613 resultados para Cirsium arvense.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Abstract. Based on prior field observations, we hypothesized that individual and interacting effects of plant size, density, insect herbivory, and especially fungal disease, influenced seedling and juvenile plant growth in native Platte thistle populations (Cirsium canescens Nutt.). We worked at Arapaho Prairie in the Nebraska Sandhills (May - August 2007), monitoring plant growth, insect damage, and fungal infection within different density thistle patches. In the main experiment, we sprayed half of test plants in different density patches with fungicide (Fungonil© Bonide, containing chlorothalonil) and half with a water control. Fungal infection rates were very low, so we found no difference in fungal attack between these treatments. However, plants that received the fungicide treatment had significantly faster growth over the season than did the control plants. At the same time, plants in the fungicide treatment had significantly reduced insect herbivory. These results strongly suggest that the fungicide had insecticidal effects and that insect herbivory significantly decreases juvenile Platte thistle growth. Further, damage by insect herbivores tended to be higher for larger plants, and herbivory was variable among different patches. However, plant density did not appear to have a large effect on the amount of insect herbivory that individual juvenile Platte thistle plants received. In the second experiment, we examined germination and survival success in relationship to seed density, and found that germination success was higher in areas of lower seed density. In the third experiment, we tested germination for filled seeds categorized primarily by color variation and size, and found no difference in germination related to either color or seed weight. We conclude that seed density, but not seed quality as estimated by color or size, affects germination success. Further, although herbivory was not significantly affected by plant density at any of the scales examined, insect herbivory significantly reduces the growth and success of juveniles of this characteristic native sand prairie plant.
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Von Prof. Dr. Wagner
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Von Prof. Dr. Wagner
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Von Dr. J. A. Schatz
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AR
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AR
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En un cultivo de manzanos en la provincia de Mendoza, Argentina, se observó la presencia de las comunidades dominadas por Cynodon dactylon y Galinsoga parviflora localizadas entre y bajo las copas de los árboles frutales, en coincidencia con una toposecuencia de relieves de altos y bajos, respectivamente. Ante el hecho de estar frente a un interesante ejemplo agronómico de establecimiento de comunidades arvenses se las analizó fisonómica, florística y sociológicamente, relacionándolas con las condiciones ecológicas, físico-químicas de los suelos y bioclimáticas de los sitios que las contienen. Mientras la comunidad de Cynodon dactylon presente en los altos o entre plantas resultó más luminosa, cálida, seca y menos fértil, la de Galinsoga parviflora en los bajos fue más sombría, fría, húmeda y más fértil. En esta última, la alta concentración de materia orgánica, nutrientes minerales y humedad de los suelos parece estar relacionada con la presencia de plantas anuales bajo las copas. Los resultados obtenidos muestran la importancia de las toposecuencias de relieves de altos y bajos en la distribución, estructura y composición florística de las comunidades vegetales arvenses, las cuales pueden resultar potenciadas con las coberturas de las copas de los árboles frutales.
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Plant species distributions are expected to shift and diversity is expected to decline as a result of global climate change, particularly in the Arctic where climate warming is amplified. We have recorded the changes in richness and abundance of vascular plants at Abisko, sub-Arctic Sweden, by re-sampling five studies consisting of seven datasets; one in the mountain birch forest and six at open sites. The oldest study was initiated in 1977-1979 and the latest in 1992. Total species number increased at all sites except for the birch forest site where richness decreased. We found no general pattern in how composition of vascular plants has changed over time. Three species, Calamagrostis lapponica, Carex vaginata and Salix reticulata, showed an overall increase in cover/frequency, while two Equisetum taxa decreased. Instead, we showed that the magnitude and direction of changes in species richness and composition differ among sites.