XV.—Encystation and Reserve Food Formation in Trinema lineare, Penard

1924 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-300
Author(s):  
J. S. Dunkerly

In the early spring of 1922 I was working with my friend Mr R. A. Staig at the rearing of larvæ and eggs of Stomoxys calcitrans in horse dung from a farm. Some of the manure had been left in the incubator (which was maintained at 24° C.) after all larvæ had been raised from it. On examining the surface of the material, which had been kept damp, it was found to be swarming with small Oligochætes and a rich culture of a testaceous Rhizopod (fig. 1). This latter is 35μ × 17μ in size, and appears to be identical with the organism figured by Leidy (10) as Trinema enchelys. It seems certain that Leidy had placed different species under this one name, and Cash and Waite (2) have placed in the species lineare those forms which differ from T. enchelys in being of smaller size and in having a test very thin and composed of ill-defined plates, which can hardly be seen in most of the specimens mounted in balsam. The present organism then can be placed in this species, Trinema lineare, Penard.

1980 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 379-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. B. McLaughlin ◽  
R. K. McConathy ◽  
R. L. Barnes ◽  
N. T. Edwards

Seasonal patterns of change in lipids, sugars, starch, labile (ethanol soluble) constituents, holocellulose, and lignin were studied in six forest-grown white oak (Quercusalba L.) trees. Contents of metabolically active constituents in leaves, twigs, branches, boles (upper and lower), and roots (support and small lateral) were used to construct whole-tree budgets of energy allocation. [14C]Sucrose was also concurrently supplied to the study trees to follow the fate and efficiency of utilization of food reserves. Results showed that white oak rapidly mobilized and replaced food reserves during the critical period of canopy generation in the spring. Starch was more important as a reserve food than lipids or sugar. Large fluctuations in starch in roots in spring and fall suggested a bimodal belowground growth pattern. Labile constituents showed the most pronounced seasonal changes and dominated the calculated whole-tree energy flux patterns. Rapid decline in labile compounds in early spring and a parallel increase in holocellulose suggested a possible pattern of mobilization and resupply of stored reserves associated with in cell wells. This possibility was supported by a concurrent shift of labile 14C to nonlabile 14C in tissues. Canopy generation was calculated to have cost ≤17.7 kg of glucose (1.6 g glucose/g of canopy) of which 13 kg appeared to have come from within the canopy.


Author(s):  
H. J. Kirch ◽  
G. Spates ◽  
R. Droleskey ◽  
W.J. Kloft ◽  
J.R. DeLoach

Blood feeding insects have to rely on the protein content of mammalian blood to insure reproduction. A substantial quantity of protein is provided by hemoglobin present in erythrocytes. Access to hemoglobin is accomplished only via erythrocyte lysis. It has been shown that midgut homogenates from the blood feeding stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans, contain free fatty acids and it was proposed that these detergent-like compounds play a major role as hemolysins in the digestive physiology of this species. More recently sphingomyelinase activity was detected in midgut preparations of this fly, which would provide a potential tool for the enzymatic cleavage of the erythrocyte's membrane sphingomyelin. The action of specific hemolytic factors should affect the erythrocyte's morphology. The shape of bovine erythrocytes undergoing in vitro hemolysis by crude midgut homogenates from the stable fly was examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy.


2011 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ondřej Koukol
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
W.M. Williams ◽  
L.B. Anderson ◽  
B.M. Cooper

In evaluations of clover performances on summer-dry Himatangi sandy soil, it was found that none could match lucerne over summer. Emphasis was therefore placed on production in autumn-winter- early spring when lucerne growth was slow. Evaluations of some winter annual clover species suggested that Trifolium spumosum, T. pallidum, T. resupinatum, and T. vesiculosum would justify further investigation, along with T. subterraneum which is already used in pastures on this soil type. Among the perennial clover species, Kenya white clover (7'. semipilosum) showed outstanding recovery from drought and was the only species to produce significantly in autumn. However, it failed to grow in winter-early spring. Within red clover, materials of New Zealand x Moroccan origin substantially outproduced the commercial cultivars. Within white clover, material from Israel, Italy and Lebanon, as well as progeny of a selected New Zealand plant, showed more rapid recovery from drought stress and subsequently better winter growth than New Zealand commercial material ('Grasslands Huia'). The wider use of plant material of Mediterranean origin and of plants collected in New Zealand dryland pastures is advocated in development of clover cultivars for New Zealand dryland situations.


Author(s):  
I.N. Voronchikhina ◽  
◽  
A.G. Marenkova ◽  
V. S. Rubets ◽  
V. V. Pylnev

The results of elements development of varietal agrotechnics of a new high-potential line 238h of winter triticale presented. It was identified that under the conditions of 2020 the most cost effective fertilizer system is an early spring application of NPK (S) (15-15-15 (10)) at a dose of 200kg/ha. The profitability level of this fertilizer was 88,9%.


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 22-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.E. Vlasov ◽  
◽  
A.D. Sereda ◽  
V.M. Balyshev ◽  
◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (92) ◽  
pp. 78-84
Author(s):  
G. Koval ◽  
M. Kaliyevskiy ◽  
V. Yeshchenko ◽  
I. Martyniuk ◽  
N. Martyniuk

The article presents the results of field experiments, where on the basis of podsolized heavy loamy chernozem the influence of replacement of mouldboard ploughing with nonmouldboard cultivation over top soil weediness, weediness at the beginning and end of spring crop vegetation and weed species composition before harve sting were studied. Investigation methods of main fall ploughing under spring crops of five-course rotation: soybeans–rape–wheat–flax–barley at the depths of 15-17, 20-22, 25-27 cm were conducted after post-harvest field tillage. Analysis of data on contamination of the top soil with weed seeds have shown that with the replacement of fall main mouldboard ploughing gwith nonmouldboard cultivation the figure before sowing of all crops withdifferent tillage depthat crop rotation average increased by 131-132%. It caused the increase of actual weed infestation of all crops and at the beginning and end of spring crop vegetationafter different depths of fall nonmouldboard cultivation compared with ploughing at crop rotation average it was 120–132 and 123-138%respectively. Species composition of weeds afterthe replacement of main fall mouldboard ploughing with nonmouldboard cultivation remained mainlyunchanged; although in rape plantings the proportion of white campion and early spring weed sincreased, in wheat plantings– wild mustard andscentless mayweed, insoybean plantings– late spring weeds, in flax plantings– white campion, and in barley plantings– scarlet pimpernel.


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