Alkaloid Accumulation in Different Parts and Ages of Lycoris chinensis

2010 ◽  
Vol 65 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 458-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong-mei Mu ◽  
Ren Wang ◽  
Xiao-dan Li ◽  
Yu-mei Jiang ◽  
Feng Peng ◽  
...  

The galanthamine, lycorine, and lycoramine content of Lycoris chinensis was researched during development from young to old plants, i.e. in seeds, ten-day-old seedlings, threemonth- old seedlings, one-year-old seedlings, and perennial seedlings. Notably the alkaloid level reduced to its lowest content 10 days after seed germinating. Then the accumulation of galanthamine tended to increase with age, reaching a higher value in perennial seedlings. The production pattern of lycorine and lycoramine was found similar to that of galanthamine. Different plant organs were also evaluated for their galanthamine, lycorine, and lycoramine contents. Mature seeds had the highest content of galanthamine (671.33 μg/g DW). Kernels, seed capsules, and root-hairs were the main repository sites for galanthamine, lycorine, and lycoramine. The leaves were the least productive organs.

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-122
Author(s):  
Hendry R. Sawe ◽  
Bruno F. Sunguya ◽  
Eligius F. Lyamuya

All too frequent, valuable research output and scholarly materials from expensively conducted research work in different parts of the world end up in research desks, academic libraries, and scientific journals. Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Science (MUHAS) through the Directorate of Research and Publications initiated a series of symposia that aim to disseminate the evidence generated by the researchers to the policy makers and the community. In two of the six conducted University-wide symposia in the last one year, MUHAS produced two important policy briefs summarizing the impact of MUHAS research in two important—though distinct areas of local and global health impact—Elimination of Mother to Child Transmission (EMTCT) of HIV, and Diarrhea diseases.


2007 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
pp. 443-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. V. Danks

AbstractIn cold climates most aquatic habitats are frozen for many months. Nevertheless, even in such regions the conditions in different types of habitat, in different parts of one habitat, and from one year to the next can vary considerably; some water bodies even allow winter growth. Winter cold and ice provide challenges for aquatic insects, but so do high spring flows, short, cool summers, and unpredictable conditions. General adaptations to cope with these constraints, depending on species and habitat, include the use of widely available foods, increased food range, prolonged development (including development lasting more than one year per generation), programmed life cycles with diapause and other responses to environmental cues (often enforcing strict univoltinism), and staggered development. Winter conditions may be anticipated not only by diapause and related responses but also by movement for the winter to terrestrial habitats, to less severe aquatic habitats, or to different parts of the same habitat, and by construction of shelters. Winter itself is met by various types of cold hardiness, including tolerance of freezing in at least some species, especially chironomid midges, and supercooling even when surrounded by ice in others. Special cocoons provide protection in some species. A few species move during winter or resist anoxia beneath ice. Spring challenges of high flows and ice scour may be withstood or avoided by wintering in less severe habitats, penetrating the substrate, or delaying activity until after peak flow. However, where possible species emerge early in the spring to compensate for the shortness of the summer season, a trait enhanced (at least in some lentic habitats) by choosing overwintering sites that warm up first in spring. Relatively low summer temperatures are offset by development at low temperatures, by selection of warm habitats and microhabitats, and in adults by thermoregulation and modified mating activity. Notwithstanding the many abiotic constraints in cold climates, aquatic communities are relatively diverse, though dominated by taxa that combine traits such as cold adaptation with use of the habitats and foods that are most widely available and most favourable. Consequently, except in the most severe habitats, food chains and community structure are complex even at high latitudes and elevations, including many links between aquatic and terrestrial habitats. Despite the complex involvement of aquatic insects in these cold-climate ecosystems, we know relatively little about the physiological and biochemical basis of their cold hardiness and its relationship to habitat conditions, especially compared with information about terrestrial species from the same regions.


1955 ◽  
Vol 45 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 82-91
Author(s):  
J. K. St. Joseph

Accounts of air reconnaissance in Britain have already been printed in this Journal (XLI, for north Britain; XLIII, for south Britain): the present paper records recent discoveries, bringing the previous records up to date.Of the last five summers only in 1955 was there a marked drought favourable to the development of crop marks; but it has been possible to observe different parts of the country under a wide variety of conditions. These have allowed advantage to be taken of different combinations of weather, crops, and soil, so that a buried site invisible one year might be seen in another. Moreover, opportunities for reconnaissance in March and April have meant that large areas could be observed soon after spring ploughing, when soil-patterns in bare fields often reveal disturbances in the ground. These conditions have been particularly valuable for studying Celtic field-systems on the chalk downs and traces of ancient agriculture in the Fenland.In the north, reconnaissance has revealed an interesting new group of military works, apparently of early date, at Troutbeck on the margin of the Lake District, besides yielding much fresh information at sites already known. This is particularly true of the extensive Roman sites in Scotland that often now lie within several different fields, not all of which are under suitable crops in any one year. Two forts, two signal-stations, and some sixteen temporary camps may be added to the list of discoveries given in JRS XLI.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. 181-186
Author(s):  
Rajendra Mohanty

To see how the community media played a role in establishing democracy in different parts of the world in the last one year, a study on different news, current affairs and publications between February-April 2011 was done. From the study it was evident that, community media indeed played a significant role in creating mass public awareness against their respective autocratic rulers and thereby prompting them to overthrow those governments. It was because of the community media that democratic principles are widely disseminated and adopted.


Author(s):  
Vera Milz

As a beginning teacher in the early 1960s, I went into a school district where a basal reading text was handed me. It was Dick, Jane, and Sally. The old “Look, look! Run, run! See, see!” In workbooks the children were to search a page for the words they saw starting with “b.” I was comfortable the first year trying things out, but by the third year of teaching I could see that the program just didn’t meet the needs of all my children, and I was going over things that some of them already knew. So I began to explore other alternatives. I went to lectures at nearby Oakland University. Quite a few reading experts came there from different parts of the country. Bill Martin was one of them. He was the author of the Little Owl books and collections of stories and poems in books and on tapes. Martin had one selection called Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? that first graders absolutely loved. Even twenty years later, it’s still one of their favorites. They would pick up that rhyme and begin to read, “Brown bear, brown bear, what do you see?” “I see a red bird looking at me.” In their own writing at Hallowe’en it became “Orange pumpkin, orange pumpkin, what do you see?” “I see a white ghost looking at me.” One year a mother came in with a little boy from Lebanon who spoke just Arabic and French. He was afraid to try English words in front of us. A couple weeks later his mother and aunt came in and said, “What’s this brown bear?” The boy had come home chanting the lines. In class I noticed that he was really looking at the words in the book while he listened to Bill Martin say them on tape. Another person I learned from at that time was Roach Van Allen, from the University of Arizona. He came in and talked about children writing their own books, and then learning to read them. He also suggested having the children talk about a common experience, which could be written down by the teacher.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 1019-1031 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylwia Budzyńska ◽  
Magdalena Krzesłowska ◽  
Przemysław Niedzielski ◽  
Piotr Goliński ◽  
Mirosław Mleczek

1964 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 482-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Stillwell ◽  
D. J. Kelly

The rate of fungous deterioration was determined for 292 balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) killed by the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana (Clem.) in an area of heavy tree mortality in northern New Brunswick. Trees dead less than one year and up to seven years were examined. Fifty fir trees dead 0 to 2 years in a light mortality area were also examined. Trees in the heavy mortality area deteriorated much more slowly than those examined by other workers in Ontario. Stereum chailletii (Pers.) Fr. and S. sanguinolentum (Alb. & Schw. ex Fr.) Fr. caused most of the incipient and advanced decay in New Brunswick, whereas S. chailletii caused all the incipient decay in trees dead less than one year in Ontario but was replaced after one year by Polyporus abietinus Dicks, ex Fr. which then caused most of the advanced decay. Advanced decay progressed faster in trees in the light mortality area in New Brunswick than in trees in the heavy mortality area. Nineteen species of basidiomycetes were associated with sapwood decay. Comments concerning the position and frequency of fungous occurrence in the different parts of the tree in relation to the number of years since death are made for eight of the more commonly isolated fungi. The introduction of S. chailletii into living trees by woodwasps and the differences observed in the development of P. abietinus in dead trees in the two regions are discussed.


1936 ◽  
Vol 14c (4) ◽  
pp. 153-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Stevenson ◽  
J. S. Clayton

A series of studies was made upon the coumarin content of various species, varieties and individual plants of sweet clover (Melilotus), determinations being made from different parts of the plant, at different stages of growth, and upon herbage dried by different methods. The conclusions drawn from the results of these studies may be summarized as follows:— (1) Coumarin content of the leaf and stem of sweet clover changes rapidly throughout the various stages of growth. (2) Wide variations in coumarin content exist between different species, between different varieties within a species and often between different individuals within a variety. (3) There is a marked relation between color of leaf and coumarin content. Plants possessing dark-colored foliage have invariably tested higher in coumarin content than those with foliage of lighter color. (4) The Alpha variety possesses a lower coumarin content than any other variety of M. albus tested. (5) The species, Melilotus dentatus, used in these tests, contained less than 0.01% of coumarin in the foliage and less than 0.05% in the mature seeds. For all practical purposes it may be regarded as coumarin-free. (6) Air drying or oven drying of sweet clover results in a heavy loss of coumarin from the leaves and marked changes in the coumarin content of the stems. (7) There is a definite correlation between the coumarin content of the leaf and of the mature seed in the materials used. (8) The coumarin content of the mature seed provides a reliable estimate of the coumarin content of the leaf of the plant. (9) Breeding results indicate the possibility of producing low coumarin varieties through inbreeding and selection.


Author(s):  
I. I. Korshykov ◽  
N. I. Sushynska

The work deals with the peculiarities of seasonal dynamics of the content of photosynthetic pigments in leaves and their parts with various colouring in variegated-leaf forms of Berberis thunbergii DC. Three forms were studied: green-leaf, purple-leaf 'Harlequin', and form 'Coronita', which has three colour patterns of leaves and their different parts (peripheral and central) with substantial differences in colouring. The photosynthetic pigments were extracted from leaves and their parts using dimethyl sulphoxide; in given extracts, the quantity of these pigments was measured by spectrophotometer SF-2000. We determined general and specific peculiarities of the content of chlorophyll and carotenoids in the leaves of one- and two-year-old shoots of three forms of B. thunbergii during growth and heterogeneity of their quantity in differently coloured parts of the leaf blade of 'Coronita'. In the yellow margins of pink-coloured leaves of one-year-old shoots of “Coronita”, the content of green and yellow pigment was usually lower than in the peripheral part of purple-coloured leaves. The maximum content of both types of photosynthetic pigments in this part of leaves of one- and two-year-old shoots was noted in the first half of the growing season. The same applies to the middle parts of the pink- and purple-coloured leaves; the lowest content of the pigments is typical of hot and dry months. The yellow-green- and brown-coloured leaves of form 'Coronita' differ from the other two leaf types in that the content of chlorophyll and carotenoids is at the highest in the second half of the growing season, and it is significantly higher. The ratio of chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b in the leaves of three forms recorded in September-October increases in comparison with such ratio in May-July. It shows that, at the end of the growing season, catabolism of chlorophyll b takes place faster than one of chlorophyll a. With regard to the ratio chlorophyll/sum of carotenoids, this index decreases in autumn in comparison with the first half of the growing season; it shows that green pigments have more active catabolism than yellow ones. The maximum content of chlorophyll in the leaves of B. thunbergii is generally recorded in the first half of the growing season; this index decreases in the hot and dry second half, but when the heat drops, the quantity of carotenoids increases slightly. In this regard, variegated-leavf form 'Coronita' stands out; it is characterized by high endogenic variability in the content of pigments within leaf blades depending on the colouring of different parts of a leaf.


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