MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS UNDER OPTICAL MICROSCOPE OF TANNIN CELLS IN PERSIMMON FRUIT

2005 ◽  
pp. 135-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Yang ◽  
X. Ruan ◽  
R. Wang ◽  
G. Li
Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 616-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kim ◽  
O. Choi ◽  
J.-H. Kwon

Sweet persimmon (Diospyros kaki L.), a fruit tree in the Ebenaceae, is cultivated widely in Korea and Japan, the leading producers worldwide (2). Sweet persimmon fruit with flyspeck symptoms were collected from orchards in the Jinju area of Korea in November 2010. The fruit had fungal clusters of black, round to ovoid, sclerotium-like fungal bodies with no visible evidence of a mycelial mat. Orchard inspections revealed that disease incidence ranged from 10 to 20% in the surveyed area (approximately 10 ha) in 2010. Flyspeck symptoms were observed on immature and mature fruit. Sweet persimmon fruit peels with flyspeck symptoms were removed, dried, and individual speck lesions transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) and cultured at 22°C in the dark. Fungal isolates were obtained from flyspeck colonies on 10 sweet persimmon fruit harvested from each of three orchards. Fungal isolates that grew from the lesions were identified based on a previous description (1). To confirm identity of the causal fungus, the complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA sequence of a representative isolate was amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1 and ITS4 (4). The resulting 552-bp sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. HQ698923). Comparison with ITS rDNA sequences showed 100% similarity with a sequence of Zygophiala wisconsinensis Batzer & Crous (GenBank Accession No. AY598855), which infects apple. To fulfill Koch's postulates, mature, intact sweet persimmon fruit were surface sterilized with 70% ethanol and dried. Three fungal isolates from this study were grown on PDA for 1 month. A colonized agar disc (5 mm in diameter) of each isolate was cut from the advancing margin of a colony with a sterilized cork borer, transferred to a 1.5-ml Eppendorf tube, and ground into a suspension of mycelial fragments and conidia in a blender with 1 ml of sterile, distilled water. The inoculum of each isolate was applied by swabbing a sweet persimmon fruit with the suspension. Three sweet persimmon fruit were inoculated per isolate. Three fruit were inoculated similarly with sterile, distilled water as the control treatment. After 1 month of incubation in a moist chamber at 22°C, the same fungal fruiting symptoms were reproduced as observed in the orchards, and the fungus was reisolated from these symptoms, but not from the control fruit, which were asymptomatic. On the basis of morphological characteristics of the fungal colonies, ITS sequence, and pathogenicity to persimmon fruit, the fungus was identified as Z. wisconsinensis (1). Flyspeck is readily isolated from sweet persimmon fruit in Korea and other sweet persimmon growing regions (3). The exposure of fruit to unusual weather conditions in Korea in recent years, including drought, and low-temperature and low-light situations in late spring, which are favorable for flyspeck, might be associated with an increase in occurrence of flyspeck on sweet persimmon fruit in Korea. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Z. wisconsinensis causing flyspeck on sweet persimmon in Korea. References: (1) J. C. Batzer et al. Mycologia 100:246, 2008. (2) FAOSTAT Database. Retrieved from http://faostat.fao.org/ , 2008. (3) H. Nasu and H. Kunoh. Plant Dis. 71:361, 1987. (4) T. J. White et al. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. M. A. Innis et al., eds. Academic Press, Inc., New York, 1990.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
pp. 843-843 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.-H. Lu ◽  
Q.-Z. Huang ◽  
H. He ◽  
K.-W. Li ◽  
Y.-B. Zhang

Avicennia marina is a pioneer species of mangroves, a woody plant community that periodically emerges in the intertidal zone of estuarine regions in tropical and subtropical regions. In February 2013, a new disease that caused the stems of A. marina to blacken and die was found in Techeng Island of Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province, China. Initial symptoms of the disease were water-soaked brown spots on the biennial stems that coalesced so whole stems browned, twigs and branches withered, leaves defoliated, and finally trees died. This disease has the potential to threaten the ecology of the local A. marina community. From February to May 2013, 11 symptomatic trees were collected in three locations on the island and the pathogen was isolated as followed: tissues were surface disinfected with 75% ethanol solution (v/v) for 20 s, soaked in 0.1% mercuric chloride solution for 45 s, rinsed with sterilized water three times, dried, placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated for 3 to 5 days at 28°C without light. Five isolates (KW1 to KW5) with different morphological characteristics were obtained, and pathogenic tests were done according Koch's postulates. Fresh wounds were made with a sterile needle on healthy biennial stems of A. marina, and mycelial plugs of each isolate were applied and covered with a piece of wet cotton to maintain moisture. All treated plants were incubated at room temperature. Similar symptoms of black stem were observed only on the stems inoculated the isolate KW5 after 35 days, while the control and all stems inoculated with the other isolates remained symptomless. An isolate similar to KW5 was re-isolated from the affected materials. The pathogenic test was repeated three times with the same conditions and it was confirmed that KW5 was the pathogen causing the black stem of A. marina. Hyphal tips of KW5 were transferred to PDA medium in petri dishes for morphological observation. After 48 to 72 h, white, orange, or brown flocculence patches of KW5 mycelium, 5.0 to 6.0 cm in diameter, grew. Tapering and spindle falciform macroconidia (11 to 17.3 μm long × 1.5 to 2.5 μm wide) with an obviously swelled central cell and narrow strips of apical cells and distinctive foot cells were visible under the optical microscope. The conidiogenous cells were intertwined with mycelia and the chlamydospores were globose and formed in clusters. These morphological characteristics of the isolate KW5 are characteristic of Fusarium equiseti (1). For molecular identification, the ITS of ribosomal DNA, β-tubulin, and EF-1α genes were amplified using the ITS4/ITS5 (5), T1/T2 (2), and EF1/EF2 (3) primer pairs. These sequences were deposited in GenBank (KF515650 for the ITS region; KF747330 for β-tubulin region, and KF747331 for EF-1α region) and showed 98 to 99% identity to F. equiseti strains (HQ332532 for ITS region, JX241676 for β-tubulin gene, and GQ505666 for EF-1α region). According to both morphological and sequences analysis, the pathogen of the black stem of A. marina was identified as F. equiseti. Similar symptoms on absorbing rootlets and trunks of A. marina had been reported in central coastal Queensland, but the pathogen was identified as Phytophthora sp. (4). Therefore, the disease reported in this paper differs from that reported in central coastal Queensland. To our knowledge, this is the first report of black stems of A. marina caused by F. equiseti in China. References: (1) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual, 1st ed. Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken, NJ, 2006. (2) K. O'Donnell and E. Cigelnik. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 7:103, 1997. (3) K. O'Donnell et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 95:2044, 1998. (4) K. G. Pegg. Aust et al. Plant Pathol. 3:6, 1980. (5) A. W. Zhang et al. Plant Dis. 81:1143, 1997.


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 15-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.I. Ableev ◽  
I.V. Baranets ◽  
S.K. Kurlyand ◽  
A.N. Zabelina ◽  
A.S. Ramsh ◽  
...  

Optical microscopy and dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) were used to study the structure of dynamically vulcanised mixes based on polypropylene, ethylenepropylenediene rubber, and copolymers of ethylene and vinyl acetate (Levapren 400, 600, 700). For the microscopic investigations, we used a complex consisting of a Leica DM-2500 optical microscope, a DFC 420C cooling chamber, and a special computer desk. DRS data were obtained on a BDS 89 instrument (NovoControl) at temperatures ranging from −150 to +100°C at a heating rate of 2°C/min and a frequency of 110 Hz. The influence of the content of Levapren and the proportion of vinyl acetate in its composition on the morphology and processing properties of olefinic thermoplastic vulcanisates (TPVs) was investigated. The combination of the discovered changes in the fine structure and DRS data indicate the preferential interaction of Levapren with the rubber component. The evolution of the morphology of the TPVs with increase in the volume fraction of vinyl acetate is not monotonic, which is consistent with the nature of change in the physicomechanical properties of the TPVs. Combined analysis of the morphological characteristics and processing properties of TPVs showed that, to achieve high values of the deformation and strength properties, a uniform distribution and high polydispersity of the ingredients are necessary. Increase in the elastic properties of the material is ensured by modification of the polypropylene phase to form fibrillar structures, while the flow of TPEs that is necessary for processing is facilitated by modification of the rubber phase.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreja Dragojevic ◽  
Jedert Vodopivec Tomažič ◽  
Diana Gregor-Svetec ◽  
Branka Lozo

Abstract Valvasor's library is a unique example of a 17th-century personal library, which also includes over 7.300 prints. Today, it is part of the Metropolitan Library of the Archdiocese of Zagreb. In this study, the 17th-century papers in Valvasor's collection of unknown origin and composition were analysed. In order to determine the composition of these papers, a dual approach was used, by combining results obtained by non-destructive and destructive analyses from two sets of samples. On 144 paper sheets from Valvasor’s collection only non-destructive analyses were performed, whereas both, non-destructive and destructive analyses were performed on the second set of samples, 10 historical paper fragments, dating from 16th to 19th centuries. Among non-destructive analyses, surface imaging, measurements of thickness, surface pH and optical properties (brightness, yellowness, opacity, and gloss) of papers were carried out. Optical properties characterized the samples as yellowish, opaque papers without gloss. Destructive analyses performed on the historical paper fragments went deeper into their composition and properties. Initially, spot tests were performed to determine absorbency, an identify lignin and starch in paper samples. Of the elementary analyses, SEM-EDS and XRF analyses for the identification of inorganic elements and FTIR analysis to identify chemical bonds in fibers, fillers, and sizes were applied. Microscopic analyses were performed in two ways - the paper surface was imaged with a digital microscope and the morphological characteristics of the fibers were studied using an optical microscope. Different fibers and components were discovered in fragments of historical papers, thus confirming their presence in handmade paper over four centuries. The dominant fibers were flax and hemp, with a smaller proportion of cotton. Also, thick and thin light brown fibers resembling straw were observed. The presence of calcium containing components, probably calcium carbonate as filler, gelatin and alumn could be confirmed. Relating the composition of historical papers with surface pH and optical properties of papers enabled us to predict the composition of 17th-century papers in Valvasor's collection.


HortScience ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 829E-830 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wol-Soo Kim* ◽  
Jin-Ho Choi

The stone cells events in the process of lignifications of plant tissues in flesh of Asian pear have been growing as a depressing factor of fruit quality. Therefore, these studies were carried out to search the effect of stone cells on fruit quality, to investigate the anatomical characteristics, such as formative period and distribution of stone cell, to seek forming causes, and to determine the effects of drought stress and calcium foliar application on the formation of stone cell. Fruit quality as contents of the stone cells, such as texture profile, reducing sugars, firmness, and fruit size, were determined. During the growing season of 2002 and 2003, samples for anatomical investigations were taken periodically in Pyrus pyriforia cv. Niitaka, Pyrus communis cv. Bartlett and Pyrus ussiriansis cv. Yari. The morphology of stone cell in the fruit flesh was observed by using optical microscope, scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM).


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-29
Author(s):  
Vanessa Escóssia Pegado Silva ◽  
Naissandra Bezerra Da Silva ◽  
Marcos Paulo Gomes Pinheiro ◽  
Maria de Lourdes Freitas ◽  
Maria de Fátima Freire de Melo Ximenes

Sandflies are important vectors of tegumentary and visceral leishmaniasis in different countries. This study aimed at analyzing the histomorphological characteristics of digestive and reproductive organs in Lutzomyia wellcomei (Fraiha, Shaw & Lainson) using light microscopy techniques. Thirty females from the rural area of Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte state were selected, microsectioned and analyzed with an optical microscope using conventional hematoxylin-eosin staining. Results show three well-characterized regions in the digestive tube: the stomodeum, mesentery and proctodeum. The stomodeum is lined internally with a basal and epithelial membrane; the mesentery has a peritrophic matrix formed above the stomodeum lining consisting of the simple cubic epithelium overlapping the conjunctive, also common to a capsule of gonadal lining; and the proctodeum, which structurally resembles the mesentery, but with a pyloric sphincter limiting the posterior midgut. Enveloping the digestive tube is the peritoneal membrane, of mesodermal origin. Richly-detailed internal morphological characteristics of L. wellcomei have widened knowledge of this Leishmania braziliensis (Vianna)-transmitting species, an etiologic agent of American tegumentary leishmaniasis. Características Histomorfológicas de Órgãos da Digestão de Lutzomyia wellcomei Fraiha, Shaw & Lainson (Diptera, Psychodidae) Resumo. Os flebotomíneos se destacam como importantes transmissores das leishmanioses tegumentar e visceral em diferentes países. O objetivo desse estudo foi analisar características histomorfológicas de órgãos da digestão de Lutzomyia wellcomei (Fraiha, Shaw & Lainson) por meio de técnicas de microscopia. Trinta fêmeas provenientes de área rural do município de Nísia Floresta, Rio Grande do Norte foram selecionadas, microseccionadas e analisadas por microscopia ótica. Métodos de coloração histológica por hematoxilina-eosina foram empregados nas análises. Os resultados mostram o trato digestório com as três regiões bem caracterizadas, estomodeo, mesêntero e proctodeo. O estomodeo possui uma membrana basal e uma membrana epitelial que o reveste internamente; o mesêntero possui matriz peritrófica formada acima do revestimento do estomodeo constituído de epitélio cúbico simples sobreposto ao conjuntivo comum também a uma cápsula de revestimento gonadal; e o proctodeo que se assemelha estruturalmente com o mesêntero, possuindo ainda, uma região pilórica limitando o intestino médio do posterior. Envolvendo o tubo digestório, está a membrana peritonial, de origem mesodérmica. As características morfológicas internas, observadas com riqueza de detalhes em L. wellcomei ampliam o conhecimento acerca dessa espécie, transmissora de Leishmania braziliensis (Vianna), agente etiológico de leishmaniose tegumentar americana.


2015 ◽  
Vol 766-767 ◽  
pp. 333-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sangeetha ◽  
S. Prakash

Aluminium alloy(A 356) has improved properties such as tension and elongation butit is decreased in hardness property compared to ceramics and therefore silicon carbideparticle (SiCp) is added with aluminium alloy to increase its hardness. Silicon Carbideparticle is abrasive and hence having poor interfacial bonding between ceramics andaluminium, so that the surface of the ceramics is coated with Multi Wall Carbon Nano Tubes(MWCNT). In this paper 10% of SiCp is taken for the experiment and coated with 1.5%, 2%,2.5% of MWCNT and this coated SiCp mixed with molten A 356 using stir casting method.The prepared castings were mechanically tested using Universal Testing Machine (UTM),Vickers hardness Testing Machine, Impact Testing Machine and Optical Microscope andtheir mechanical properties and morphological characteristics were studied


2013 ◽  
Vol 197 ◽  
pp. 221-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafał Michalik ◽  
Henryk Woźnica ◽  
Agnieszka Tomaszewska

Zn-Al-Cu alloys are characterized by advantageous set of functional quality futures: tribological, strength, corrosion. They are used as an alternative material for bronze, cast iron and aluminum alloys in bearings and as a structural material. Properties of Zn-Al-Cu can be improved by partial or total replacement of copper with silicon and addition of rare - earth elements. Previous studies of the current authors have shown a significant effect of cooling rate on the structure of the ZnAl22Cu3 alloy. The presence of pores and significant differences in porosity between samples slowly and fast cooled has been found. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of cooling conditions on the pore formation in ZnAl22Cu3 alloy. The article presents the structure of the slowly and fast cooled alloy. Structural examinations were carried out on samples taken from the top, center and bottom of the ingot. In order to determine the microstructure metallographic tests were carried out using optical microscope and electron scanning microscope. Through EDS X-ray spectrometry quantitative analysis of characteristic microareas was performed as well. In order to assess the morphological characteristics of the pore a computer program Met-Ilo developed in the Department of Materials Science, Silesian University of Technology has been used. Changes of the volume fraction and the average area on a flat cross section in particular areas of the ingot were analyzed quantitatively.


HortScience ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 815E-816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wol-Soo Kim* ◽  
Jin-Ho Choi

The stone cells are observed in the process of lignifications of tissues in flesh of pear as a depressing factor of fruit quality. These studies were carried out to search the effect of stone cells on fruit quality, to investigate the anatomical characteristics, such as formative period and distribution of stone cell, to seek forming causes. During the growing seasons of 2002 and 2003, samples for anatomical investigations were taken periodically in Pyrus pyriforia cv. Niitaka, P. communis cv. Bartlett and P. ussiriansis cv. Yari. The morphology of stone cell in the fruit flesh was observed by using optical microscope, scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). By optical microscope, stone cell observed first from 14 days after full bloom. The adjacent cells to stone cell was first showed spherical type on initial forming stage but showed radial form at 90 days after full bloom. The shape of stone cell inspected by SEM was like a cluster and its size was various. By using TEM, components of stone cell, such as nucleus and vacuole, and secondary cell wall thickening were observed, so it could consider that the stone cell is living thing. The largest amount of stone cell clusters existed beneath fruit skin.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreja Dragojević ◽  
Diana Gregor-Svetec ◽  
Jedert Vodopivec Tomažič ◽  
Branka Lozo

AbstractValvasor's library is a unique example of a Seventeenth century personal library, including over 7300 prints and 1530 books. Today, it is kept in the Metropolitan Library of the Zagreb Archdiocese which is part of the Croatian State Archives. In this study, we analysed a selection of papers from Valvasor's collection (VC) of unknown origin and composition. We used a dual approach, combining the results of the analyses of two sets of samples to find the most useful tools for the characterization of historical handmade papers. 144 randomly selected papers were included in the study. As the VC is a cultural heritage, only non-destructive analyses were used, such as visual inspection, surface imaging, measurements of thickness and the determination of optical properties (brightness, yellowness, opacity and gloss). According to the optical properties, papers from the VC could be characterized as yellowish and opaque, without gloss. Due to the fact that the VC papers could not be destroyed, we took another set of samples consisting of 10 historical papers (HP) from archival materials, dating from the 16th to nineteenth century, and subjected them to non-destructive, as well as micro-destructive analyses. This was done to supplement the findings of non-destructive analyses of the original collection. Initially, spot tests were performed to determine water absorbency and to identify the presence of lignin and starch in the paper samples. SEM–EDS and XRF were applied for the identification of inorganic elements. FTIR analyses were used to identify the chemical structures of the paper components. Microscopic analyses were performed in two ways: the paper surface was imaged with a digital microscope, and the morphological characteristics of the fibres were studied using an optical microscope. The dominant fibres present were flax and hemp, with a smaller proportion of cotton. Additionally, thick and thin light brown fibres resembling straw were detected. The presence of calcium-containing components, gelatine and alum could be confirmed with SEM–EDS, XFR and FTIR analysis. Comparing the results of analyses performed on two sets of samples a connection was explored by which it was possible to define the characterization of VC papers. The main goal of the study was to document and characterize a specific collection for the future use of researchers of handmade paper or paper conservators. Furthermore, the study may serve as a model approach for other researchers who seek to document the characteristics of paper in their collections.


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