Gaseous emissions of mercury from an aquatic vascular plant

Nature ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 274 (5670) ◽  
pp. 468-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
JACK KOZUCHOWSKI ◽  
DAVID L. JOHNSON
2005 ◽  
Vol 119 (1) ◽  
pp. 114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randy W. Olson ◽  
Josef K. Schmutz ◽  
Theodore Hammer

Widgeon Grass (Ruppia maritima) is an aquatic vascular plant (Ruppiaceae) which has been the source for rare balls of plant material found at the shores of lakes on four continents. In North America, the lakes involved were in North Dakota, Oregon, and now northern and southern Saskatchewan. The formation of the balls has not been observed in nature, but similar balls have been produced in other studies with Posidonia or Turtle Grass (Hydrocharitaceae) fibers under the wavelike action in a washing machine. Our samples are from a saline lake in southern Saskatchewan (49°N), and an over 40-year-old sample from an unknown lake north of the boreal transition zone (52°N). Comparisons of the plant material with herbarium specimens confirm that the balls are almost entirely comprised of Ruppia maritima, with minor items including invertebrate animal parts, sand pebbles and feathers. The context in which the material was found is consistent with the proposition that they are formed by Ruppia inflorescences breaking apart, drifting to near shore due to wind and being rolled into balls by wave action.


2019 ◽  
Vol 133 (2) ◽  
pp. 139
Author(s):  
Daniel F. Brunton

Making identifiable herbarium vouchers of the minute aquatic vascular plant duckmeal, Wolffia (Lemnoideae; Araceae) has typically required plants to be preserved in transparent, space-consuming vials that are fragile, difficult to work with, and labourious to prepare. An alternative technique for dry-mounting Wolffia within a layer of transparent, acid-free glue presents a promising alternative. Although the largely water-filled individual plants still compress substantially, this preparation technique results in specimens that retain their colour, size, and, most important, their shape. This greatly enhances the possibility of confident identification and simplifies both specimen preparation and storage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 194 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-149
Author(s):  
Susanne Halbedel ◽  
Nicole Weinert

Elodea nuttallii is a globally distributed aquatic vascular plant that provides many ecosystem services. In the sediment its roots fulfill important geochemical functions and initiate biological interactions within the rhizosphere. However, the macro-anatomy and development of its roots remained widely uncharacterized. This study aims to analyze the early morphogenesis of Elodeas roots and their general macro-anatomy. Therefore, plants free of roots were planted on two different sediment types and harvested along an individual time axis after the first roots were developed. All plants were photographed, measured and the roots were microscopically analyzed. Elodea has nodal adventitious roots, non-woody and from shoots. All roots have a root tip with a well-developed apical meristem and a root cap, an elongation zone, and a well-developed maturation zone with root hairs. Root hair deformations like swollen root hairs, swollen root hair tips, and branched root hairs most often developed when plants were grown on nutrient-poor, coarse-grained sediment. We here present a first description of the morpho- genesis and macro-anatomy of roots developed by E. nuttallii. This work will improve our understanding of this important species and foster further studies on the coupling between physiological processes, the morphogenesis, anatomy, ecosystem services, economical use, and management strategies related to E. nuttallii.


2008 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronika Supalkova ◽  
Miroslava Beklova ◽  
Jiri Baloun ◽  
Christoph Singer ◽  
Bernd Sures ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 28-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. Baranovski

Nowadays, bioecological characteristics of species are the basis for flora and vegetation studying on the different levels. Bioecological characteristics of species is required in process of flora studying on the different levels such as biotopes or phytocenoses, floras of particular areas (floras of ecologically homogeneous habitats), and floras of certain territories. Ramensky scale is the one of first detailed ecological scales on plant species ordination in relation to various environmental factors; it developed in 1938 (Ramensky, 1971). A little later (1941), Pogrebnyak’s scale of forest stands was proposed. Ellenberg’s system developed in 1950 (Ellenberg, 1979) and Tsyganov’s system (Tsyganov, 1975) are best known as the systems of ecological scales on vascular plant species; these systems represent of habitat detection by ecotopic ecomorphs of plant species (phytoindication). Basically, the system proposed by Alexander Lyutsianovich Belgard was the one of first system of plant species that identiified ectomorphs in relation to environmental factors. As early as 1950, Belgard developed the tabulated system of ecomorphs using the Latin ecomorphs abbreviation; he also used the terminology proposed in the late 19th century by Dekandol (1956) and Warming (1903), as well as terminology of other authors. The article analyzes the features of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs on vascular plants. It has certain significance and advantages over other systems of ecomorphs. The use of abbreviated Latin names of ecomorphs in tabular form enables the use shortened form of ones. In the working scheme of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs relation of species to environmental factors are represented in the abbreviated Latin alphabetic version (Belgard, 1950). Combined into table, the ecomorphic analysis of plant species within association (ecological certification of species), biotope or area site (water area) gives an explicit pattern on ecological structure of flora within surveyed community, biotope or landscape, and on environmental conditions. Development and application by Belgrard the cenomorphs as «species’ adaptation to phytocenosis as a whole» were completely new in the development of systems of ecomorphs and, in this connection, different coenomorphs were distinguished. Like any concept, the system of ecomorphs by Belgard has the possibility and necessity to be developed and added. Long-time researches and analysis of literature sources allow to propose a new coenomorph in the context of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs development: silvomargoant (species of forest margin, from the Latin words margo – edge, boundary (Dvoretsky, 1976), margo – margin, ad margins silvarum – along the deciduous forest margins). As an example of ecomorphic characterization of species according to the system of ecomorphs by Belgard (when the abbreviated Latin ecomorph names are used in tabular form and the proposed cenomorph is used), it was given the part of the table on vascular plants ecomorphs in the National Nature Park «Orelsky» (Baranovsky et al). The Belgard’s system of ecomorphs is particularly convenient and can be successfully applied to data processing in the ecological analysis of the flora on wide areas with significant species richness, and the proposed ecomorph will be another necessary element in the Belgard’s system of ecomorphs. 


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