scholarly journals Сontribution of G. N. Potanin to the developing the collections of the Botanical Museum of the Imperial Tomsk University

Author(s):  
I. A. Golev ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-348
Author(s):  
V. N. Tarasova ◽  
T. Ahti ◽  
O. Vitikainen ◽  
A. V. Sonina ◽  
L. Myllys

This is a report of a revision of 565 herbarium specimens of lichens, lichenicolous or non-lichenized fungi and additional locality records of common species produced from a visit of the Russian-Finnish expedition to Vodlozersky National Park right after its foundation in 1991. The analyzed collection and field records represent the earliest information about the lichen flora of the territory of the park. In total, 177 species are listed including 173 lichens, 3 non-lichenized and 1 lichenicolous fungi. Xylographa rubescens is new to the Republic of Karelia. Twenty two species are reported for the first time for biogeographic province Karelia transonegensis; 47 species for the Karelian part of Vodlozersky National Park; and 17 species for the whole territory of the park.


Plant Disease ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Amein ◽  
C. H. B. Olsson ◽  
M. Wikström ◽  
R Findus ◽  
D AB ◽  
...  

During September 2004, downy mildew of parsley caused by a species of Plasmopara was observed in an experimental field of parsley (Petroselinum crispum subsp. crispum L. cv. Gigante d'Italia/Hilmar) in Borgeby in southern Sweden. The summer of 2004 was exceptionally wet and humid. Disease became widespread throughout the field in just a few days. Local growers reported that symptoms consistent with downy mildew had appeared in their parsley fields every year since 2001. Plasmopara, under P. nivea, has been reported on parsley in Europe since the middle of the 19th century (4). In recent years, this disease has caused severe damage to parsley grown in several European countries, e.g., France, Germany, Switzerland, and Belgium (1,3). The first symptoms appeared as faint chlorotic spots on the upper surfaces of the leaves. On the corresponding lower surfaces, mycelium and sporangiophores grew profusely and developed a white mat that in part turned dark gray. Eventually, the leaves and stalks became necrotic and died. The sporangiophores were monopodially branched, 248.4 ± 13.36 μm long (n = 17), each branch ending in 2 to 5 ultimate branchlets tapered toward the tip. The trunk diameter measured 7.0 ± 0.77 μm (n = 9) above the basal part and 6.1 ± 0.81 μm just below the first branch. The sporangia were broadly ellipsoidal to ellipsoidal, hyaline, 22.5 ± 0.73 μm long and 16.6 ± 0.48 μm wide (n μ 40). They were mostly nonpapillate when young, although exit pores 4.8 ± 0.32 μm (n = 10) were visible. Mature sporangia exhibited a dehiscence apparatus and a plug in the exit pore. On the basis of the characteristics above, the pathogen was identified as P. petroselini (= P. nivea pro parte [2]). Independent verification of the identity was done by O. Constantinescu at the Botanical Museum, Uppsala, Sweden. A voucher specimen was deposited at the Herbarium UPS, in Uppsala under the number UPS F-118873. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. petroselini on parsley in Sweden. References: (1) E. Bèliard and J. Thibault. Phytoma 554:2, 2002. (2) O. Constantinescu. Taxon 54:813, 2005. (3) C. Crepel and S. Inghelbrecht. Plant Dis. 87:1266, 2003. (4) A. de Bary, Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot., Sér. 4, 20:5, 1863.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 329 (2) ◽  
pp. 185 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOÃO A.M. CARMO ◽  
VIVIANE R. SCALON ◽  
MARIA F. CALIÓ ◽  
ANDRÉ O. SIMÕES

Psyllocarpus schwackei was described by Schumann (1898: 18), for which he cited a single collection, “in Brasiliae civitate Minas Geraes, locis arenosis in Serra do Cipo: Schwacke n, 8089, floret Aprili”. In a taxonomic revision of the genus, Kirkbride (1979) stated that the material studied by Schumann at the Botanical Museum in Berlin had been destroyed during the Second World War (Hiepko 1987), and that he was unable to locate any duplicates of this collection. He consulted a photograph of the specimen available in the Field Museum of Natural History type photograph series, negative number 896. Therefore, based upon the original description of the species, the photograph he analysed, and his experience at the type locality, the Serra do Cipó, Minas Gerais state, Kirkbride (1979) selected as neotype the collection “Serra do Cipó, elev. ca. 1125 m, Anderson et al. 36254 (neotype US; isoneotypes NY, UB)”.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-146
Author(s):  
Caroline Cornish ◽  
Patricia Allan ◽  
Lauren Gardiner ◽  
Poppy Nicol ◽  
Heather Pardoe ◽  
...  

Exchange of duplicate specimens was an important element of the relationship between metropolitan and regional museums in the period 1870–1940. Evidence of transfers of botanical museum objects such as economic botany specimens is explored for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and six museums outside the capital: Cambridge University Botanical Museum, National Museum Wales, Glasgow Museums, Liverpool World Museum, Manchester Museum and Warrington Museum. Botany became an important element in these museums soon after their foundation, sometimes relying heavily on Kew material as in the case of Glasgow and Warrington, and usually with a strong element of economic botany (except in the case of Cambridge). Patterns of exchange depended on personal connections and rarely took the form of symmetrical relationships. Botanical displays declined in importance at various points between the 1920s and 1960s, and today only Warrington Museum has a botanical gallery open to the public. However, botanical objects are finding new roles in displays on subjects such as local history, history of collections, natural history and migration.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 1211-1222
Author(s):  
Antonella Monaco ◽  
Giuseppina Chianese ◽  
Marisa Idolo

2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hörður Kristinsson ◽  
Starri Heiðmarsson ◽  
Eric Steen Hansen

Abstract Kristinsson H., Heiðmarsson S., Hansen E. S., 2014: Lichens from Iceland in the collection of Svanhildur Svane [Islandijos kerpės Svanhildur Svane kolekcijoje]. - Bot. Lith., 20(1): 14-18. Survey was made of the lichens collected by Svanhildur Svane in different parts of Iceland from 1949 to 1997 and deposited at the Botanical Museum of the University of Copenhagen (C). As a result, 11 species, Agonimia tristicula, Aspicilia mashiginensis, Fuscidea tenebrica, Gyalecta flotowii, Lecania baeomma, Lithographa tesserata, Pyrenopsis grumulifera, Rimularia fuscosora, Steinia geophana, Thelignya lignyota and Umbilicaria nylanderiana, were recorded as new to Iceland, and 6 species were new to certain regions in Iceland as defined in the Nordic Lichen Flora


2015 ◽  
Vol 52 (0) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viktoria Tarasova ◽  
Vera Androsova ◽  
Angella Sonina ◽  
Teuvo Ahti
Keyword(s):  

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