fuentes et al. .... 24 Use of airborne fungal spores as a biological sensor for bioclimatic comparison of two viticultural Galician regions, Estefan´ıa Gonzalez-Fern´ andez´ et al. ........................ 25 Annual diagram of pollen with allergen potential present in the atmosphere of the city of Ibague-´ Tolima (Colombia), Mosquera Mosquera Hilda Rocio et al. ..................... 26 Airborne pollen calendar of Tetouan (NW of Morocco): 2008-2014, Asmae Janati et al. ....... 27 The airborne pollen of Es-Senia airport (Oran- Northwest Algeria), Ghania Kiared et al. ....... 28 Aerobiological study of Platanus pollen type and Pla a 1 allergen in Toledo (Spain), Beatriz Lara et al. ................................................ 29 Airborne pollen records, phenology of Quercus rotundifolia, Alejandro Monroy-Col´ın et al. .... 30 Airborne pollen records, phenology and geolocation of plane tree (Platanus sp.), Alejandro Monroy-Col´ın et al. ........................................... 31 Results of automatic pollen species identification with the first Swisens Poleno series device, Erny Niederberger et al. ............................................ 32 2 Pollen information based on allergy symptoms and real-time pollen measurement - preliminary results from a pilot project, Erny Niederberger et al. .......................... 33 Relationship between NDVI using Sentinel and Olea airborne pollen in SW of the Iberian Penin- sula, Raul Pecero-Casimiro et al. .................................... 34 AIROT applied for the creation of urban risk maps for Cupressaceae family, Raul Pecero-Casimiro et al. ..................................................... 35 Comparative study of Alternaria airborne spore concentrations among urban, rural and natural areas in southern Spain., Antonio Picornell et al. ............................ 36 AeRobiology: the computational tool for biological data in the air, Antonio Picornell et al. ..... 37 Bioclimatic indexes and their trends in the North-Spain DO areas, Alba Pina-Rey˜ et al. ....... 38 Identification of airborne pollen using a pollen Raman spectra database, Helena Ribeiro et al. .... 39 Phenology, aerobiology and thermal requirements in two Olea varieties, F. Javier Rodr´ıguez- Rajo et al. ................................................ 40 Les maladies allergiques et les parametres` met´ eorologiques´ dans la commune d’Abomey-Calavi au Benin,´ Monique Tossou et al. .................................... 41 Comparative study between two aerobiological stations situated in the city of Malaga (southern Spain), Mar´ıa Del Mar Trigo et al. ................................... 42 The incidence of Amaranthaceae pollen in Qatar: a two-years research, Mar´ıa Del Mar Trigo Perez et al. ................................................ 43 Annual diagram of airborne spores of Pteridophytes from Ibague Tolima city, Ram´ırez Cotes Daniel Augusto et al. .......................................... 44 Pollen forecast in Rome, Alessandro Travaglini et al. ......................... 45 A microfluidic approach for the automated analysis of pollen grains, Alessandro Travaglini et al. .. 46 Melissopalynology 47 Can starch grains inside Cistaceae’s pollen supply the deficiency of other components in foraging preferences of the honey bees?, Amelia Virginia Gonzalez-Porto´ et al. ................ 48 Etude melissopalynologique´ des miels de la region´ de Med´ ea´ (Algerie),´ Mounia Homrani et al. ... 49 Botanical origin of several commercial honeys: spring heather and eucalyptus unifloral hon- eys, David Rodr´ıguez De La Cruz et al. ................................ 50 Strengthening of Forest Honey from Salamanca (MW Spain) to improve its commercializa- tion, Silvia Sanchez´ Duran´ et al. .................................... 51 APICAMPUS, a project on Urban beekeeping developed at the University of Malaga, Mar´ıa Del Mar Trigo Perez et al. .......................................... 52 Pollen morphology, biology and biochemistry 53 Screening of Amb a 1 allergen localisation in Ambrosia artemisifolia pollen by immunolabeling in TEM, Aydan Acar S¸ahin et al. .................................... 54 Profiles of histone epigenetic marks and histone modifiers enzymes during pollen development and microspore embryogenesis: effects of epigenetic inhibitors, Eduardo Berenguer et al. ...... 55 Lipid composition and associated gene expression patterns during pollen germination and pollen tube growth in Olea europaea L., Antonio J Castro et al. ....................... 56 Pollen morphology of genus Cirsium Mill. Sect. Cirsium (Asteraceae: Cardueae) species in Turkey, Sevcan Celenk et al. ....................................... 57 Morphometric analysis of Ericaceae pollen from southwestern European species, Ludovic De- vaux et al. ................................................ 58 Ultrastructural comparative study of the apertures, wall and tapetum in the Lardizabalaceae fam- ily, Mar´ıa Del Carmen Fernandez et al. ................................ 59 Air pollutants NO2 and O3 evoked altered Dactylis glomerata pollen oxidative defenses and al- lergen expression, Ana Galveias et al. .................................. 60 Effect of air pollutants (O3, NO2, SO2) on Olea europaea. L pollen performances, Sahar Hadj Hamda et al. ............................................... 61 3 Morphology and evolution of the orbicules in the Ranunculales order, Luc´ıa S. Hernandez-´ Moreno et al. ............................................... 62 Palynological studies on genus Dianthus L. section Fimbriati, Derya Mete et al. ........... 63 New biotechnological strategies with small molecule modulators of autophagy and proteases to improve stress-induced microspore embryogenesis efficiency for crop breeding, Yolanda Perez´ et al. 64 Effects of selenium on calcium gradient and on germination in Olea europaea pollen., Emma Tedeschini et al. ............................................. 65 Morphological characterization of some Gymnospermae non-saccate pollen., Emma Tedeschini et al. ..................................................... 66 Stressful connections during pollen development. A personal account, Oscar Vicente ........ 67 Palynomorphological investigations on Cyanus Mill. Subgenus of Centaurea L. (Asteraceae) in Turkey, Burcu Yilmaz C¸itak et al. ................................... 68 Identification of novel superoxide dismutase isoenzymes in the olive (Olea europaea L.) pollen, Ado- racion´ Zafra et al. ............................................ 69 Paleopalynogy 70 Les environnements veg´ etaux´ et agricoles de la Crete` de 3200 a` 2600 cal BP rev´ el´ es´ par l’etude´ du site de Phaistos (alt., 35 m, Grece),` Valerie´ Andrieu-Ponel et al. .................. 71 Environmental change around a Iron age foreshore settlement at Plougasnou-Saint Jean du Doigt (Finistere,` France), David Aoustin et al. ................................. 72 Mid- to Late-Holocene Mediterranean climate variability: Contribution
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