scholarly journals S. O. Illichevskyi’s introductory studios in the botanical garden of Poltava pedagogical institute

Author(s):  
O. V. Khalymon ◽  
V. M. Samorodov

The great ukrainian botanist Serhii Olimpiiovych Illichevskyi (1895–1959?) research activities during his work period in Botanical Garden of Pedagogical Institute of Poltava (1940–1943) had been reconstructed for the first time. Materials on studies of growing heat loving plants on uncovered soil (predominantly tropical species) are given. The most interesting and topical ones are about acclimatization of sweet potato (Ipomoea batataз (L.) Lam.).

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (89) ◽  
pp. 52-58
Author(s):  
Alicja Damasiewicz ◽  
Małgorzata Leśniewska

For the first time in Poland, centipedes of a tropical species Tygarrup javanicus (Attems, 1907) (Geophilomorpha) were found in the hothouses with the tropical vegetation of the Botanical Garden in Wrocław. This Asian species has increasingly been reported from European greenhouses. Its spread is facilitated, among other factors, by small body size and parthenogenesis. In Poland one should also expect other exotic species which have already been found in neighbouring countries.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Demas Wamaerand ◽  
Kuntoro Boga Andri

This study aims to: (1) mapping the distribution pattern of the application of agricultural technology innovation specific locations, (2) determine the critical success factors  distribution  application  of  agricultural  technology  innovation  specific locations,  (3)  improvement  of  distribution  patterns  and  acceleration  of  the  adoption and diffusion of technological innovations to support agribusiness and agroindustrial rice, sweet potatoes and  soybeans in Papua. The research activities carried out during March  2011  to  February  2014  using  three  approaches  (methods),  namely  (1)  Desk Study  on  the  SL-  PTT  rice,  soybean  and  sweet  potato  (2)  surveys  to  obtain quantitative  data in  three  districts  purposively  selected  with  10-  20  respondents, (3) the application pattern of diffusion through the demonstration of quality seeds of rice, corn  and  soybeans  in  the  BPP  or  a  farmer  seed  sources  in  three  selected  districts.Agronomic  data  were tabulated  and  analyzed  descriptively.  Analysis  of  the level  of efficiency  in  the  application  of  technology  used  indicator  plots  the  balance  receiptsand  fees  or  analysis  of  R  /  C  ratio.  To  measure  the  success  of  the  application  of technological  innovations  in  the  plots  need  to  set  performance  indicators,  covering aspects of the use of inputs, processes, outputs, outcomes, benefits and impacts. The results show that the dissemination of technological innovations for the development of location-specific agricultural commodities  of rice, corn, soybean and sweet potato, has  spread  in  most  regions  crop  farming  development  centers  in  Papua.  But  only concentrated  around  the  transmigration  settlement  area.  New  varieties  of  soybean plants  yielding  seeds  and  rice  showed  better  productivity  than  the  old  varieties  that have  been  repeatedly  planted  by  farmers.  Yielding  varieties  of  maize  is  being introduced less developed because it is still constrained by marketing, if the market is readily available, farmers are willing to develop it.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 639-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Starčević ◽  
Danijela Barić ◽  
Hrvoje Pilko

Level crossing (LC) accidents are a significant safety challenge worldwide and for that reason they have been subject of numerous research activities. Joint conclusion is that human behaviour is the main cause of accidents. This study examines how and to which extent certain influential parameters cause accident mechanisms on level crossings. To gain the necessary data we used an on-line survey questionnaire that was sent internationally to key experts in the field of road and railway safety. A total of 185 experts were asked to rank how much certain parameters influence level crossings accident mechanisms and what are the best countermeasures for diminishing accidents at level crossings. To our knowledge, this is the first time that an international survey among key experts was used to gain necessary data about influential parameters regarding level crossings safety. The results of this study could be used by road and railway traffic engineers and policy makers for further enhancement of LC’s safety.


Author(s):  
Natalia A. Koshelyuk ◽  
◽  

Introduction. The article reviews background studies on the Mansi language and its dialects performed by European and Russian (Soviet) linguists. Goals. The paper seeks to provide a comprehensive historical description of Mansi language research. Methods. The descriptive and comparative-historical methods have been employed thereto. Results. The work arranges the studies chronologically — from earliest research activities to contemporary ones — highlighting most essential achievements. Mansi is one of the least studied languages with earliest written accounts dating to the 16th-17th centuries. The earliest Mansi dictionaries were compiled by explorers and missionaries (I. Kuroedov, S. Cherkalov, P. S. Pallas, etc.) in the 18th century. In the 19th century, the Mansi language officially became a subject of scientific research, and expeditions by Finnish and Hungarian linguists (Antal Reguly, August Engelbrekt Ahlqvist, Bernát Munkácsi, Artturi Kannisto) proved the first field studies. In the 20th century, quite a number of European scientists have contributed to Mansi language research, namely: W. Steinitz, L. Honti, K. F. Кarjalainen, M. Bakró-Nagy, K. Rédei, M. Szilasi, and others. In Russia, the first Mansi studies were initiated by Soviet scholars in the 1930s (V. Chernetsov, A. Balandin). Studies in spoken Mansi evolved into a national Cyrillic alphabet, and for the first time ever there were published comprehensive works dealing with Mansi studies, textbooks on Mansi phonetics, morphology, and grammar. Experimental phonetic explorations emerged in the mid-to-late 20th century resulting in new Mansi dictionaries (A. Sainakhova, T. FrankKamenetskaya, E. Rombandeeva, and others). Mansi studies in the 21st century in Russia and Europe have reached a brand new level: there appeared online research laboratories and linguistic platforms which make it possible to further investigate the Mansi language and verify up-to-date materials.


HortScience ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 681b-681
Author(s):  
Shujun YU

The author investigated, recorded, observed and analyzed the major wildflowers in Mount Huangshan---the natural and cultural heritages listed by the ESC0 of UN for the first time. On the basis of their desirable characteristics, more than 300 wild ornamental species are divided into 8 categories -–-historical old trees, rare and endangered species, evergreen ornamentals, blooming trees and shrubs, plants with colored foliage and fruit in fall, vines, herbaceous ornamentals and ground covers, and ornamental ferns. Mount Huangshan is one of the richest regions of native ornamentals in Eastern China and the most famous natural beauty in Pan-China. There are about 1500 wild landscape plants in and around it. Finally the paper puts forth some proposals and methods for introduction and utilization of wild ornamental plants. That is, investigation, classification,acclimatization and cultivation of them, and building a sort-out botanical garden for the germplasmic preservation and the flourishing landscape tourism.


2005 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 74 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. SIMBOURA ◽  
A. ZENETOS

The increasing diversity of the Greek Polychaete fauna over the last seven decades, as illustrated graphically, shows an increasing trend which is proportionately related to the research effort exerted. Ongoing research activities mainly in the depths of the N. Aegean Sea, as a result of which 13 new records have been added to the Greek Polychaete fauna, confirming the above statement. The new species records are presented along with their geographical distribution and habitat. According to the latest checklist of the Greek Polychaeta, 753 species of Polychaetes have been recorded in Greek waters. Finally, it should be noted that 6 Lessepsian migrants and 16 species have been recorded in the Mediterranean for the first time. Their distribution within Greece and worldwide is given and their presence in Greek waters is discussed.


ZooKeys ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1062 ◽  
pp. 123-155
Author(s):  
Cheng Wang ◽  
Shuqiang Li

Nine new species of jumping spiders from Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden are described: Euochin yaoisp. nov. (♀♂), Laufeia bannasp. nov. (♀♂), Marengo tangisp. nov. (♀♂), Myrmarachne liuisp. nov. (♀♂), Nandicius proszynskiisp. nov. (♂), Phintelloides pengisp. nov. (♀♂), Poecilorchestes zhengisp. nov. (♀♂), Rhene wandaesp. nov. (♂) and Simaetha chenisp. nov. (♀♂). The female of Chinattus inflatus Wang & Li, 2020 is described for the first time.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 8452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashish N. Nerlekar ◽  
Sairandhri A. Lapalikar ◽  
Akshay A. Onkar ◽  
S. L. Laware ◽  
M. C. Mahajan

<p>The present study was aimed at determining the vascular plant species richness of an urban green-space- the Fergusson College campus, Pune and comparing it with the results of the past flora which was documented in 1958 by Dr. V.D. Vartak. For this, the species richness data was obtained by both secondary sources and intensive surveys from 2009–2014. The data from the primary and secondary sources resulted in the documentation of 812 species belonging to 542 genera under 124 families, of which 534 species (65.8%) exists  today as compared to 654 in 1958 (net loss of 120 species). Of the 812 species listed, 278 species were observed only during the past, 210 species were exclusively recorded in the current survey and 324 species were observed both, in the past as well as current survey. Arboreal species richness recorded till date (196) in the campus accounts for 40.7% of that of the entire Pune City. Leguminosae and Poaceae were the dominant dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous families respectively and an inventory of all the species recorded is provided. Although the botanical garden over the past years has lost 187 species, it still houses rare species such as <em>Acacia greggii,</em> which has been reported from Maharashtra for the first time. Considering the rapidly changing urban land use in the city, much attention should be paid towards the conservation of these green spaces, for which such studies provide baseline data.</p><div> </div>


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aminat Korede Oyetunde ◽  
Yao Kolombia ◽  
Omowumi B Adewuyi ◽  
Steve Olaoluwa Afolami ◽  
Daniel Leigh Coyne

Meloidogyne enterolobii is a highly polyphagous tropical species of root knot nematode. It has been recorded to be causing major damage to a range of economically important crops and is increasingly recorded from new locations. The morphological similarity and overlap of characteristics with other commonly occurring species, especially M. incognita, has confused its diagnosis using morphometrics. Cassava (Manihot esculenta) is an important crop across the tropics, including Africa, where it is among the most important root and tuber crop for food security. Cassava can be heavily infected by root knot nematodes, which can incur heavy production losses. The main species known to affect cassava are M. incognita and M. javanica (Coyne and Affokpon, 2018). With the exception of one report of M. enterolobii morphologically identified from cassava roots during a survey in Brazil (Rosa et al., 2014), there is no record with molecular confirmation of it infecting the crop. In the absence of any molecular or isozyme confirmation, diagnosis of M. enterolobii is difficult to determine. In the current study, the species responsible for substantial galling damage (Fig. 1A) on several cassava roots growing in Ibadan, Nigeria (7°22′39″ N; 3°54′21″ E) were diagnosed. DNA isolated from juveniles recovered using a modified Baermann method (Hooper, 1986) from these roots was used for PCR amplification of the mitochondrial Nad5 using primer pair, NAD5F2 (5’-TATTTTTTGTTTGAGATATATTAG-3’) and NAD5R1 (5’-CGTGAATCTTGATTTTCCATTTTT-3’). The 515 bp PCR DNA product was sequenced on both strands (GenBank Accession No. MW965454) and found to be 100% identical to M. enterolobii with those in the DNA sequence database (KU372358, KU372359) (Janssen et al., 2016; Kolombia et al., 2017). In addition, M. incognita was also recovered from the galled roots and identified using the same primers (GenBank Accession No. MW965455) indicating a combined species infection (Fig. 2). Cultures of M. enterolobii, developed from single egg masses were maintained on tomato plants and used to assess infection on cassava in 10 L pots filled with steam sterilized loam soil in the screenhouse. Cassava cv. IITA-TMS-IBA070593 cuttings planted in June, 2018 and repeated in April, 2019 were inoculated with 1,000 juveniles per pot at three weeks after planting, and then maintained for four months before quantifying the nematode densities in both roots and soil. Nematode reproduction factor (RF), calculated from total nematode densities (n=8) from soil and roots was as high as 44.3, compared to uninoculated controls. Molecular diagnostics of M. enterolobii, as above, confirms unequivocally the host status of cassava to this nematode. This study reports for the first time the infection of cassava by M. enterolobii under field conditions in Africa and for the first time demonstrates the host suitability of cassava to this nematode (Fig. 1B). M. enterolobii is among the most commonly occurring root-knot nematode species in West Africa (dos Santos et al., 2019). It is therefore anticipated that M. enterolobii has long been infecting, especially in West Africa, but has been overlooked due to its morphological similarity with M. incognita. Given the high reproductive ability of M. enterolobii on cassava and its highly aggressive nature on a range of crops, it is likely that it is causing, or will result in, high levels of losses on cassava in Africa.


Zootaxa ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 1211 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARTIN CARR ◽  
SAMUEL COTTON ◽  
MIHÁLY FÖLDVÁRI ◽  
MARION KOTRBA

A new specie s of Diasemopsis (Diptera, Diopsidae ) from Comoro Islands is described and illustrated for the first time wi th a llometric datasets . Diasemopsis comoroensis Carr & Földvár i is shown t o be genetically close, but morphologically distinct from th e widesprea d Afro-tropical species D. meigenii (Westwood); notably a significant dive rgence in the degree of sexual dimorphism within eye spa n has occurre d between the two species. A revised molecula r phylogeny of th e genus Diasemopsis is presente d based on the partial sequenc es of four genes.


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