首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Mesophyll structure and content of photosynthetic pigments in the leaves of three species of steppe plants, Centaurea scabiosa L., Euphorbia virgata Waldst. et Kit., Helichrysum arenarium (L.) Moench, were investigated in four geographical sites of the Volga region and the Urals located in the forest-steppe and steppe zones. Variations of the studied parameters between geographical points depended both on the species and on the structural organization of the leaf. The highest level of variation was observed for leaf area and pigment content per unit leaf area, the size and the number of chloroplasts in the cell changed to a lesser extent. The leaf thickness, leaf area and mesophyll cell sizes mostly depended on the plant species. C. scabiosa had large leaves (40–50 cm2) with large thickness (280–290 μm) and large mesophyll cells (up to 15000 μm3). The leaves of H. arenarium and E. virgata were ten times smaller and characterized by 1.5 times smaller thickness and 2?3 times smaller cell size. Geographical location and climate of the region affected leaf density, proportion of partial tissue volume, and the ratio of the photosynthetic pigments. In the southern point of Volga region with the highest climate aridity, all studied species were characterized by maximum values of volumetric leaf density (LD), due to the high proportion of sclerenchyma and vascular bundles, and specificity of the mesophyll structure. With the decline in latitude, chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoid (Car) contents in leaf area were reduced, the ratio Chl/Car was increased, and the ratio Chl a/b was declined. The reduction of the pigment content in the leaf in all species was associated with a reduction in the amount of Chl per chloroplast, and for C. scabiosa and H. arenarium it was associated also with the reduction of chloroplast amount in the leaf area. In turn, chloroplast number per leaf area and the total cell area (Ames/A) depended on the ratio of the number and size of mesophyll cells inherent to this plant species. At the same time, we found a similar mechanism of spatial organization of leaf restructuring for all studied species—decrease in Ames/A was accompanied by increasing in the proportion of intercellular air spaces in the leaf. It is concluded that variations in structural and functional parameters of the photosynthetic apparatus of steppe plants were associated with plant adaptation to climate features. General direction of the changes of leaf parameters of the studied species with aridity was the increase of LD and the decrease of pigment content per leaf area however the cellular mechanisms of changes in the pigment content and integral parameters of mesophyll were determined by the plant species properties.  相似文献   

2.
The specific features of the structural and functional organisation of the photosynthetic apparatus (PSA) were studied in wild halophytes representing three strategies of salt tolerance: euhalophyte Salicornia perennans, crynohalophyte Limonium gmelinii, and glycohalophyte Artemisia santonica. The sodium content in aboveground parts of the plants corresponded to the strategy of salt tolerance. The photosynthetic cells of the euhalophyte were large and contained a higher number of chloroplasts than those in other species. In contrast, the number of cells per a leaf area unit was lower in S. perennans as compared to cryno- and glycohalophytes. Thereupon, the cell and chloroplast surface area per leaf area unit declined in the following sequence: A. santonica > L. gmelinii > S. perennans. However, the large cells of euhalophyte contained chloroplasts of larger sizes with 4- to 5-fold higher chlorophyll (Chl) content per chloroplast and Chl concentration in chloroplast volume unit. Also, chloroplasts of S. perennans were characterised by the higher content of glyco- and phospholipids. Qualitative composition of fatty acids (FA) in lipids isolated from the chloroplast-enriched fraction was similar in all three species; however, the index of unsaturation of FA was higher in glycohalophyte A. santonica than those in two other species. Under natural condition, PSA of all three halophytes showed high resistance to soil salinity. The results indicated tolerance of PSII to the photodamage in halophytes. The high rate of electron transport through PSII can be important to prevent oxidative damage of PSA in halophytes under strong light and hight temperature in vivo. Thus, the strategy of salt tolerance is provided by both the leaf anatomical structure and the ultrastructure of photosynthetic membranes, which is determined in particular by the specific composition of lipids.  相似文献   

3.
4.
5.
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaf color mutants are excellent models for studying chlorophyll biosynthesis and chloroplast development. In this study, we isolated a stable genetic white and lesion mimic leaf1 (wlml1) mutant from an ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS)-mutagenized population of the indica cultivar TN1. Compared with wild-type TN1, the wlml1 mutant had lower contents of chlorophyll and carotenoids, altered chloroplast ultrastructure, and altered regulation of genes associated with chlorophyll metabolism and chloroplast development. In addition, lesions formed on the leaves of wlml1 plants grown at 20 °C and genes related to disease resistance and antioxidant functions were up-regulated; by contrast, the mutant phenotype was partially suppressed at 28 °C. These findings indicated that WLML1 might play a role in chlorophyll metabolism and chloroplast development, as well as in biotic and abiotic stress responses. Genetic analysis showed that WLML1 was controlled by a recessive nuclear gene, and map-based cloning delimited WLML1 to a 159.7-kb region on chromosome 4 that includes 30 putative open reading frames. Based on these findings, the wlml1 mutant will be a good genetic material for further studies on chlorophyll metabolism and stress responses in rice.  相似文献   

6.
We conducted an experiment to assess the predictive capability of a leaf optical meter for determining leaf pigment status of Acer mono Maxim., A. ginnala Maxim., Quercus mongolica Fisch., and Cornus alba displaying a range of visually different leaf colors during senescence. Concentrations of chlorophyll (Chl) a, Chl b, and total Chl [i.e., Chl (a+b)] decreased while the concentration of carotenoids (Car) remained relatively static for all species as leaf development continued from maturity to senescence. C. alba exhibited the lowest average concentration of Chl (a+b), Chl a, and Car, but the highest relative anthocyanin concentration, while Q. mongolica exhibited the highest Chl (a+b), Chl b, and the lowest relative anthocyanin concentration. A. mono exhibited the highest Chl a and Car concentrations. The relationships between leaf pigments and the values measured by the optical meter generally followed an exponential function. The strongest relationships between leaf pigments and optical measurements were for A. mono, A. ginnala, and Q. mongolica (R 2 ranged from 0.64 to 0.95), and the weakest relationships were for C. alba (R 2 ranged from 0.13 to 0.67). Moreover, optical measurements were more strongly related to Chl a than to Chl b or Chl (a+b). Optical measurements were not related to Car or relative anthocyanin concentrations. We predicted that weak relationships between leaf pigments and optical measurements would occur under very low Chl concentrations or under very high anthocyanin concentrations; however, these factors could not explain the weak relationship between Chl and optical measurements observed in C. alba. Overall, our results indicated that an optical meter can accurately estimate leaf pigment concentrations during leaf senescence — a time when pigment concentrations are dynamically changing — but that the accuracy of the estimate varies across species. Future research should investigate how species-specific leaf traits may influence the accuracy of pigment estimates derived from optical meters.  相似文献   

7.
LrgA and LrgB genes have been identified as new components in regulation of programmed cell death (PCD) in bacteria. While in Arabidopsis, it has been documented that AtLrgB plays a crucial role in chloroplast development and photorespiration by acting as a glycolate/glycerate translocator (PLGG1) in the chloroplast inner membrane. However, little is known about LrgB homologs in other plant species, especially those with fleshy fruits. In this study, a homologous gene of AtLrgB, here designated SlLrgB, was identified in tomato. Similar to AtLrgB, structure analysis suggests that the LrgA and LrgB genes have evolved into two domains of the SlLrgB protein. Expression pattern analysis showed that SlLrgB accumulated mainly in green tissues and could be regulated by light, hormone, and abiotic stress treatments. Compared to wild-type plants, parts of SlLrgB overexpression plants displayed etiolated leaves and a growth retardation phenotype, with significantly reduced chlorophyll content both in leaves and fruits. The qPCR results revealed that the SGR gene, which was associated with chlorophyll degradation, was severely repressed. Two key genes in the chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway, CAO and POR, were also suppressed in the SlLrgB overexpression plants. Taken together, we suggest that SlLrgB may play important roles in the regulation of chlorophyll metabolism pathways in tomato.  相似文献   

8.
Leaf anatomy and irradiance-dependent leaf transmittance changes serving as irradiance acclimation mechanisms in leaves were studied in two ecologically contrasting Tradescantia species, a shade plant T. fluminensis Vell. and a sun plant T. sillamontana Matuda, grown at different irradiances. A dramatic increase in leaf thickness (2 to 4-fold) under a high growth irradiance (800 μmol m?2 s?1) compared with a low growth irradiance (60 μmol m?2 s?1), achieved mainly by expansion of the epidermis, was recorded in both species. The effect took place on the background of modest changes in mesophyll thickness (1.8-fold in T. fluminensis and 1.15-fold in T. sillamontana) and chloroplast size (0.8-fold in T. fluminensis and an insignificant change in T. sillamontana). Mesophyll structure and growth irradiance response did not seem to facilitate significantly light-dependent chloroplast (avoidance) movement in these species. Nevertheless, an exceptionally large (2 to 4-fold) irradiance-induced increase in light transmittance attributable to chloroplast avoidance movement was revealed. This increase by far exceeded that in other higher plants according to available literature. The magnitude of the irradiance-dependent transmittance changes positively correlated both with the rate of photosystem II recovery and with the extent of xanthophyll deepoxidation in the leaves. This was opposite to a negative correlation observed between the same parameters in different plant species. We hypothesize that, at the evolutionary timescale, chloroplast avoidance movement might adjust independently from other photoprotective mechanisms, e.g., non-photochemical quenching, whereas, on the ontogenetic timescale, adjustment of these mechanisms inevitably follows the same trend.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the effects of low nocturnal temperature on photosynthetic apparatus of winter rapeseed (Brassica campestris L.). An artificial climate chamber was used to simulate the effects of low nocturnal temperature on seedling and stomatal morphology, chloroplast ultrastructure, photosynthetic parameters, and dry matter distribution and accumulation in two winter rapeseed cultivars, Longyou-7 (ultra coldresistant) and Tianyou-2 (weak cold resistance). Compared with those at diurnal/nocturnal temperatures of 20°/10°C (control), rapeseed seedlings at 20°/5°C had increased leaf chlorophyll content, deepened green leaf color, decreased stomatal conductance (Gs), intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci), and photosynthetic rate (Pn), and improved root/shoot ratio; the majority of stomata remained open in Longyou-7 while those in Tianyou-2 were mostly closed or semi-closed. At diurnal/nocturnal temperatures of 20°/–5°C, rapeseed seedlings had decreased leaf chlorophyll content with increased Ci but decreased Gs and Pn; Tianyou-2 exhibited ruptured chloroplast membrane, dissolved grana, broken stroma lamella, and decreased root/shoot ratio, whereas Longyou-7 had chloroplasts retaining partial structure of grana with a small amount of starch granules in guard cells. Low nocturnal temperature damaged the photosynthetic membrane of chloroplasts and reduced Pn in the leaves of winter rapeseed influencing photosynthetic processes in this crop. The reduction of Pn was mainly related to stomatal limitation at diurnal/nocturnal temperatures of 20°/5°C and non-stomatal limitation at diurnal/nocturnal temperatures of 20°/–5°C.  相似文献   

10.
At present, chlorophyll meters are widely used for a quick and nondestructive estimate of chlorophyll (Chl) contents in plant leaves. Chl meters allow to estimate the Chl content in relative units - the Chl index (CI). However, using such meters, one can face a problem of converting CI into absolute values of the pigment content and comparing data acquired with different devices and for different plant species. Many Chl meters (SPAD-502, CL-01, CCM-200) demonstrated a high degree of correlation between the CI and the absolute pigment content. A number of formulas have been deduced for different plant species to convert the CI into the absolute value of the photosynthetic pigment content. However, such data have not been yet acquired for the atLEAF+ Chl meter. The purpose of the present study was to assess the applicability of the atLEAF+ Chl meter for estimating the Chl content. A significant species-specific exponential relationships between the atLEAF value (corresponding to CI) and extractable Chl a, Chl b, Chl (a+b) for Calamus dioicus and Cleistanthus sp. were shown. The correlations between the atLEAF values and the content of Chl a, Chl b, and Chl (a+b) per unit of leaf area was stronger than that per unit of dry leaf mass. The atLEAF value- Chl b correlation was weaker than that of atLEAF value-Chl a and atLEAF value-Chl (a+b) correlations. The influence of light conditions (Chl a/b ratio) on the atLEAF value has been also shown. The obtained results indicated that the atLEAF+ Chl meter is a cheap and convenient tool for a quick nondestructive estimate of the Chl content, if properly calibrated, and can be used for this purpose along with other Chl meters.  相似文献   

11.
Micromorphological features of the leaf epidermis and the inner structure of leaf tissues of eight arborescent taxa of the genus Dracaena were analysed using light and scanning electron microscopy. The plants are xeromorphic or mesomorphic. Their leaves are isobilateral and amphistomatic, and the stomata are anomocytic and tetracytic. The mesophyll in all the species is divided into an outer chlorenchyma and a central region with colourless water-storage cells, chlorophyll cells and vascular bundles. Water-storage cells have wall bands and reticulate thickenings on the walls. The article describes and illustrates several new quantitative and qualitative leaf characters of the dragon tree group. Our findings can be used to identify the dragon tree group leaves, while the shape of epidermal cells and stomata types may be useful in the identification and classification of fragments of fossil leaves. We conclude that D. ombet and D. schizantha are not two distinct species, but should be treated as subspecies of D. ombet. Leaf characters, especially stomata depth on adaxial epidermis, height of adaxial epidermal cells and the presence and thickness of hypodermal fibre bundles markedly differ between geographical groups: Macaronesian species (D. draco and D. tamaranae), the species found in East Africa and Arabian Peninsula (D. ombet subsp. ombet, D. ombet subsp. schizantha, D. serrulata and D. cinnabari) and Southeast Asian species (D. kaweesakii and D. jayniana).  相似文献   

12.
Previous works suggested that Pleurostima purpurea (Velloziaceae—Barbacenioideae) shows a remarkable capacity to endure desiccation of its vegetative tissues. P. purpurea occurs in monocotyledons mats on soil islands in the Pão de Açucar (Sugar Loaf) one of the most recognizable rock outcrops of the world, in Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil. Mats of P. purpurea occur in cliffs by the sea some meters above the tidal zone. Although living in rock outcrops almost devoid of any soil cover, P. purpurea seems to occur preferably on less exposed rock faces and slightly shady sites. Usually, less extreme adaptations to drought would be expected in plants with the habitat preference of P. purpurea. Relying on this observation, we argue if a combination of different strategies of dealing with low water availability can be found in P. purpurea as on other desiccation tolerant angiosperms. This study aims to examine the occurrence of desiccation tolerant behavior in P. purpurea together with the expression of drought avoidance mechanisms during dehydration progression. For this, it was analyzed the gas exchanges, leaf pigments and relative leaf water content during desiccation and rehydration of cultivated mature individuals. P. purpurea behaved like typical drought avoiders under moderated drought condition with stomatal closure occurring around a relative leaf water content up to 90%. During this process, it was observed a delay in the leaf relative water content (RWC leaf) decrease comparing to the plant-soil relative water content (RWC plant-soil). As soil dehydration worsened, gas exchanges restrictions progressed until a lack of activity which characterizes anabiosis. The loss of chlorophyll occurs before the end of total dehydration, characterizing the presence of poikilochlorophylly. The chlorophyll degradation follows the RWC leaf decrease, which achieved the minimum average value of 17% without incurring in leaf abscission. The chlorophyll re-synthesis seems to start well after the full rehydration of the leaf. During all of this process, carotenoid content remained stable. These results are coherent with a combination of drought avoidance and desiccation tolerance in P. purpurea which seems to be coherent with the amplitude of water availability in the rock outcrop habitat where it occurs, suggesting that the periods of water availability are sufficiently long for the success of the costly desiccation tolerant behavior but too short to make a typical drought avoider species win the competition for exploring the rock outcrop substrate where P. purpurea occurs.  相似文献   

13.
Iridoplasts (modified plastids in adaxial epidermal cells) reported from Begonia were originally hypothesized to cause iridescence, which was broadly accepted for decades. However, several species of Begonia with iridoplasts are not iridescent causing confusion. Here chloroplast ultrastructure was observed in 40 taxa of Begoniaceae to explore the phenomenon of iridescence. However, 22 Begonias and Hillebrandia were found to have iridoplasts, but only nine display visually iridescent blue to blue-green leaves. Unexpectedly, a new type of plastid, a ‘minichloroplast,’ was found in the abaxial epidermal cells of all taxa, but was present in adaxial epidermal cells only if iridoplasts were absent. Comparative ultrastructural study of iridoplasts and a shading experiment of selected taxa show that a taxon with iridoplasts does not inevitably have visual iridescence, but iridescence is greatly affected by the spacing between thylakoid lamellae (stoma spacing). Thus, we propose instead the name ‘lamelloplast’ for plastids filled entirely with regular lamellae to avoid prejudging their function. To evaluate photosynthetic performance, chlorophyll fluorescence (F v /F m ) was measured separately from the chloroplasts in the adaxial epidermis and lower leaf tissues by using leaf dermal peels. Lamelloplasts and minichloroplasts have much lower photosynthetic efficiency than mesophyll chloroplasts. Nevertheless, photosynthetic proteins (psbA protein of PSII, RuBisCo and ATPase) were detected in both plastids as well as mesophyll chloroplasts in an immunogold labeling. Spectrometry revealed additional blue to blue-green peaks in visually iridescent leaves. Micro-spectrometry detected a blue peak from single blue spots in adaxial epidermal cells confirming that the color is derived from lamelloplasts. Presence of lamelloplasts or minichloroplasts is species specific and exclusive. High prevalence of lamelloplasts in Begoniaceae, including the basal clade Hillebrandia, highlights a unique evolutionary development. These new findings clarify the association between iridescence and lamelloplasts, and with implications for new directions in the study of plastid morphogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
The cadmium (Cd), being a widespread soils pollutant and one of the most toxic heavy metals in the environment, adversely affects sustainable crop production and food safety. Pot experiment was conducted to quantify and simulate the response of purslane (Portulaca oleracea L.) plants to Cd toxicity. The purslane germinated seeds were cultivated in twelve Cd concentrations (from 0 to 300 mg/kg of Cd in soil) for six weeks and then some growth characteristics, photosynthesis pigments, and chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters were measured. The influence of Cd gradients in the soil on all growth parameters, photosynthesis pigments and chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters (except Fm and carotenoid content) were described by a segmented model. Furthermore, Fm and carotenoid contents were fitted to a linear model. The growth characteristics, chlorophyll content, photosynthetic pigments and some parameters of chlorophyll a fluorescence such as Fv, Fv/Fm, Y(II) and ETR decreased when Cd concentration increased. In contrast, F0, Y(NPQ) and Y(NO) increased and Fm was not significantly affected. In general, most variations in the studied parameters were recorded with low concentrations of cadmium, which ranged from 0 to 125 mg/kg. Also, the growth characteristics (especially stem, leaf, and shoot dry weights) were more sensitive to Cd contamination than other parameters. Moreover, among chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, Y(NPQ) was the most sensitive to Cd concentration gradients in the soil that can be due to disturbances of antennae complex of PSII.  相似文献   

15.
Some studies have reported the presence of leaf cork-warts in several families of plants; however, in Lauraceae, these structures have not been confirmed. Therefore, based on studies of leaf anatomy, we have herein documented the presence of leaf cork-warts in Mezilaurus species of Lauraceae. To accomplish this, we investigated fifteen species from all six genera of the Mezilaurus group, including Anaueria, Chlorocardium, Clinostemon, Mezilaurus, Sextonia, and Williamodendron. Analyses of leaf anatomy were performed through optical and scanning electron microscopy. Our results revealed cork-warts in six species of the genus Mezilaurus: M. crassiramea, M. navalium, M. revolutifolia, M. subcordata, M. synandra, and M. vanderwerffii. In the investigated species M. crassiramea and M. navalium, cork-warts originated from the stomatal complex, from epidermal cells covering oil cells located in mesophyll, and from epidermal cells around trichomes. Therefore, cork-warts could be considered an additional taxonomic character to delimit Mezilaurus species.  相似文献   

16.
Leaf reddening in overwintering evergreens largely restricts their application in landscapes and is generally triggered in response to excess light. To explore how leaves respond to excess light and examine the potential relevance of leaf reddening in this process, a comparative field study was conducted on the sun leaves (SUL), shade leaves (SHL) and three levels of artificially shaded sun leaves (SSUL) of Buxus microphylla ‘Wintergreen’. The seasonal changes in leaf colorations, chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoid contents, leaf absorbance and chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics were investigated. The results showed that SUL upregulated Chl a/b with increased reductions in Chl b compared with Chl a, accumulated red pigments in the upper palisade mesophyll with reduced absorption in blue and red light but increased absorption in green light, and additionally, significantly downregulated photochemical activities through the sustained enhancement of energy dissipation in PSII antenna (ΦD) from fall to midwinter. In the SSUL, as the light intensity decreased, all of the above processes were mitigated except that the SSUL maintained constant absorptions in blue light region and whose levels were similar to those of the SUL and SHL. In contrast, the SHL maintained relatively high levels of Chl a and Chl b, remained completely green and showed regulated ΦD and ΦE (energy dissipation in PSII reaction centers) to maintain relatively high photochemical activity in the winter. We conclude that the sun leaves downregulate Chl contents to reduce the light absorption and simultaneously enhance sustained ΦD to dissipate most of the light energy, whereas shade leaves maintain relatively high Chl contents and demonstrate regulated proportions of ΦD and ΦE to match the extent to which the absorbed light can be utilized through photochemical reactions. The accumulated red pigments in sun phenotypes may provide a shading effect on Chls by directing energy to non-photosynthetic reaction centers in the blue light region where the absorption is offset by the reduced Chls.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Comparing with other angiosperms, most members within the family Orchidaceae have lower photosynthetic capacities. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Cypripedium and Paphiopedilum are closely related phylogenetically in Orchidaceae, but their photosynthetic performances are different. We explored the roles of internal anatomy and diffusional conductance in determining photosynthesis in three Cypripedium and three Paphiopedilum species, and quantitatively analyzed their diffusional and biochemical limitations to photosynthesis. Paphiopedilum species showed lower light-saturated photosynthetic rate (A N), stomatal conductance (g s), and mesophyll conductance (g m) than Cypripedium species. A N was positively correlated with g s and g m. And yet, in both species A N was more strongly limited by g m than by biochemical factors or g s. The greater g s of Cypripedium was mainly affected by larger stomatal apparatus area and smaller pore depth, while the less g m of Paphiopedilum was determined by the reduced surface area of mesophyll cells and chloroplasts exposed to intercellular airspace per unit of leaf area, and much thicker cell wall thickness. These results suggest that leaf anatomical structure is the key factor affecting g m, which is largely responsible for the difference in photosynthetic capacity between those two genera. Our findings provide new insight into the photosynthetic physiology and functional diversification of orchids.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Assessment of photosynthetic traits and temperature tolerance was performed on field-grown modern genotype (MG), and the local landrace (LR) of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) as well as the wild relative species (Aegilops cylindrica Host.). The comparison was based on measurements of the gas exchange (A/ci, light and temperature response curves), slow and fast chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics, and some growth and leaf parameters. In MG, we observed the highest CO2 assimilation rate \(\left( {{A_{{\text{C}}{{\text{O}}_2}}}} \right),\) electron transport rate (Jmax) and maximum carboxylation rate \(\left( {{V_{{{\text{C}}_{\hbox{max} }}}}} \right)\). The Aegilops leaves had substantially lower values of all photosynthetic parameters; this fact correlated with its lower biomass production. The mesophyll conductance was almost the same in Aegilops and MG, despite the significant differences in leaf phenotype. In contrary, in LR with a higher dry mass per leaf area, the half mesophyll conductance (gm) values indicated more limited CO2 diffusion. In Aegilops, we found much lower carboxylation capacity; this can be attributed mainly to thin leaves and lower Rubisco activity. The difference in CO2 assimilation rate between MG and others was diminished because of its higher mitochondrial respiration activity indicating more intense metabolism. Assessment of temperature response showed lower temperature optimum and a narrow ecological valence (i.e., the range determining the tolerance limits of a species to an environmental factor) in Aegilops. In addition, analysis of photosynthetic thermostability identified the LR as the most sensitive. Our results support the idea that the selection for high yields was accompanied by the increase of photosynthetic productivity through unintentional improvement of leaf anatomical and biochemical traits including tolerance to non-optimal temperature conditions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号