University of Copenhagen
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Colonial Garden Plants
COLONIAL GARD~J~ PLANTS I Flowers Before 1700 The following plants are listed according to the names most commonly used during the colonial period. The botanical name follows for accurate identification. The common name was listed first because many of the people using these lists will have access to or be familiar with that name rather than the botanical name. The botanical names are according to Bailey’s Hortus Second and The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture (3, 4). They are not the botanical names used during the colonial period for many of them have changed drastically. We have been very cautious concerning the interpretation of names to see that accuracy is maintained. By using several references spanning almost two hundred years (1, 3, 32, 35) we were able to interpret accurately the names of certain plants. For example, in the earliest works (32, 35), Lark’s Heel is used for Larkspur, also Delphinium. Then in later works the name Larkspur appears with the former in parenthesis. Similarly, the name "Emanies" appears frequently in the earliest books. Finally, one of them (35) lists the name Anemones as a synonym. Some of the names are amusing: "Issop" for Hyssop, "Pum- pions" for Pumpkins, "Mushmillions" for Muskmellons, "Isquou- terquashes" for Squashes, "Cowslips" for Primroses, "Daffadown dillies" for Daffodils. Other names are confusing. Bachelors Button was the name used for Gomphrena globosa, not for Centaurea cyanis as we use it today. Similarly, in the earliest literature, "Marygold" was used for Calendula. Later we begin to see "Pot Marygold" and "Calen- dula" for Calendula, and "Marygold" is reserved for Marigolds. -
Ethnopharmacology of Murcia (SE Spain)
M~DICAMENTSET ALIMENTS :L >APPROCHEETHNOPHARMACOLOGIQUE M 215 Ethnopharmacology of Murcia (SE Spain) RIVERA NiTr”JEZ D., OB6N DE CASTRO C. Departamento de Biologia Vegetal, Facultad de Biologia Universidad de Murcia, Campus de Espinardo, E-3007 1-Murcia, EspaÎia RÉSUMÉ Ce travail présente les plantes médicinales de larégion de Murcia (Sud-Est de l’Espagne) et leurs usages thérapeutiques.Deux listes, les espèces avec les noms scientifiques, les noms vernaculaires et les indications dans la thérapeutique populaire de cette région sont jointes ;la première liste couvre la flore locale, sauvage ou cultivée, et ladeuxième les plantes importées. INTRODUCTION of irrigated fields. In both areas the inhabitants were almost This chapter is a sequel to the monographs Plantas deprived of regular medical care until relatively recent times. Treatment was provided, and the gap filled, by the native Medicinales de Nuestra Region (OB6N and RIVERA,1991) and Introduccidn al Mundo de las Plantas Medicixales en healers called “curandero” or by the housewives theirselves. Murcia (RIVERA, OBdN, CANO and ROBLEDO, 19941, Three cultures, three religions and presumably three kindsof which compiled the scattered published information available medicine met in Murcia duringthe Middle Ages. Murcian folk about traditional uses of medicinal plants found in Murcia, beliefs and medicinal practices retain many elementsof Latin, and the works carried out by ourselves and manyof Our stu- Moorish and Jewish medical traditions. Untangling different dents in the Ethnobotany laboratoryat Murcia University since cultural contributionsto modem folk medicineis difficult, but 1982 (Fig. 1, and Tab. 1). Field trips and open-ended inter- the task of comparing the availabledata is worth to gaining a views with herbalists, healers, shepherds and housewives betterwere understandingof Western Mediterraneanfolk medicine. -
Relationship Between Floral Colour and Pollinator Composition in Four Plant Communities
Relationship between floral colour and pollinator composition in four plant communities Sara Reverté Saiz Màster en Ecologia Terrestre i Gestió de la Biodiversitat; especialitat en Ecologia Terrestre Jordi Bosch1 i Javier Retana1, 2 1 CREAF, Centre de Recerca Ecològica i Aplicacions Forestals, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra E-08193, Espanya 2 Unitat d’Ecologia, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra E-08193, Espanya 16 de Setembre de 2014 The present study started on February 2014. I was provided with the database of pollinator censuses I needed for the study. My contribution to this work has been: 1) Conducting fieldwork along the flowering season to obtain the flower samples and also performing censuses to expand the database; 2) conducting flower colour measurements with the spectrometer; 3) definition of the objectives and methodology (with supervisors’ advice); 4) analysis and interpretation of results (with supervisors’ advice); 5) writing of the document (with supervisors’ advice). The manuscript has been formatted attending to the guidelines provided by the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B- Biological Sciences. 1 Title: Relationship between floral colour and pollinator composition in four plant 2 communities 3 4 Abstract 5 6 Pollinators use a variety of floral cues to locate resources, but the relative importance of these 7 different cues on pollinator foraging decisions is unclear. However, floral colour is undoubtedly one 8 of the most important, as evidenced in previous works revealing the importance of floral colour on 9 pollinator choices and determining flower visitor composition. Our purpose is to establish whether 10 there is a relationship between flower colour and pollinator composition in natural communities. -
Fatty Acid Composition of Some Ranunculaceae Seed Oils Eugene Ucciani3, Alain Debal3, Michel Gruberb, and Robert L
Fatty Acid Composition of Some Ranunculaceae Seed Oils Eugene Ucciani3, Alain Debal3, Michel Gruberb, and Robert L. Wolffc a Chimie Organique Appliquee, CNRS, URA 1409, Faculte des Sciences, Case 412, 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France b Botanique et Ecologie, CNRS-URA 1152, Faculte des Sciences, 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France c ISTAB, Lipochimie Alimentaire, Universite de Bordeaux 1, Allee des Facultes, 33405 Talence, France Z. Naturforsch. 51c, 151-154 (1996); received November 11, 1995/January 5, 1996 Ranunculaceae, Fatty Acid Composition, Columbinic Acid, Gamma-Linolenic Acid, Taxonomy The fatty acid composition of seed oils of eight Ranunculaceae was determinated in order to characterize new sources of gamma-linolenic acid. Fatty acids were identified as fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) by capillary gas-liquid chromatography (GC) and capillary GC- Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). For trienic FAME the use of a cyanopropyl- polysiloxane stationary phase (CP-Sil 88) allowed the separation with high resolution of methyl ester of columbinic acid (trans-5,c/s-9,ds-12 18:3) and gamma-linolenic acid (cis-6,cis-9,cis-12 18:3). The results confirmed the presence of columbinic acid in Thalictrum seed oils, and that of gamma-linolenic acid in A nem one and related species seed oils. The taxonomic subdivision of Ranunculaceae into sub-families and tribes, which resulted from morphological considera tions, did not account for the above results. Introduction binic acid (COL) or trans-5,cis-9,cis-12 18:3 Species of the botanical family Ranunculaceae (Bagby et al., 1962; Kaufmann and Barve, 1965; are herbaceous plants bearing dry fruits such as Spencer et al., 1970; Takagi et al., 1983; Wu et al., achenes and follicles. -
Accepted Manuscript
Collateral effects of beekeeping: impacts on pollen-nectar resources and wild bee communities Anna Torné-Nogueraa,*, Anselm Rodrigoa,b, Sergio Osorioa, Jordi Boscha a CREAF, 08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès, Spain b Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès, Spain manuscript Accepted *Corresponding author. Tel.: +34 93 5814851; fax: +34 93 5814151. E-mail address: [email protected]. 1 Abstract 2 Due to the contribution of honey bees (Apis mellifera) to wild flower and crop pollination, 3 beekeeping has traditionally been considered a sustainable practice. However, high honey bee 4 densities may have an impact on local pollen and nectar availability, which in turn may 5 negatively affect other pollinators. This is exacerbated by the ability of honey bees to recruit 6 foragers to highly rewarding flower patches. We measured floral resource consumption in 7 rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) and thyme (Thymus vulgaris) in 21 plots located at different 8 distances from apiaries in the scrubland of Garraf Natural Park (Barcelona), and related these 9 measures to visitation rates of honey bees, bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) and other 10 pollinators. In the same plots, we measured flower density, and used pan traps to characterize 11 the wild bee community. Flower resource consumption was largely explained by honey bee 12 visitation and marginally by bumblebee visitation. After accounting for flower density, plots close 13 to apiaries had lower wild bee biomass. This was due to a lower abundance of large bee 14 species, those more likely to be affected by honey bee competition. We conclude that honey 15 bees are the main contributors to pollen/nectar consumption of the two main flowering plants in 16 the scrubland, and that at the densities currently occurring in the park (3.5 hives / km2) the wild 17 bee community is being affected. -
A Propósito De Algunas Phelipanche Pomel, Boulardia FW Schultz Y
Serie documentos Este número 6 de los Documentos del Jardín Botánico Atlántico (Gijón) —cuya línea del Jardín Botánico Atlántico de Gijón reanuda la de los tres iniciales (2002, 2003 y 2005)— se centra en el género Phelipan- 1. A propósito de algunas Orobanche che Pomel —que propugnábamos ya en el anterior, como lo hacemos hoy con Bou- Más, a propósito de algunas G. M. Schneeweiss M. G. (Orobanchaceae) del noroeste peninsular y de | lardia F.W. Schultz—. Tras algunas obligadas precisiones, y aparte las cuatro especies su tratamiento en Flora iberica vol. XIV (2001). del oeste del Paleártico del oeste del nuevas descritas (Ph. camphorosmae, Ph. resedarum, Ph. aedoi y Ph. lavandulaceoides L. Carlón, G. Gómez Casares, M. Laínz, —españolas todas, y francesa por añadidura la inicial—), aquí designamos lectótipo Phelipanche Pomel, Boulardia G. Moreno Moral & Ó. Sánchez Pedraja de un viejo e incomprendido binomen —Orobanche mutelii F.W. Schultz—, con lo 2. Más, a propósito de algunas Orobanche que la Phelipanche mutelii será una especie mediterránea muy neta en lo morfológico (Orobanchaceae) Ó. Sánchez Pedraja Sánchez Ó. | y en lo filogenético. Ph. rosmarina, inconfundible asimismo, llega desde Portugal a L. F. W. Schultz y Orobanche (Orobanchaceae) del norte y este de la Península la costa dálmata, por lo menos, y se hace africana en Argelia. Al ampliarse nuestros Ibérica (2003). L. Carlón, G. Gómez Casares, M. Laínz, horizontes afroasiáticos, el taxon que inicialmente se dio por endemismo alicantino Orobanche L. (Orobanchaceae) del oeste G. Moreno Moral & Ó. Sánchez Pedraja —de momento, Ph. portoilicitana, parásita del género Centaurea— no solo se hace G. -
Perennials Available at 2006 UBC BG Perennial Plant Sale 5/2/2006
Perennials Available at 2006 UBC BG Perennial Plant Sale 5/2/2006 Plant Name Common Name Height Colour Bl Time Special Conditions Country Acaena sp. New Zealand Burr to 4" (10 deep red, soft 1/2 inch burrs on fruit summer z6 pt.shade, well-drained, slightly alkaline soi S. Hemisphere Acanthus spinosus Bear's Breeches to 5' (150cm) white flowers with purple bracts lsp-msu z5 sun/pt.shade, good soil, tolerates dry heat Italy to W Turke Acanthus spinosus Spinosissimus Group (syn.A.spinosissimus) to 48" (120cm white flowers with purple bracts lsp-msu z5 sun/pt.shade, good soil, tolerates dry heat Achillea Yarrow 4' (120cm) gold flowers summer z4 sun, moist, well-drained soil In open site Achillea 'Terracotta' Yarrow to 30" (75cm) soft orange-brown flowers summer z4 sun, moist, well-drained soil in open site garden origin Achlys triphyllum <N> Vanilla Leaf to 1' (30cm) spikes of very small white flowers spring z5 shade, moist woodland conditions NW N America Aconitum Monkshood (all parts are p to 6' (2m) blue flowers sum-fall sun/pt.shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Aconitum carmichaelii 'Arendsii' Monkshood (all parts are p to 4' (120cm) rich blue flowers fall z3 sun/pt.shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Aconitum japonicum Monkshood (all parts are p 36" (90cm) deep blue flowers fall z6 sun/pt,shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Japan Aconitum napellus Monkshood (all parts are p to 40" (1m) ivory white flowers summer z5 sun/pt.shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Europe Aconitum napellus Monkshood (all parts are p to 5' (1.5m) indigo blue flowers summer z5 sun/pt.shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Europe Aconitum x cammarum Monkshood to 5' (1.5m) purple flowers fall z4 sun/pt.sun moist, humus-rich, well-draine Aconitum yezoense Monkshood (all parts are p to 24" (60cm) blue-purple flowers summer z6 sun/pt.shade, cool, moist, fertile soil Japan Acorus gramineus 'Variegatus' Variegated Japanese Rush 10" (25 c creamy white and green striped leave z5 full sun, wet or very moist soil E Asia Actaea simplex (syn. -
Flora and Vegetation Outline of Mt. Pozzoni-St. Rufo Valley (Cittareale, Rieti)
PhytoKeys 178: 111–146 (2021) A peer-reviewed open-access journal doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.178.62947 CHECKLIST https://phytokeys.pensoft.net Launched to accelerate biodiversity research An unknown hotspot of plant diversity in the heart of the Central Apennine: flora and vegetation outline of Mt. Pozzoni-St. Rufo valley (Cittareale, Rieti) Edda Lattanzi1, Eva Del Vico2, Roberto Tranquilli3, Emmanuele Farris4, Michela Marignani5, Leonardo Rosati6 1 Via V. Cerulli 59, 00143 Roma, Italy 2 Dipartimento di Biologia Ambientale, Sapienza Università di Roma, P.le A. Moro 5, 00185 Roma, Italy 3 Via Achille Mauri 11, 00135 Roma, Italy 4 Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy, University of Sassari, Via Piandanna 4, 07100 Sassari, Italy 5 Department of Life and Environmental Sciences – Botany Division, University of Cagliari, Via Sant’Ignazio da Laconi 13, 09123 Cagliari, Italy 6 School of Agriculture, Forestry, Food and Environment, Via dell’Ateneo Lucano 10, University of Basilicata, 85100 Potenza, Italy Corresponding author: Eva Del Vico ([email protected]) Academic editor: Manuel Luján | Received 9 January 2021 | Accepted 9 March 2021 | Published 31 May 2021 Citation: Lattanzi E, Del Vico E, Tranquilli R, Farris E, Marignani M, Rosati L (2021) An unknown hotspot of plant diversity in the heart of the Central Apennine: flora and vegetation outline of Mt. Pozzoni-St. Rufo valley (Cittareale, Rieti). PhytoKeys 178: 111–146. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.178.62947 Abstract Surprisingly enough, Italy still has some botanically unexplored areas; among these there are some territo- ries between Lazio, Umbria and Abruzzo not included in any protected area. The study area, ranging for 340 ha, includes the mountainous area of Mt. -
Genuine and Sequestered Natural Products from the Genus Orobanche (Orobanchaceae, Lamiales)
Review Genuine and Sequestered Natural Products from the Genus Orobanche (Orobanchaceae, Lamiales) Friederike Scharenberg and Christian Zidorn * Pharmazeutisches Institut, Abteilung Pharmazeutische Biologie, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Gutenbergstraße 76, 24118 Kiel, Germany; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +49-431-880-1139 Received: 10 October 2018; Accepted: 28 October 2018; Published: 30 October 2018 Abstract: The present review gives an overview about natural products from the holoparasitic genus Orobanche (Orobanchaceae). We cover both genuine natural products as well as compounds sequestered by Orobanche taxa from their host plants. However, the distinction between these two categories is not always easy. In cases where the respective authors had not indicated the opposite, all compounds detected in Orobanche taxa were regarded as genuine Orobanche natural products. From the about 200 species of Orobanche s.l. (i.e., including Phelipanche) known worldwide, only 26 species have so far been investigated phytochemically (22 Orobanche and four Phelipanche species), from 17 Orobanche and three Phelipanche species defined natural products (and not only natural product classes) have been reported. For two species of Orobanche and one of Phelipanche dedicated studies have been performed to analyze the phenomenon of natural product sequestration by parasitic plants from their host plants. In total, 70 presumably genuine natural products and 19 sequestered natural products have been described from Orobanche s.l.; these form the basis of 140 chemosystematic records (natural product reports per taxon). Bioactivities described for Orobanche s.l. extracts and natural products isolated from Orobanche species include in addition to antioxidative and anti-inflammatory effects, e.g., analgesic, antifungal and antibacterial activities, inhibition of amyloid β aggregation, memory enhancing effects as well as anti-hypertensive effects, inhibition of blood platelet aggregation, and diuretic effects. -
Tesis Doctoral
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros Agrónomos y de Montes Departamento de Producción Vegetal y Tecnología Agraria TESIS DOCTORAL DINÁMICA Y COMPETENCIA DE LA FLORA ARVENSE EN FORESTACIONES DE TERRENOS AGRÍCOLAS Doctorando: José Antonio Monreal Montoya Directores de la Tesis: Miguel Ángel Copete Carreño Olga Botella Miralles Albacete, junio de 2018 Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros Agrónomos y de Montes Departamento de Producción Vegetal y Tecnología Agraria TESIS DOCTORAL DINÁMICA Y COMPETENCIA DE LA FLORA ARVENSE EN FORESTACIONES DE TERRENOS AGRÍCOLAS Doctorando: José Antonio Monreal Montoya Directores de la Tesis: Miguel Ángel Copete Carreño Olga Botella Miralles Albacete, junio de 2018 A Antonio Del Cerro Barja, que se fue sin que me pudiera despedir y a quien estoy seguro que, como a mí, le hubiera ilusionado este día RESUMEN RESUMEN La forestación de terrenos agrícolas abandonados en Castilla-La Mancha ha tenido una gran aceptación por parte de los agricultores durante estos últimos años, recibiendo ayudas de la Unión Europea y de la propia Comunidad Autónoma. En los últimos 20 años se han forestado en Castilla La-Mancha cerca de 120.000 ha de terrenos agrícolas, correspondiendo 30.000 a la provincia de Albacete. Sin embargo, dichas forestaciones no siempre han tenido el éxito esperado, y en muchos casos, el porcentaje de marras ha sido muy elevado, alcanzando en ocasiones más del 80%. Esto se debe a las propias características de los suelos agrícolas, carentes de inóculos micorrícicos y con un gran número de propágulos de malas hierbas que hace difícil, en algunas ocasiones, el establecimiento de la vegetación forestal. -
Orobanche Apuana (Orobanchaceae) a New Species Endemic to Italy
Phytotaxa 207 (1): 163–171 ISSN 1179-3155 (print edition) www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/ PHYTOTAXA Copyright © 2015 Magnolia Press Article ISSN 1179-3163 (online edition) http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.207.2.2 Orobanche apuana (Orobanchaceae) a new species endemic to Italy GIANNIANTONIO DOMINA1* & ADRIANO SOLDANO2 1 Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali, via Archirafi 38, 90123 Palermo, Italy; e-mail: [email protected] 2 Largo Brigata Cagliari 6, 13100 Vercelli, Italy *author for correspondence Abstract Orobanche apuana, a new species belonging to Orobanche sect. Orobanche, is described and illustrated from the Apuan Alps, Central Italy. Its relationships with the other species of the group of O. caryophyllacea (O. grex Galeatae) and with other Orobanche that parasitize Santolina species are examined. The names Boulardia latisquama, Orobanche lutea and O. teucrii are here lectotypified. Key words: broomrape, Santolina pinnata, Mediterranean flora Introduction Orobanche Linnaeus (1752: 632), as unanimously accepted by all modern studies (Carlón et al. 2008, Crespo & Pujadas 2006, Domina 2009, Schneeweiss et al. 2004a, 2004b), in Europe and the Mediterranean area includes at least two well distinct groups from the morphological and karyological points of view. Despite this, researchers are divided with regard to the nomenclature to be used by grouping this taxon under a single genus with different sections (Crespo & Pujadas 2006, Domina 2009) or under different genera (Schneeweiss et al. 2004a, 2004b, Carlón et al. 2008). The taxonomic research on Orobanche s.l. in Europe is in full progress. In the last years, relationships between several taxa have been studied from the taxonomic and biological points of view (Jeanmonod 2007, Carlón et al. -
Time Lags in Plant Community Assembly After Forest Encroachment Into Mediterranean Grasslands: Drivers and Mechanisms
Time lags in plant community assembly after forest encroachment into Mediterranean grasslands: drivers and mechanisms Tesi doctoral Guillem Bagaria Morató per optar al grau de Doctor Dirigida per: Dr. Joan Pino Vilalta Dr. Ferran Rodà de Llanza Programa de doctorat en Ecologia Terrestre CREAF i Departament de Biologia Animal, Biologia Vegetal i Ecologia Facultat de Biociències Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, març 2015 El Doctor Joan Pino Vilalta, professor de la Unitat d’Ecologia de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona i investigador del Centre de Recerca Ecològica i Aplicacions Forestals, El Doctor Ferran Rodà de Llanza, professor de la Unitat d’Ecologia de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona i investigador del Centre de Recerca Ecològica i Aplicacions Forestals, Certifiquen que: Aquesta tesi duta a terme per Guillem Bagaria Morató al Departament de Biologia Animal, Biologia Vegetal i Ecologia i al Centre de Recerca Ecològica i Aplicacions Forestals, i titulada Time lags in plant community assembly after forest encroachment into Mediterranean grasslands: drivers and mechanisms ha estat realitzada sota la seva direcció. Dr. Joan Pino Vilalta Dr. Ferran Rodà de Llanza Bellaterra (Cerdanyola del Vallès), març 2015 LO CEP I Al Cep, pare del vi, li digué la pacífica Olivera: —Acosta’t a mon tronch, de branca en branca enfila’t, y barreja als penjoys d’esmeragdes que jo duch los teus rahims de perles—. Y l’arbre de Noè a l’arbre de la pau fa de contesta: —Olivera que estàs prop de mi, ni tu faràs oli, ni jo faré vi. II Ta brancada és gentil, gentil y sempre verda, mes, ay de mi! No em dexa veure el sol, que ab sos raigs d’or més rossos m’enjoyella.