scholarly journals Пропозиції щодо реконструкції парку села Піківець Уманського району

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 38-41
Author(s):  
A. V. Kodzhebash

Парк у с. Піківець Уманського району Черкаської області було закладено у 50-60-х роках ХХ ст. у центрі села, а саме біля сільського клубу. Насамперед потрібно провести санітарне рубання та обрізування дерев. Пропонуємо підсіяти мавританський газон, а в місці, де зростає пирій повзучий (Elytrigia repens L.), повністю замінити травостій на газон. Згідно з проектом розширюється стежкова мережа. Запропоновано створення доріжок з бетонної тротуарної плитки завширшки 0,75 та 1,5 м. Деякі стежки виконуватимуть транзитну роль, а деякі сполучатимуть окремі елементи парку. З малих архітектурних форм у парку встановлюємо альтанку для відпочинку. Також запропоновано збільшити кількість лавок, додавши дугоподібну лавку на круглому майданчику, у центрі якого розміщуватиметься клумба. Позаду кругової лавки, у північно-східній частині парку запроектовано створення декоративної групи з кущів. Асортимент рослин для цієї групи включає: Berberis thunbergii DC, Forsythia europaea Deg. et Bald., Pyracantha coccinea (L.) M. Roem, Syringa vulgaris L., Cotoneaster horizontalis Decne. Для клумб використовуємо цибулькові ранньоквітучі види, а також переважно тіньовитривалі багаторічники. Рекомендуємо створити мавританський газон, до складу якого входять: костриця червона (Festuca rubra L.), райграс пасовищний (Lolium perenne L.), тонконіг лучний (Poa pratensis L.), мак польовий (Papaver rhoeas L.), льон великоквітковий (Linum grandiflorum Desf.), ромашка лікарська (Matricaria recutita L.), низькорослі сорти космеї (Cosmos Cav.), чорнобривці мексиканські (Tagetes tenuifolia Сav.), гіпсофіла повзуча (Gypsophila muralis L.), гіпсофіла витончена (Gypsophila elegans M. Bieb.).


2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (No. 6) ◽  
pp. 307-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jadwiga Wyszkowska ◽  
Agata Borowik ◽  
Jan Kucharski

Resistance of common European grasses to diesel oil and petroleum pollution is not well-known. Therefore, this study aimed at determining the level of resistance of selected grasses to pollution by diesel and petroleum using the pot experiment. The achieved results were compared with those determined for grasses grown on the non-polluted soil. Soil pollution with the tested products was found to significantly decrease the yield of all grasses, with the decrease being lower upon soil pollution with petroleum than with diesel oil. The most resistant to the pollution with diesel oil and petroleum were Phleum pratense L., Lolium perenne L. and Lolium × hybridum Hausskn. The degradation of particular groups of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) depended on their chemical properties, on the type of pollutant and grass species. The greatest degradation was determined in the case of BTEX, C<sub>6</sub>–C<sub>12</sub> benzines as well as 2- and 3-ring hydrocarbons, whereas the lowest in the case of 5-and 6-ring hydrocarbons and C<sub>12</sub>–C<sub>25</sub> oils. The most useful species in the remediation of soils polluted with diesel oil and petroleum turned out to be: Lolium perenne L., Lolium × hybridum Hausskn and Phleum pratense L., whereas the least useful appeared to be: Festuca rubra, Dactylis glomerata L. and Poa pratensis L.



2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-23
Author(s):  
Julie H. Campbell ◽  
Jason J. Henderson ◽  
John C. Inguagiato ◽  
Victoria H. Wallace ◽  
Anthony Minniti

Abstract Many intensively trafficked areas such as athletic fields and golf courses require constant overseeding to maintain suitable turfgrass cover. Rapid seed germination and development are critical to managing these high wear areas. The objectives of this research were to determine the effect of water aeration, seed soaking duration, and water temperature on mean germination time (MGT) and final germination percentage (FGP) of Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L., KBG) and perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L., PRG). Two separate controlled environment studies were conducted. PRG soaked in aerated water from 8 to 48 h had a 20% decrease in MGT compared to an untreated control, while treated KBG decreased MGT by only 10% compared to an untreated control. Soaking duration and water temperature had significant effects on KBG. KBG MGT was optimized at 20 C (68 F) water temperature with a soaking duration of 24 h. MGT of PRG was optimized when soaked for 8 h while water was aerated. There was no significant difference in FGP for any of the treatments tested. Index words: turfgrass, aeration, seed soaking. Species used in this study: Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.); perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.).



2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-56
Author(s):  
Erdal ÖZAYDIN ◽  
Tahir POLAT ◽  
Mustafa OKANT

Bu araştırma Şanlıurfa'da 2015-2016 yaz yetiştirme sezonunda, Harran Üniversitesi Osman Bey yerleşkesi Ziraat Fakültesi araştırma ve uygulama alanında yürütülmüştür. Araştırmada; kamışsı yumak  (Festuca arundinaceae), İngiliz çimi (Lolium perenne), rizomsuz kırmızı yumak (Festuca rubra L. subsp. Commutate), rizomlu kırmızı yumak (Festuca rubra L. subsp. rubra), koyun yumağı (Festuca ovina), çayır salkım otu (Poa pratensis) materyal olarak kullanılmış, tesadüf blokları deneme desenine göre 3 tekerrürlü olacak şekilde kurulmuştur. Bu çalışmada; çim yaş ot verimi (kg/da), çim kuru ot verimi (kg/da), çıkış hızı (gün), kışa dayanıklılık (1-9), kaplama hızı (gün), kaplama derecesi (%), yaprak dokusu (1-9), kardeş sayısı (1-5) ve seyrekleşme derecesi (1-9) gibi karakterler incelenmiştir. Deneme bulgularına göre; Şanlıurfa ekolojik şartları için önerilebilecek sıcak mevsim çim tür çeşitlerinin pek çok özellik açısından kamışsı yumak (Festuca arundinaceae)  Golden Gate çeşidinin kullanılması uygun olacaktır.



PhytoKeys ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
pp. 1-330
Author(s):  
Jeffery M. Saarela ◽  
Paul C. Sokoloff ◽  
Lynn J. Gillespie ◽  
Roger D. Bull ◽  
Bruce A. Bennett ◽  
...  

Victoria Island in Canada’s western Arctic is the eighth largest island in the world and the second largest in Canada. Here, we report the results of a floristic study of vascular plant diversity of Victoria Island. The study is based on a specimen-based dataset comprising 7031 unique collections from the island, including some 2870 new collections gathered between 2008 and 2019 by the authors and nearly 1000 specimens variously gathered by N. Polunin (in 1947), M. Oldenburg (1940s–1950s) and S. Edlund (1980s) that, until recently, were part of the unprocessed backlog of the National Herbarium of Canada and unavailable to researchers. Results are presented in an annotated checklist, including keys and distribution maps for all taxa, citation of specimens, comments on taxonomy, distribution and the history of documentation of taxa across the island, and photographs for a subset of taxa. The vascular plant flora of Victoria Island comprises 38 families, 108 genera, 272 species, and 17 additional taxa. Of the 289 taxa known on the island, 237 are recorded from the Northwest Territories portion of the island and 277 from the Nunavut part. Thirty-nine taxa are known on the island from a single collection, seven from two collections and three from three collections. Twenty-one taxa in eight families are newly recorded for the flora of Victoria Island: Artemisia tilesii, Senecio lugens, Taraxacum scopulorum (Asteraceae); Crucihimalaya bursifolia, Draba fladnizensis, D. juvenilis, D. pilosa, D. simmonsii (Brassicaceae); Carex bigelowii subsp. bigelowii, Eriophorum russeolum subsp. albidum (Cyperaceae); Anthoxanthum monticola subsp. monticola, Bromus pumpellianus, Deschampsia cespitosa subsp. cespitosa, D. sukatschewii, Festuca rubra subsp. rubra, Lolium perenne, Poa pratensis subsp. pratensis (Poaceae); Stuckenia filiformis (Potamogetonaceae); Potentilla × prostrata (Rosaceae); Galium aparine (Rubiaceae); and Salix ovalifolia var. ovalifolia (Salicaceae). Eight of these are new to the flora of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago: Senecio lugens, Draba juvenilis, D. pilosa, Anthoxanthum monticola subsp. monticola, Bromus pumpellianus, Deschampsia cespitosa subsp. cespitosa, Poa pratensis subsp. pratensis and Salix ovalifolia var. ovalifolia. One of these, Galium aparine, is newly recorded for the flora of Nunavut. Four first records for Victoria Island are introduced plants discovered in Cambridge Bay in 2017: three grasses (Festuca rubra subsp. rubra, Lolium perenne, and Poa pratensis subsp. pratensis) and Galium aparine. One taxon, Juncus arcticus subsp. arcticus, is newly recorded from the Northwest Territories. Of the general areas on Victoria Island that have been botanically explored the most, the greatest diversity of vascular plants is recorded in Ulukhaktok (194 taxa) and the next most diverse area is Cambridge Bay (183 taxa). The floristic data presented here represent a new baseline on which continued exploration of the vascular flora of Victoria Island – particularly the numerous areas of the island that remain unexplored or poorly explored botanically – will build.



Botany ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 98 (10) ◽  
pp. 545-553
Author(s):  
Ricky S. Kong ◽  
Hugh A.L. Henry

Prior exposure to freezing can increase the subsequent freezing tolerance of plants and reduce the severity of injury. However, it is unknown how freezing memory influences plant productivity. We investigated the effects of repeated freezing events over multiple seasons on the biomass of Bromus inermis, Lolium perenne, Festuca rubra, Plantago lanceolata, and Poa pratensis. The plants were exposed to different combinations of freezing in the early spring, late spring, or fall (2017), as well as the following spring (2018); control plants were frozen only once, along with all of the other treatments, during the spring of 2018. Bromus inermis that experienced every freeze, and the plants frozen in both the early and late spring, had higher biomass than the controls. Similarly, Poa pratensis plants frozen in both the early and late spring had higher biomass than the controls. In contrast, Festuca rubra plants frozen in early spring and fall had lower root biomass than the control plants, and Lolium perenne plants that experienced every freeze had lower root biomass than the controls. Variation among species in repeated freezing responses could have important consequences for the relative abundances of herbaceous species in northern temperate regions.



Weed Science ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 579-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. W. Bingham ◽  
J. Segura ◽  
C. L. Foy

The susceptibility of 2- and 4-month-old perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenneL.), orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerataL.), Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensisL.), red fescue (Festuca rubraL.) and highland bentgrass (Agrostis tenuisSibth.) to glyphosate [N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine] was studied in the greenhouse. All 2-month-old grasses were killed by 0.28 kg/ha and higher rates of glyphosate. At 0.14 kg/ha, red fescue was moderately resistant, and bluegrass, orchardgrass, and perennial ryegrass were moderately susceptible. Bent-grass was very susceptible. When 4-month-old grasses were treated, bluegrass was as tolerant to 0.28 kg/ha of glyphosate as was red fescue. At this same rate, orchardgrass and perennial ryegrass were moderately susceptible, whereas bentgrass remained the most susceptible. Dosages lower than 0.28 kg/ha had little effect; whereas higher doages injured all five species.14C-glyphosate was absorbed and translocated via both apoplast and symplast in 1-month-old red fescue, orchardgrass and perennial ryegrass seedlings. Comparatively, less radioactivity was transported to the untreated areas in red fescue than in orchardgrass and perennial ryegrass. Thus, the differential tolerances of these species to low rates of glyphosate may be explained, in part, by differential translocation of glyphosate.



2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Borowski

Abstract In the years 2005 - 2006 studies were conducted in a growth chamber and a vegetation hall which compared tolerance to NaCl salinity of seeds and plants of some lawn grasses. The effect of sodium chloride salinity on the germination of 4 species of grasses i.e. Lolium perenne cv. ‘Info’, Festuca rubra cv. ‘Audio’, Agrostis capillaris cv. ‘Niwa’, Poa pratensis cv. ‘Alicja’ and 4 cultivars of Lolium prenne - ‘Nira’, ‘Stadion’, ‘Ronija’, ‘Darius’ was studied. The grass seeds germinated in Petri dishes, in darkness, at the temperature of 24°C. Besides the control, 3 levels of salinity were used in the studies: 100, 200 and 300 mM NaCl. The obtained results demonstrated that the growing level of salinity in the environment significantly decreased the germinating speed, the number of the produced roots, the length of the longest root, and the length of the coleoptile in the seedlings of all studied grass species. Lolium perenne seeds tolerated salinity the best, and next - in a diminishing sequence - those were the seeds of Festuca rubra, Agrostis capillaris and Poa pratensis. However, the obtained data showed that tolerance to salinity of the analyzed cultivars of Lolium prenne decreased in the following sequence ‘Ronija’ > ‘Stadion’ > ‘Nira’ > ‘Darius’. In a vegetation hall tolerance to NaCl salinity of these 4 cultivars of Lolium perenne in the first year growth was compared. The plants grew in pots of 2 dm3 filled with a mixture of universal earth and river sand (3:1 / v:v) with the soil moisture of 70% and 3 levels of salinity: 0, 50, and 100 mM NaCl. The obtained results demonstrated that in all studied cultivars the increase of the salinity level caused a significant decrease of the yield of the leaf dry weight from the successive grass crops, and an increase of the content of sodium, chloride and free proline in them. The greatest tolerance to NaCl salinity in the group of the studied cultivars was shown by ‘Ronija’, medium tolerance - by ‘Darius’ and ‘Stadion’, and the lowest one - by ‘Nira’. This resulted from the degree of accumulation of Na+ and Cl- ions and proline in those conditions. The cultivars with higher tolerance accumulated fewer osmotically active compounds in the leaves.



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