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1.
Effects of growth temperature and winter duration on leaf longevity were compared between a spring ephemeral, Gagea lutea, and a forest summergreen forb, Maianthemum dilatatum. The plants were grown at day/night temperatures of 25/20°C and 15/10°C after a chilling treatment for variable periods at 2°C. The temperature regime of 25/20°C was much higher than the mean air temperatures for both species in their native habitats. Warm temperature of 25/20°C and/or long chilling treatment shortened leaf longevity in G. lutea, but not in M. dilatatum. The response of G. lutea was consistent with that reported for other spring ephemerals. Air temperature increases as the vegetative season progresses. The decrease in leaf longevity in G. lutea under warm temperature condition ensures leaf senescence in summer, an unfavorable season for its growth. This also implies that early leaf senescence could occur in years with early summers. Warm spring temperatures have been shown to accelerate the leafing-out of forest trees. The decrease in leaf longevity due to warm temperature helps synchronize the period of leaf senescence roughly with the time of the forest canopy leaf-out. Prolonged winter due to late snowmelt has been shown to shorten the vegetative period for spring ephemerals. The decrease in leaf longevity due to long chilling treatment would correspond with this shortened vegetative period.  相似文献   

2.
Temperature and daylength responses were determined in culture for isolates of the red alga Cystoclonium purpureum (Hudson) Batters from Nova Scotia (NS, Canada), Helgoland (HE, Germany), and Roscoff (RO, France). Most isolates survived temperatures of –1.5°/–2° to 23°C, whereas 25°C was lethal. Only the RO-gametophytes died at 23°C. Optimal growth conditions were 10°–20°C in both long and short days for the NS isolates and 8°–15°C and 8°–18°C at daylengths of >12 h for the RO and HE isolates, respectively. Tetrasporophytes and gametophytes of the NS isolate reproduced at 10°–20°C in long and short days within 5 months. At lower temperatures reproduction was limited or slow. The European isolates formed tetrasporangia at 10°–20°C (HE) or 5°–l8°C(RO), spermatangia at 5°–15°C (HE) or 5°–20°C (RO), and carpospores at 5°–15°C(HE) or 10°–15°C (RO). Short days either blocked or delayed reproduction of the European isolates. The phenology of C. purpureum was studied at Helgoland and Roscoff, where similar seasonal patterns were observed. In early spring, growth was rapid and plants started to form reproductive structures. In summer, tetra-and carpospores were shed followed by degeneration of the upright axes while branched holdfasts persisted. New upright axes and juvenile plants were formed in autumn, but these remained small during the winter months. Published data indicate that the seasonal pattern at Nova Scotia is similar, although the onset of growth and reproduction is delayed until the end of spring. These observations correspond well with the results of the experiments. The life history of C. purpureum is regulated by temperature and daylength. In the eastern Atlantic, the limiting effect of short days confines growth and reproduction to spring and summer. In the western Atlantic, low winter temperatures alone bring about the same seasonal pattern. After plants have reproduced, uprights degenerate in spite of continuing favorable conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

The germination of spring and winter wheat lines of exaploid Triticum « Denti de Cani ». — The dormancy in the seeds of two lines of Triticum « Denti de Cani » (which is spontaneous in Sardinia), one with solid stem (CP line), a spring line, the other with hollow stem (CV line), an winter line, has been studied. Germination was carried out in the dark, in Petri dishes at the constant temperatures of 5°, 10°, 20°, 23°, 26°, 30° and 35°C, using full ripe seeds, and seeds in different stages of after-ripening up to one year of age. The increase in % germination, for increasing temperatures above 5°C, is clearly conditioned by the progress of after-ripening in the seeds. In fact it was seen that, in general for the two lines, percentages over 50% of seeds germinated at 3 days were reached: at 10° and 20° after 15 days from the full ripening; at 23°C after 30 days; at 26°C after 50 days; at 30°C after about 100 days and at 35°C only after about 4–5 months from the harvest. During the experiment at 5°C it was observed that, during the first year of life of seeds and especially in the CP line, this temperature produces a clear slowing down in germinations after first year from the ripening, only the CV seeds — not the CP which remain very much inhibited — reach germination values over 50% at 3 days. It has also been demonstrated that the CV are more sensitive than the CP, in the first initial period of after-ripening (15 and 30 days), to the non-inhibiting activity of low temperatures (5° and 10°C) and that, between these, the 10°C temperature promotes the germination more clearly than the 5°C temperature. The results obtained have shown that the dormancy wears off in the spring CP-line much more slowly than in the winter CV-line. The CP-seeds remain in a relative dormancy condition for a long time, which causes a significative delay in germination, up to 100 days from the full ripening stage.  相似文献   

4.
Development of powdery mildew Erysiphe (sect. Microsphaera) pulchra in dogwood (Cornus florida) was assessed over a 5‐year period (1996–2000). Variations in the timing of initial infection, disease severity, ascocarp formation, and primary inoculum density were evaluated. Ascocarps formed late in the growing season (September‐November) when relatively low temperatures (< 27°C) persisted for at least 2 weeks, but ascocarp abundance was not influenced by disease severity. Studies conducted in a controlled environment showed that low temperatures triggered ascocarp formation and neither day length nor host plant age affected ascocarp formation. Ascocarps formed within 12–14 days at 18°C/ 10°C (day/night) and 23°C/15°C, but required 25 days at 26°C/18°C; no ascocarps formed at 28°C/ 20°C. Because ascocarps are an important source of primary inoculum for dogwood powdery mildew, ascocarp survival was evaluated in a 2‐year study (1998–2000). 60–80% of mature, dark‐coloured ascocarps survived at ‐10°C and ‐20°C and maintained viable spores for 4 months, but only 4–12% of partially developed, light brown ascocarps survived at ‐10°C and ‐20°C in the first experiment and only 30–40% survived in the second experiment. Immature ascocarp initials (cream‐yellow in colour) withered and disintegrated at all temperatures (24°C/20°C, 4°C, ‐10°C, and ‐20°C). Because ascocarps need time to mature, the timing of ascocarp initiation affects ascocarp maturity and thus winter survival and primary inoculum density. The evaluation of spring inoculum dispersal to spore traps and trap plants in 1999 and 2000 showed that rainfall patterns in early spring influenced primary inoculum and thus the timing of initial infection.  相似文献   

5.
Semi‐arid rangeland degradation is a reoccurring issue throughout the world. In the Great Basin of North America, seeds sown in the fall to restore degraded sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) steppe plant communities may experience high mortality in winter due to exposure of seedlings to freezing temperatures and other stressors. Delaying germination until early spring when conditions are more suitable for growth may increase survival. We evaluated the use of BioNik? (Valent BioSciences LLC) abscisic acid (ABA) to delay germination of bluebunch wheatgrass (Pseudoroegneria spicata). Seed was either left untreated or coated at five separate rates of ABA ranging from 0.25 to 6.0 g 100 g?1 of seed. Seeds were incubated at five separate constant temperatures from 5 to 25°C. From the resultant germination data, we developed quadratic thermal accumulation models for each treatment and applied them to 4 years of historic soil moisture and temperature data across six sagebrush steppe sites to predict germination timing. Total germination percentage remained similar across all temperatures except at 25°C, where high ABA rates had slightly lower values. All ABA doses delayed germination, with the greatest delays at 5–10°C. For example, the time required for 50% of the seeds to germinate at 5°C was increased by 16–46 d, depending on the amount of ABA applied. Seed germination models predicted that the majority of untreated seed would germinate 5–11 weeks after a 15 October simulated planting date. In contrast, seeds treated with ABA were predicted to delay germination to late winter or early spring. These results indicate that ABA coatings may delay germination of fall planted seed until conditions are more suitable for plant survival and growth.  相似文献   

6.
Seasonal variations in the ex vivo phagocytic function of blood cells from tench, including ingestion capacity of inert particles and its destruction (microbicide capacity) assessed by measurement of superoxide anion production, were studied. Tench were maintained under natural conditions throughout the year, and the different assays of samples taken during each season were initially performed in vitro at 22°C and the results compared. Subsequently, assays were performed at the same temperature as that of the water ponds in which the fish were kept (“seasonal temperature”: 12°C in winter, 22°C in spring and autumn and 30°C in summer) and the results compared seasonally. The results at 22°C showed that phagocytic capacity was greatest in spring and summer and lowest in winter. However, when phagocytic capacity was measured at seasonal temperature, highest values appeared in winter and lowest in summer and autumn. Nitroblue tetrazolium reduction by tench phagocytes after phagocytosing latex beads demonstrated a similar seasonal behaviour at both 22°C in each season and at seasonal temperature. The highest values appeared in summer, which suggests a better microbicide capacity in this season. The results obtained in this study suggest that for a correct interpretation of ex vivo phagocytic capacity of fish through the year it is necessary to use the same assay temperature as that of the water in which the fish is kept.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Male and femalePsammodromus hispanicus from southern Europe were acclimated to four seasonal conditions of photoperiod and night time temperature. During the dark period, the lizards' body temperatures fell to ambient air temperature but during the light period the lizards were allowed to thermoregulate behaviourally and at such times the lizards' mean body temperature varied from 29.0°C to 32.6°C. The resting metabolic rate of these lizards was measured in 5°C steps from 5°C to 30°C or 35°C. Sexual condition had little effect on resting metabolic rate, but at low temperatures lizards acclimated to winter or spring seasonal conditions had lower resting metabolic rates than those acclimated to summer or autumn conditions. At temperatures above 20°C seasonal acclimation had no effect on resting metabolic rate. It is considered that the reduction in low temperature metabolic rate in spring and winter is induced by low night time temperatures and serves to conserve energy during those seasons when lizards must spend long periods at low temperature without being able to feed.  相似文献   

8.
Growth and sexual reproduction of the marine littoral diatom Cocconeis scutellum Ehrenb. var. ornata Grun. were investigated at 30 different combinations of temperature (5, 10, 14, 18, 22° C), irradiance (20, 60, 100 μE·m?2·s?1) and daylength (14:10 and 10:14 h LD cycle). Growth occurred at all combinations. The optimal growth was observed at 14–18° C, long daylength and highest-to-moderate irradiance, and at 18° C, short daylength and highest irradiance. Sexual reproduction on the other hand occurred between 5 and 18° C, and the optimal condition was 10–14° C and short daylength. Annual cyclic, and sesonal changes in the distribution of cell size (valve length) were observed in a field population. These changes were characterized by an annual minimum in mean cell size in autumn, an annual maximum in winter, a slight decrease from the mean in spring–middle summer, a rapid decrease from the mean in late summer–early autumn, and appearance of bimodal distribution of cell size in winter. These changes were caused by sexual reproduction in autumn, rapid growth in late summer–early autumn and slow growth in other seasons, and poor viability of small cells near the lower end of the size range.  相似文献   

9.
Observations were made at 2 or 4 wk intervals from December to harvest on all stages of Heterodera avenae in winter oats growing on infested land. Second-stage larvae were present in all soil samples except on 5 and 20 July. Invasion and development of larvae was slow during winter. The nodal and seminal roots of winter oats were both heavily invaded by the nematode; larvae which invaded seminal roots tended to become male whereas those in nodal roots tended to become female. There was a small second invasion in August. Females were first observed on the roots of winter oats on 17 May, 214 days after the crop was sown and 62 days after the first fourth-stage larva was observed. The nodal roots of spring barley contained few H. avenae larvae whereas these roots were heavily invaded in winter wheat and oats. In spring barley the nodal roots were developing in June and July when few second-stage larvae were in the soil whereas in winter oats and wheat the nodal roots were growing rapidly in April when larvae were most numerous, and so were heavily invaded.  相似文献   

10.
Summary

In the southeast of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), slugs cause reductions in crop yield by killing seeds and seedlings, by destroying stems and growing points, and by reducing leaf area. Deroceras reticulatum (Müller, 1774) was introduced into Argentina a long time ago, but the biology and ecology of this species in this country are still unknown. The aim of this study was to determine how temperature affects growth rate, reproduction and survival of D. reticulatum and also to assess the seasonal phenology of this species. The life cycle of D. reticulatum was investigated at 12°C, 20°C and at a temperature which alternated between 12°C for 16 h and 20°C for 8 h. The light/dark regime during the experiment was LD: 8/16 h. Slug populations were sampled from grassland located at the Experimental Station of INTA Balcarce. Eggs hatched after 16.3 to 39.8 days and fertility varied between 83.9% and 91.1%. The mean time from hatching to oviposition was longer and fecundity lower at 20°C than 12°C and 12/20°C (p <0.05). The net reproductive rate was 1.49 to 70.53 and the mean generation time varied between the 27 and 30 weeks. In natural conditions, eggs of D. reticulatum were found from early winter until the end of the spring, when soil temperature was 8–15°C and humidity was above 15%. These results indicate that D. reticulatum has one generation per year, univoltine phenology, with peak densities of slugs from the beginning of winter to the end of spring, which coincides with the sowing and emergence of winter and summer crops.  相似文献   

11.
Quantitative changes in total leaf soluble proteins, proline, carbohydrate content, chlorophyll fluorescence, guaiacol peroxidase (POD) and catalase (CAT) activities were determined in a less cold-hardy (LCH) spring cv. Kohdasht (LT50 = −6°C), a semi cold-hardy (SCH) facultative cv. Azar 2 (LT50 = −15°C), and a cold-hardy (CH) winter cv. Norstar (LT50 = −26°C) of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) exposed to 4°C for 9 weeks. Seedlings were grown in a controlled growth room for 14 days at 20°C and then transferred to 4°C (experimental day 0) for 63 days (cold treatment); otherwise they were maintained continuously at 20°C (control treatment). The samples were harvested 0, 2, 21, 28, 42, and 63 days after exposure to 4°C. The results showed significant low temperature (LT)-induced accumulation of total soluble proteins, proline, and carbohydrates and elevation in activities of CAT and POD in leaves of SCH and CH winter cultivars rather than in LCH spring cultivar. In contrast, the chlorophyll fluorescence (F v/F m) declined during LT treatment irrespective of cultivar. The results suggest that developmental traits such as vernalization requirement of wheat affects on cold-tolerance expression system of plants.  相似文献   

12.
I examined the effects of growth temperature and winter duration on the leaf phenology of Fauria crista-galli plants, which have an indeterminate growth habit. After a 220-day chilling treatment, the leaf expansion and green periods of plants maintained at 25/20°C were much longer than those of plants maintained at 15/10°C and of plants at the natural habitat obtained in a previous study. The results indicate that early growth cessation and early leaf senescence in the natural habitat are not only due to endogenous rhythm but determined to some extent by cool summer temperatures. When grown at 15/10°C, the green period of individual leaves and plants was much shorter after a long chilling treatment (220 days) than after a short chilling treatment (110 days). The plants sprouted during or immediately after the termination of chilling treatment, suggesting that the decrease in the green period results partly from an advance of endogenous developmental stages during the chilling treatment and that the timing of snowmelt potentially affects the time of leaf senescence in the natural habitat.  相似文献   

13.
The Frank–Starling law is a fundamental property of the vertebrate myocardium which allows, when the end-diastolic volume increases, that the consequent stretch of the myocardial fibers generates a more forceful contraction. It has been shown that in the eel (Anguilla anguilla) heart, nitric oxide (NO) exerts a direct myocardial relaxant effect, increasing the sensitivity of the Frank–Starling response (Garofalo et al., 2009). With the use of isolated working heart preparations, this study investigated the relationship between NO modulation of Frank–Starling response and temperature challenges in the eel. The results showed that while, in long-term acclimated fish (spring animals perfused at 20 °C and winter animals perfused at 10 °C) the inhibition of NO production by L-N5 (1-iminoethyl)ornithine (L-NIO) significantly reduced the Frank–Starling response, under thermal shock conditions (spring animals perfused at 10 or 15 °C and winter animals perfused at 15 or 20 °C) L-NIO treatment resulted without effect. Western blotting analysis revealed a decrease of peNOS and pAkt expressions in samples subjected to thermal shock. Moreover, an increase in Hsp90 protein levels was observed under heat thermal stress. Together, these data suggest that the NO synthase/NO-dependent modulation of the Frank–Starling mechanism in fish is sensitive to thermal stress.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of the duration and degree of chilling, and the temperature of incubation, on hatching of winter eggs of Panonychus ulmi (Koch) were investigated. For chilling, 0°C and 5°C were more effective than — 5° and 9°, and the limits for the reaction were close to — 10° and 15°. As the chilling period was increased from 60 to 200 days, the percentage hatch on incubation at 21° increased, and the mean incubation time and its variance decreased. Before the maximum effect of chilling was achieved, percentage hatch on incubation at 9° and 15° was higher than at 21°; 27° was lethal to most winter eggs though not to summer eggs. After chilling, the later stages of diapause development could occur at temperatures from 0° to 21°) i.e. above and below the threshold temperature for morphogenesis, 6–7° in both winter and summer eggs. Diapause development cannot, therefore, be a unitary process. The significance of the results is discussed in relation to forecasting the time of hatch in the field, and to the phenological aspects of hatching in the spring.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

The resting metabolic rate (RMR) of Hemidactylus flaviviridis was measured at different temperatures from 20 to 35°C during winter and summer acclimatization. The mass exponent b values ranged between 0.67 and 0.72. Winter-acclimatized geckos of various body masses had significantly lower RMRs than summer-acclimatized geckos only at 20°C. It seems that low thermal sensitivity for summer–acclimatized group may facilitate activity during its active seasons, and high thermal sensitivity between 20 and 25°C for winter–acclimatized group may conserve energy during inactivity in winter.  相似文献   

16.
The contributions of phenotypic plasticity to photosynthetic performance in winter (cv Musketeer, cv Norstar) and spring (cv SR4A, cv Katepwa) rye (Secale cereale) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) cultivars grown at either 20°C [non‐acclimated (NA)] or 5°C [cold acclimated (CA)] were assessed. The 22–40% increase in light‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation in CA vs NA winter cereals were accounted for by phenotypic plasticity as indicated by the dwarf phenotype and increased specific leaf weight. However, phenotypic plasticity could not account for (1) the differential temperature sensitivity of CO2 assimilation and photosynthetic electron transport, (2) the increased efficiency and light‐saturated rates of photosynthetic electron transport or (3) the decreased light sensitivity of excitation pressure and non‐photochemical quenching between NA and NA winter cultivars. Cold acclimation decreased photosynthetic performance of spring relative to winter cultivars. However, the differences in photosynthetic performances between CA winter and spring cultivars were dependent upon the basis on which photosynthetic performance was expressed. Overexpression of BNCBF17 in Brassica napus generally decreased the low temperature sensitivity (Q10) of CO2 assimilation and photosynthetic electron transport even though the latter had not been exposed to low temperature. Photosynthetic performance in wild type compared to the BNCBF17‐overexpressing transgenic B. napus indicated that CBFs/DREBs regulate not only freezing tolerance but also govern plant architecture, leaf anatomy and photosynthetic performance. The apparent positive and negative effects of cold acclimation on photosynthetic performance are discussed in terms of the apparent costs and benefits of phenotypic plasticity, winter survival and reproductive fitness.  相似文献   

17.
The Asian paddle crab, Charybdis japonica, native to the northwest Pacific, is an invasive species that has established populations within northeastern New Zealand. Here, we provide a detailed examination of C. japonica's reproductive seasonality and gametogenesis, sizes at physiological maturity, and sex ratios outside its native range. Trapping in the Weiti River Estuary, Whangaparoa (36°38.4′S, 174°43.6′E) from February 2010 to May 2012 indicated a male‐biased population. Reproductive seasonality largely depended on female condition, since males contained ripe spermatozoa year‐round. Female gametogenesis began during late autumn, with oocyte development occurring throughout winter to early spring. Based on the presence of mature gametes during late winter and the appearance of gravid females in early November, mating began during early spring, with spawning in mid‐spring. Spawning coincided with a large drop in the gonad index, and occurred between sea surface temperatures of 17–22°C and 11.75–13.5 h day length. Females remained reproductive for up to 5 months of the year. Histological observation suggested that CW50 (the carapace width at which 50% of the population is mature) for females was 46.39 mm, while CW50 for males could not be determined due to a paucity of immature males. Histological analysis also suggested that females of C. japonica could produce store sperm and multiple broods annually.  相似文献   

18.
Physiological functions are impaired in various organs in aged people, as manifest by, e.g., renal and cardiac dysfunction and muscle atrophy. The elderly are also at increased risk of both hypothermia and hyperthermia in extreme temperatures. The majority of those over 65 years old have elevated serum osmolality. Our hypothesis is that the elderly have suppressed osmolality control in different seasons compared to the young. Eight healthy young men and six healthy older men participated in this study. The experiments were performed during spring, summer, autumn and winter in Japan, with average atmospheric temperatures of 15–20°C in spring, 25–30°C in summer, 15–23°C in autumn and 5–10°C in winter. Each subject immersed his lower legs in warm water at 40°C for 30 min. Core (tympanic) temperature and sweat rate at chest were recorded continuously. Blood was taken pre-immersion to measure the concentrations of antidiuretic hormone, serum osmolality, plasma renin activity, angiotensin II, aldosterone, leptin, thyroid stimulating hormone, fT3 and fT4. The results suggested that the elderly have suppressed osmolality control compared to the young; osmolality was especially elevated in winter compared to the summer in elderly subjects. Therefore, particularly in the elderly, balancing fluid by drinking water should be encouraged to maintain euhydration status in winter.  相似文献   

19.
Activation by Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+, or Mn2+ of adenosine triphosphatases in a microsomal fraction from wheat roots depends upon the growth temperature when the plants are grown under low salt conditions, but not when the plants get a full-strength culture medium. At low ionic strength, cultivation at 25°C gives only half as high activation as cultivation at 18°C or at high ionic strength at both temperatures. Corresponding data for activation of ATPases from oats also show that low ionic strength during growth gives the highest temperature dependence. Low temperature together with low salt conditions during growth gives the highest ATPase activity after stimulation with divalent cations. High growth temperature and full-strength medium decrease the ATPase activity. Activation energies (Ea) were calculated for the two temperature intervals 35–20°C and 20–5°C. The dominating ATPase stimulation (Ca2+ in wheat, Mg2+ in oats) is characterized by high specific activity combined with a low Ea value. The differences in ATPase activity between oats and wheat can be correlated with different cultivation requirements known from agriculture.  相似文献   

20.
In the years 1973/4–1974/5, Botrytis cinerea was responsible for losses of 26% and 37% respectively in overwintered salad (green) onion crops grown at Wellesbourne. The fungus invaded the tips of cotyledonary and young true leaves and then grew downwards and inwards through the leaf axils to colonise the internal tissues and produce a collar rot which caused plants to collapse and die. More direct infection of the junction between an older and younger leaf produced a similar effect. Symptoms were rarely noticeable (except occasionally in the later stages of the disease) and affected plants disappeared unobtrusively. The incidence of collar rot increased as the rate of leaf production fell with the drop in temperatures in winter months but decreased as leaf growth resumed with increases in temperature in the spring. The fungus grew and sporulated well at low temperatures (5°C) and more inoculated seedlings developed collar rot when maintained at simulated winter temperatures (7°C) than when kept at simulated spring temperatures (15°C). B. squamosa occurred spasmodically producing white leaf lesions but caused no loss of plants. B. allii although present at a low incidence did not increase in the crops but in common with B. cinerea caused some damage to the bases of plants at harvest.  相似文献   

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