Page 3541 of 3644 Results 35401 - 35410 of 36438
Id/Author/Year/TitleOrder by:  Year  Id  Author  Title
34062
Duwe V.K., Vu L.V., von Rintelen T., von Raab-Straube E., Schmidt S., Nguyen S.V., Vu T.D., Do T.V., Luu T.H., Truong V.B., Di Vincenzo V., Schmidt O., Glöckler F., Jahn R., Lücking R., von Oheimb K.C.M., von Oheimb P.V., Heinze S., Abarca N., Bollendorff S., Borsch T., Buenaventura E., Dang H.T.T., Dinh T.D., Do H.T., Ehlers S., Freyhof J., Hayden S., Hein P., Hoang T.A., Hoang D.M., Hoang S.N., Kürschner H., Kusber W.-H., Le H.N., Le T.Q., Linde M., Mey W., Nguyen H.D., Nguyen M.T., Nguyen M.T., Nguyen D.V., Nguyen T.V., Nguyen V.D.H., Nguyen D.Q., Ohl M., Parolly G., Pham T.N., Pham P.V., Rabe K., Schurian B., Skibbe O., Sulikowska-Drozd A., To Q.V., Truong T.Q., Zimmermann J. & Häuser C.L. (2022): Contributions to the biodiversity of Vietnam – Results of VIETBIO inventory work and field training in Cuc Phuong National Park - Biodiversity Data Journal, 10: e77025 [28 p.]

VIETBIO [Innovative approaches to biodiversity discovery and characterisation in Vietnam] is a bilateral German-Vietnamese research and capacity building project focusing on the development and transfer of new methods and technology towards an integrated biodiversity discovery and monitoring system for Vietnam. Dedicated field training and testing of innovative methodologies were undertaken in Cuc Phuong National Park as part and with support of the project, which led to the new biodiversity … URL EndNote Read more... 

34068
Tarelkina T.V., Galibina N.A., Moshnikov S.A., Nikerova K.M., Moshkina E.V. & Genikova N.V. (2022): Anatomical and morphological features of Scots pine heartwood formation in two forest types in the middle taiga subzone - Forests, 13: 91 [17 p.]

Currently, there is no consensus on how growing conditions affect the heartwood formation in Scots pine. Comparing the results obtained by different authors is difficult due to methodology differences and poor descriptions of the objects used. We selected two sample plots in (1) a blueberry pine forest on nutrient-rich and moist soil and (2) a lichen pine forest on nutrient-poor and dry soil and performed their detailed characterization. The sample plots were located 22 km apart in the middle … URL EndNote Read more... 

34077
Halda J. P., Woo J. J., Liu D., O, S. O., Joshi Y. & Hur J. S. (2022): Jejulea byssolomoides gen. et sp. nov., a Remarkable Pilocarpaceae (Lichen-Forming Ascomycetes) from Jeju Island, South Korea - Mycobiology, 50: 172-180

The new genus and species, Jejulea byssolomoides, is described from Jeju Island, Korea. This lichen is characterized by saxicolous, crustose, pale greenish-gray, partly finely filamentous, matt, smooth thallus, prominent convex brown to dark brown ascomata with a concolorous margin constricted at the dark brown base, 300-800 μm diameter, 200-250 μm high, without a distinct proper margin, adhering to the substratum ending in a minute byssoid white external part of cylindrical cells, fusiform 3-5 … URL EndNote PDF Read more... 

34600
Şenol Z.M.,Gül Ü.D. & Şimşek S. (2022): Bioremoval of Safranin O dye by the identified lichen species called Evernia prunastri biomass; biosorption optimization, isotherms, kinetics, and thermodynamics - Biomass Conversion and Biorefinery, 12: 4127–4137

Evernia prunastri (lichen), a novel, eco-friendly, cost-effective, wide availability, safe, renewable and easy collection biosorbent, has been utilized for the removal of Safranin O (SO) dye from an aqueous solution. The biosorption behavior of SO onto the lichen biomass was investigated concerning parameters such as initial SO concentration (10–2000 mg L−1), solution pH (2.0– 12.0), lichen biomass dosage (1–20 g L−1), contact time (2–1440 min), temperature (5 °C, 25 °C, and 40 °C), … URL EndNote Read more... 

34083
Knudsen K., Tsurykau A., Hodková E., Golubkov V., Bely P. & Kocourková J. (2022): Acarospora fuscata and A. umbilicata (Acarosporaceae, Ascomycota) in Belarus - Ботанический журнал [Botanicheskii Zhurnal], 107(1): 38–46

The article presents the results of a revision of herbarium specimens of gyrophoric acid containing Acarospora species in Belarus. Two species were recorded, A. fuscata and A. umbilicata. Morphological and anatomical characters, ecology and distribution of both species are discussed. Our revision sufficiently extended the knowledge about range of Acarospora umbilicata in Eastern Europe. For this species, two genes, nrITS and mtSSU, were generated and available through GenBank for further phylogenetic … URL EndNote Read more... 

34097
Ametrano C.G., Lumbsch H.T., Di Stefano I., Sangvichien E., Muggia L. & Grewe F. (2022): Should we hail the Red King? Evolutionary consequences of a mutualistic lifestyle in genomes of lichenized ascomycetes - Ecology and Evolution, 12: e8471 [16 p.]

The Red Queen dynamic is often brought into play for antagonistic relationships. However, the coevolutionary effects of mutualistic interactions, which predict slower evolution for interacting organisms (Red King), have been investigated to a lesser extent. Lichens are a stable, mutualistic relationship of fungi and cyanobacteria and/ or algae, which originated several times independently during the evolution of fungi. Therefore, they represent a suitable system to investigate the coevolutionary … URL EndNote Read more... 

34100
Hofmeister J., Vondrák J., Ellis C., Coppins B., Sanderson N., Malíček J., Palice Z., Acton A., Svoboda S. & Gloor R. (2022): High and balanced contribution of regional biodiversity hotspots to epiphytic and epixylic lichen species diversity in Great Britain - Biological Conservation, 266:109443 [6 p.]

We surveyed epiphytic and epixylic lichens in eleven 1-hectare forest plots located in representative old-forest stands in four distinct regions of Great Britain that are well-known centres of lichen biodiversity. We aimed to analyse the patterns of lichen biodiversity in these important biodiversity hotspots from a British perspective. In total, we recorded 550 lichen species in 11 ha, i.e. 73% of the presently known British epiphytic and epixylic lichen flora. Species richness per site was regionally … URL EndNote Read more... 

34101
Kidron G.J. & Kronenfeld R. (2022): Dew and fog as possible evolutionary drivers? The expansion of crustose and fruticose lichens in the Negev is respectively mainly dictated by dew and fog - Planta, 255:32 [12 p.]

Main conclusion: The expansion of crustose lichens in the Negev is principally determined by dew and that of fruticose lichens by fog. Crustose and fruticose lichens are largely adapted to dew and fog, respectively. Although crustose and fruticosea lichens were shown to efciently use dew and fog, the link between their expansion and the occurrence of dew and fog has never been shown experimentally. This is also the case for the Negev Desert Highlands, where (i) dewless habitats were not inhabited … URL EndNote Read more... 

34103
Gheza G., Vallese C. & Nascimbene J. (2022): Enhancing lichen inventories in Italy: new records of Cladonia, Nephroma and Peltigera from the mountains of Lombardia - Borziana, 3: 5–17

We report 510 records of 58 species belonging to the three lichen genera Cladonia P. Browne, Nephroma Ach. and Peltigera Willd. from 57 sites in the Prealps and Alps of Lombardia (Northern Italy). Four mountain sectors were investigated: the Orobic Prealps and Alps (19 sites), the Brescia Prealps (9 sites), the Adamello massif (8 sites), and the Rhaetian Alps (22 sites). Cladonia was represented by 39 species (415 records), Nephroma by 2 species (7 records), Peltigera by 17 species (88 records). … URL EndNote Read more... 

34107
McCune B., Yang S., Jovan S. & Root H.T. (2022): Climate and epiphytic macrolichen communities in the Four Corners region of the U.S.A. - Bryologist, 125(1): 70–90

We used data on epiphytic lichen communities in 1215, 0.4-ha plots in the Southwest U.S.A. collected by the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) program to analyze relationships with climate. We sought the climate variables most strongly associated with differences in epiphytic macrolichen communities and described the nature of those relationships, including diversity, community composition, and patterns in individual species. Five lichen community groups were strongly related to temperature … URL EndNote Read more... 

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