THE AFFINITIES OF WATER PLANTS AND THEIR SYSTEMATIC DISTRIBUTION AMONG THE ANGIOSPERMS

Water Plants ◽  
2014 ◽  
pp. 308-321
Author(s):  
Agnes Arber
Keyword(s):  
1993 ◽  
Vol 27 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 381-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Upton

The European waste water industry will need to develop denitrification processes to remove nitrogen as pressures increase to reduce nutrient levels discharged in effluents. In the USA deep bed filter technology has been used extensively to provide denitrification to levels less than 5 mg/l TN. This paper describes this technology and the full scale performance at some waste water plants in Florida, USA. This paper also describes a pilot study in the United Kingdom at Severn Trent Water. The results of the pilot plant study indicate that denitrification in deep bed sand filters is a sound robust technology using methanol addition. Nitrogen removals greater than the 70% required in the EC Directive 1991 are possible at winter sewage temperatures. The process is most suitable for achieving nitrogen removal at trickling filter plants. The cost of methanol addition is calculated to be ₤10/1000m3.


2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 727-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Oliveira Medici ◽  
Hermes Soares da Rocha ◽  
Daniel Fonseca de Carvalho ◽  
Carlos Pimentel ◽  
Ricardo Antunes Azevedo

Despite the massive demand of water for plant irrigation, there are few devices being used in the automation of this process in agriculture. This work evaluates a simple controller to water plants automatically that can be set up with low cost commercial materials, which are large-scale produced. This controller is composed by a ceramic capsule used in common domestic water filters; a plastic tube around 1.5 m long, and a pressostate used in domestic washing machines. The capsule and the pressostate are connected through the tube so that all parts are filled with water. The ceramic capsule is the sensor of the controller and has to be placed into the plant substrate. The pressostate has to be placed below the sensor and the lower it is, the higher is the water tension to start the irrigation, since the lower is the pressostate the higher is the water column above it and, therefore, the higher is the tension inside the ceramic cup to pull up the water column. The controller was evaluated in the control of drip irrigation for small containers filled with commercial organic substrate or soil. Linear regressions explained the relationship between the position of pressostate and the maximum water tension in the commercial substrate (p < 0.0054) and soil (p < 0.0001). Among the positions of the pressostate from 0.30 to 0.90 m below the sensor, the water tension changed from 1 to 8 kPa for commercial substrate and 4 to 13 kPa for the soil. This simple controller can be useful to grow plants, applying water automatically in function of the water tension of the plant substrate.


2019 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 494-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Yahyaev ◽  
Shamil K. Salikhov ◽  
S. O. Abdulkadyrova ◽  
A. Sh. Aselderova ◽  
Z. Z. Surkhayeva ◽  
...  

Introduction. Study of the interrelation between magnesium content in biosphere objects (soil, natural water, plants) with arterial hypertension (AH) incidence among the population living in the territory of the plain Dagestan (Babayurtovsky, Kizlyar, Tarumovsky and Nogai districts of the Republic). material and Methods. To assess the development of hypertension, the data were obtained from the medical information center of the Ministry of Health of Dagestan. Samples of soil, water, plants with the determination of the magnesium content in them were processed by the photometric method in the biogeochemical laboratory of the Prikaspiyskiy Institute of Biology Resources of Daghestan Scientific Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences. For analyzes, the material was selected in the summer months. The correlation coefficients are calculated by Pearson. Results. When comparing the incidence rates of AH for 2005-2007 with the magnesium content in soils, natural waters, plants, a negative average correlation of magnesium concentration in the study sites with the incidence of AH population was established in the study area. A number of patients in the studied years was also noted to be changing, but the dependence of the incidence of AH of the population on the magnesium content in the biosphere objects is preserved. Conclusions. One of the factors of occurrence and course of hypertension is the magnesium status of the population, which depends on the geochemical features of the territory. As a result of the study, it was found that the higher the magnesium content in biosphere objects, the lower the incidence of AH population. In order to reduce the AH values among the population, it is necessary to correct the lack of magnesium in the human body with magnesium additives, which contribute to the regulation of blood pressure and reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases. In connection with the possible subclinical magnesium deficiency, an important factor in informing about the possible morbidity of hypertension is information on the magnesium content in environmental objects.


1999 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 491-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroaki SEKIOKA ◽  
Michiko SHIMODA ◽  
Manabu NAKAMOTO ◽  
Tomo MIZUSAWA ◽  
Yukihiro MORIMOTO

Plant Disease ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 204-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Hüberli ◽  
K. L. Ivors ◽  
A. Smith ◽  
J. G. Tse ◽  
M. Garbelotto

In May 2003, Phytophthora ramorum S. Werres & A.W.A.M. de Cock was isolated from the leaf tips of a single plant of false Solomon's seal (Maianthemum racemosum (L.) Link, formely known as Smilacina racemosa (L.) Desf.), a native, herbaceous perennial of the Liliaceae family, at the Jack London State Park in Sonoma County, California. Affected leaves had cream-to-brown lesions on the tips that were delimited by a yellow chlorotic zone. Lesions on the stems were not observed. The isolate (American Type Culture Collection [ATCC], Manassas, VA, MYA-3280; Centraal Bureau voor Schimmelcultures, Baarn, the Netherlands, CBS 114391) was typical of P. ramorum with large chlamydospores and caduceus, semipapillate sporangia, and the sequence (GenBank Accession No. AY526570) of the internal transcribed spacer region of the rDNA matched those published previously (4). The site, from which wood rose (Rosa gymnocarpa) was recently identified as a host, is a mixed forest containing confirmed P. ramorum-infected coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), California bay laurel (Umbellularia californica), and tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflora) trees (2,3). Two leaves per asymptomatic, pesticide free, potted plant of false Solomon's seal were inoculated with zoospores of the P. ramorum isolate obtained from infected false Solomon's seal (1). Five plants were inoculated in trial 1, and the following day, three plants were inoculated in trial 2. A control leaf of each plant was dipped in sterile deionized water. Plants were enclosed in plastic bags, misted regularly with sterile distilled water, and maintained at 16 to 21°C in the greenhouse. In both trials, plants did not have lesions on the leaves after 16 days and were reinoculated on separate days for each trial with higher concentrations of zoospores (1 × 105 [trial 1] and 2 × 105 [trial 2] zoospores/ml). Cream-colored lesions, similar to those observed in the field, were evident 1 week after the second inoculation and stopped progressing in both trials by 17 days. Lesions starting from the leaf tips averaged 13 mm (range 8 to 24 mm) long, and P. ramorum was reisolated on Phytophthora-selective agar medium modified with 25 mg of pentachloronitrobenzene from 44% (trial 1) and 83% (trial 2) of all lesions (4). Control leaves had no lesions, and P. ramorum was not reisolated. Sporangia were not observed on any leaves when examined with the dissecting microscope. The fact that lesions developed only after a second inoculation with higher concentrations of zoospores, and these lesions stopped progressing after 17 days, suggests that false Solomon's seal is much less susceptible than other hosts such as western starflower (Trientalis latifolia) (1) and wood rose (2). To our knowledge, this is the first report of a plant from the Liliaceae as a natural host for P. ramorum, although Smilax aspersa was identified as being susceptible in artificial inoculations of detached leaves (E. Moralejo and L. Hernández, personal communication). False Solomon's seal is popular in the horticultural industry. References: (1) D. Hüberli et al. Plant Dis. 87:599, 2003. (2) D. Hüberli et al. Plant Dis. 88:430, 2004. (3) P. E. Maloney et al. Plant Dis. 86:1274, 2002. (4) D. M. Rizzo et al. Plant Dis. 86:205, 2002.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-159
Author(s):  
Ummi Suraya

The aim of this research is to identify and to inventory water plants in Hanjalutung Lake,Petuk Ketimpun Village, Jekan Raya District, Palangka Raya City. This research was conducted from December 2017 to January 2018. Sampling was carried out in 3 (three) stations, namely inlet ,middle and outlet. The tool used for aquatic plants 2 x 2 m transect.The results of research aquatic plants found in the waters of Lake Hanjalutung 7 (seven) types namely Kiambang (Salvinia molesta), gerigit/bite (Leersia hexandra), Cat Tail Grass (Utricularia aurea), Para Grass (Cyperus platystylis), Water Hyacinth ( Eichhornia crassipes ), Kiapu (Pistia stratiotes) dan Ketanan (Polygonum sp).


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