The conservation of botanical diversity

2000 ◽  
pp. 3-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. T. Prance
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 257-263
Author(s):  
G. N. Ogureeva ◽  
L. Zhargalsaikhan ◽  
T. Yu. Karimova ◽  
I. M. Miklyaeva

Plants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 584
Author(s):  
Nadia Las Heras Las Heras Etayo ◽  
Félix Llamas ◽  
Carmen Acedo

The species Chiliadenus glutinosus (L.) Fourr. has a large number of therapeutic uses reported in the traditional Spanish medicine. The growing interest in preserving the ethnopharmacological knowledge related to the botanical diversity existing in Spain and the interest in achieving scientific validation of the therapeutic properties of medicinal species has led to the development of this study. To do it, all the known medicinal uses of Ch. glutinosus in Spain were compiled, then an exhaustive bibliographic research on its chemical composition was carried out, and finally, an in silico validation of the bioactive phytochemicals present in a higher proportion in the essential oil of Ch. glutinosus: camphor, borneol, lucinone, glutinone, quercetin, kutdtriol, and kaempferol; in an attempt to justify the reported traditional uses of the species. It was found that much of the traditional medicinal uses of Ch. glutinosus, along with the biological activity of its phytochemicals, are supported by scientific evidence. The results place this species in a prominent position to initiate possible lines of research to develop new, more effective drugs and improve therapies to treat conditions and diseases that affect the different organic systems of the human being.


2015 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 391-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingrida Šaulienė ◽  
Laura Šukienė ◽  
Auste Noreikaite-Merkeliene ◽  
Vidmantas Pileckas

Honey as a food has long been used in human nutrition and is still popular. Honey is important because of its therapeutic, prophylactic and strengthening value. Pollen is one of the most decisive components that ensure the quality and type of honey. Modern society becomes more and more sensitive to airborne pollen. Therefore, it is crucial to determine the composition of allergenic plant pollen in natural honey. For this purpose, we studied and compared pollen abundance in honey and air samples collected in Lithuania. Standard methods for pollen investigation in air and honey were used in this study. The botanical diversity of pollen identified in honey and air samples indicates 10 morphotypes: 8 of woody plants and 2 of herbaceous plants, in both the honey and air samples. <em>Salix</em> pollen counts in the honey were found to be highest among airborne pollen from May to September. The anemophilous allergenic pollen constituted 44 % of the total pollen detected in the honey.


Bothalia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Strohbach

Background: The Great Escarpment of southern Africa takes the form of an extended mountainous highland in central-western Namibia, commonly referred to as the ‘Khomas Hochland’. It is regarded as an area of high botanical diversity. Yet only few localised studies on the vegetation composition are available. The Khomas Hochland is formed on the southern part of the Damara Orogen and dominated by metamorphosed sediments. Climatically it forms a transition between the hot desert of the Namib and the slightly cooler hot steppe in the inland.Objectives: To classify and provide syntaxonomical descriptions of the vegetation of the Khomas Hochland.Methods: A dataset comprising 1151 relevés and 914 species was compiled from various surveys, mostly collected under, and to the standards of, the umbrella project ‘Vegetation Survey of Namibia’. For first classifications, the data set was reduced to a synusial set consisting of trees, shrubs, dwarf shrubs and grasses only.Results: The classification resulted in four major landscape units, being the Pre-Namib and Escarpment zone, the Khomas Hochland proper, riverine habitats as well as surrounding lowlands. The classification was further refined using Cocktail procedures to produce 30 associations, one with four sub-associations. These are described in this paper.Conclusion: A classification of synoptic data grouped the associations into five orders and one undefined cluster of associations on specialised desert habitats. Four of these orders correspond to the habitat types identified in the first classification. The fifth order, the Senegalio hereroensis–Tarchonanthoetalia camphorathi, represents high mountains of the central Khomas Hochland, which link biogeographically to the grassland biome in South Africa.


Botany ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahboubeh Sherafati ◽  
Shahrokh Kazempour-Osaloo ◽  
Maryam Khoshsokhan-Mozaffar ◽  
Shokouh Esmailbegi ◽  
Yannick M. Staedler ◽  
...  

The Irano-Turanian (I-T) bioregion harbours one of the Old world’s greatest repositories of botanical diversity; however, the diversification patterns and the phenotypic evolution of its flora are sorely understudied. The subtribe Cynoglossinae is characteristic of the western I-T bioregion, species–rich both in the desertic lowlands and the more mesic highlands of the Iranian plateau. About 70 species of Cynoglossinae are present in the Iranian plateau, 47 of which are endemic to the plateau.Herein, nuclear ITS and cpDNA rpl32-trnL and trnH–psbA sequences were used to investigate the molecular phylogeny, historical biogeography and ancestral character states of Cynoglossinae. Molecular dating and ancestral range reconstruction analyses indicated that the subtribe Cynoglossinae has initiated its diversification from the eastern part of the western I-T during the mid-Miocene, concomitantly with the uplift of the Pamir and Hindu Kush mountains. Moreover, from the Pliocene onwards the Afghan-India collision and extensive deformation of the Arabia-Eurasia convergence probably promoted allopatric speciation in Cynoglossinae via mostly vicariance events. Evolution of annuals with small nutlets from perennials with large nutlets was accompanied by mesic to desert habitats shifts. Herein, to explain distribution of Cynoglossinae in the western I-T, the congruence between cladogenetic, geological and palaeoclimatic events was investigated.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 00007
Author(s):  
Maxim V. Bocharnikov ◽  
Anton A. Stas’ko

Bioclimatic substantiation of the vegetation spatial structure of the Kodar-Kalar orobiome on the basis of altitudinal vegetation divisions using the global climate model (BioClim) was carried out. Statistical analysis showed differences between altitudinal belts, sub-belts and also larch forests types on average annual temperature and average annual precipitation. The possibility of using the climate as a factor of differentiation of the vegetation cover at the regional level has been proved.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-212
Author(s):  
I. M. Miklyaeva ◽  
D. S. Belyavsky

Soil Science ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 172 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiguo Xu ◽  
Baixing Yan ◽  
Yan He ◽  
Changchun Song

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