13 resultados para 241716 Histología vegetal
em Acceda, el repositorio institucional de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. España
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[EN] Plant Tissue Culture, also called “micropropagation”, is the propagation of plants from different tissues (or explants) in a shorter time than conventional propagation, making use of the ability that many plant cells have to regenerate a whole plant (totipotency).There are two alternative mechanisms by which an explant can regenerate an entire plant, namely organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis. Since the last decades, the number of higher terrestrial plants species from which these techniques have been successfully applied has continually increased. However, few attempts have been carried out in marine plants. Previous seagrasses authors have focused their studies on i) vegetative propagation of rhizome fragments as explants in Ruppia maritima, Halophila engelmannii, Cymodocea nodosa and Posidonia oceanica; ii) culture of meristems in Heterozostera tasmanica, C. nodosa or P. oceanica; and iii) culture of germinated seeds on aseptic conditions, in Thalassia testudinum, H. ovalis, P. coriacea, P. oceanica, and H. decipiens. All these studies determine the most adequate culture medium for each species (seawater, nutrients, vitamins, carbon sources, etc...), often supplemented with different plant growth regulators and the necessary conditions for the culture maintenance, such as light and temperature. On the other hand, several studies have previously established protocols for cell or protoplast isolation in the species Zostera marina, Z. muelleri, P. oceanica, and C. nodosa, using shoots collected from natural meadows as original vegetal source, but further cell growth was never accomplished. Due to the absence of somatic embryogenesis or organogenetic studies in seagrasses we wonder: IS THE SUCCESSFUL APPLICATION OF TISSUE CULTURE TECHNIQUES POSSIBLE IN SEAGRASSES?
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Líneas de actuación del grupo de Fisiología y Biotecnología Vegetal Marina
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Máster Oficial en Gestión Costera
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[ES]En el marco del proyecto LIFE B-4-3200/94/43 «Plan de Recuperación del Lagarto Gigante de El Hierro» se ha contemplado, en un futuro próximo, la posibilidad de ampliación del área actual de distribución de dicho lagarto. Una de las zonas escogidas, La Dehesa, se localiza en la zona oeste de la Isla de El Hierro y está constituida por un sabinar sometido actualmente a poca intervención humana. Esta zona ha sido preseleccionada por varias razones, entre las que sobresalen, la existencia de lagartos gigantes en tiempos pretéritos, su relativa inaccesibilidad alejada de la acción humana, la abundante vegetación y la presencia de refugios potenciales. Para evaluar de modo fiable la bondad de la zona escogida como lugar de posible suelta…
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Doctorado en Medioambiente. La fecha de publicación es la fecha de lectura
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Programa de doctorado en Oceanografía y Cambio Global. IOCAG.