首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   51篇
  免费   4篇
  2020年   1篇
  2015年   2篇
  2014年   2篇
  2013年   3篇
  2012年   1篇
  2011年   9篇
  2010年   4篇
  2009年   2篇
  2008年   1篇
  2007年   1篇
  2006年   3篇
  2005年   4篇
  2000年   3篇
  1998年   3篇
  1997年   1篇
  1987年   1篇
  1983年   1篇
  1980年   4篇
  1979年   2篇
  1977年   1篇
  1976年   2篇
  1975年   1篇
  1974年   1篇
  1973年   1篇
  1969年   1篇
排序方式: 共有55条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
31.
32.
Abstract: Twenty‐five gastropod taxa are reported from the Early Jurassic (Hettangian to Toarcian) of England. Of these, 14 are identified to species level, and the remaining 11 are treated in open nomenclature. One genus (Lensataphrus) and six species are introduced as new. The new species are Lensataphrus tatei, Lensataphrus tenuis, Tricarilda toddi, Cylindrobullina dorsetensis, Cylindrobullina ventricosa and Consobrinella greeni. The following new combinations are introduced: Cassianopsis hebertana (d’Orbigny, 1852) for Neritopsis hebertana; Cryptaulax abscisum (Terquem and Piette, 1868) for Cerithium abscisum; and Cylindrobullina avena (Terquem, 1855) for Striactaeonina avena. Most of the genera and some of the species are also known from Central Europe (Germany and France). Typical vetigastropod genera that are present in England and Central Europe are Colpomphalus, Costataphrus, Ooliticia, Eucycloscala and Eucycloidea. The caenogastropod genera Levipleura and Cryptaulax are present in both regions, as are the heterobranchs Tricarilda and Cylindrobullina. The heterobranch genus Consobrinella is reported from England for the first time. Gastropods seem to follow the diversity trends of other marine invertebrates during the Early Jurassic. They diversify until the Late Pliensbachian but decrease sharply in number around the Pliensbachian–Toarcian boundary. This may reflect both regional anoxia and a global mass extinction event in the Early Toarcian.  相似文献   
33.
Phytophthora ramorum is an oomycete plant pathogen classified in the kingdom Stramenopila. P. ramorum is the causal agent of sudden oak death on coast live oak and tanoak as well as ramorum blight on woody ornamental and forest understorey plants. It causes stem cankers on trees, and leaf blight or stem dieback on ornamentals and understorey forest species. This pathogen is managed in the USA and Europe by eradication where feasible, by containment elsewhere and by quarantine in many parts of the world. Genomic resources provide information on genes of interest to disease management and have improved tremendously since sequencing the genome in 2004. This review provides a current overview of the pathogenicity, population genetics, evolution and genomics of P. ramorum. Taxonomy: Phytophthora ramorum (Werres, De Cock & Man in't Veld): kingdom Stramenopila; phylum Oomycota; class Peronosporomycetidae; order Pythiales; family Pythiaceae; genus Phytophthora. Host range: The host range is very large and the list of known hosts continues to expand at the time of writing. Coast live oak and tanoak are ecologically, economically and culturally important forest hosts in the USA. Rhododendron, Viburnum, Pieris, Syringa and Camellia are key ornamental hosts on which P. ramorum has been found repeatedly, some of which have been involved in moving the pathogen via nursery shipments. Disease symptoms: P. ramorum causes two different diseases with differing symptoms: sudden oak death (bleeding lesions, stem cankers) on oaks and ramorum blight (twig dieback and/or foliar lesions) on tree and woody ornamental hosts. Useful websites: http://nature.berkeley.edu/comtf/ , http://rapra.csl.gov.uk/ , http://www.aphis.usda.gov/plant_health/plant_pest_info/pram/index.shtml , http://genome.jgi‐psf.org/Phyra1_1/Phyra1_1.home.html , http://pamgo.vbi.vt.edu/ , http://pmgn.vbi.vt.edu/ , http://vmd.vbi.vt.edu./ , http://web.science.oregonstate.edu/bpp/labs/grunwald/resources.htm , http://www.defra.gov.uk/planth/pramorum.htm , http://www.invasive.org/browse/subject.cfm?sub=4603 , http://www.forestry.gov.uk/forestry/WCAS‐4Z5JLL  相似文献   
34.
35.
Litter production in many drought‐affected ecosystems coincides with the beginning of an extended season of no or limited rainfall. Because of lack of moisture litter decomposition during such periods has been largely ignored so far, despite potential importance for the overall decay process in such ecosystems. To determine drivers and extent of litter decay in rainless periods, a litterbag study was conducted in Mediterranean shrublands, dwarf shrublands and grasslands. Heterogeneous local and common straw litter was left to decompose in open and shaded patches of various field sites in two study regions. Fresh local litter lost 4–18% of its initial mass over about 4 months without rainfall, which amounted to 15–50% of total annual decomposition. Lab incubations and changes in chemical composition suggested that litter was degraded by microbial activity, enabled by absorption of water vapor from the atmosphere. High mean relative humidity of 85% was measured during 8–9 h of most nights, but the possibility of fog deposition or dew formation at the soil surface was excluded. Over 95% of the variation in mass loss and changes in litter nitrogen were explained by characteristics of water‐vapor uptake by litter. Photodegradation induced by the intense solar radiation was an additional mechanism of litter decomposition as indicated by lignin dynamics. Lignin loss from litter increased with exposure to ultraviolet radiation and with initial lignin concentration, together explaining 90%–97% of the variation in lignin mass change. Our results indicate that water vapor, solar radiation and litter quality controlled decomposition and changes in litter chemistry during rainless seasons. Many regions worldwide experience transient periods without rainfall, and more land area is expected to undergo reductions in rainfall as a consequence of climate change. Therefore, absorption of water vapor might play a role in decomposition and nutrient cycling in an increasing number of ecosystems.  相似文献   
36.
Although few simian rotaviruses (RVs) have been isolated, such strains have been important for basic research and vaccine development. To explore the origins of simian RVs, the complete genome sequences of strains PTRV (G8P[1]), RRV (G3P[3]), and TUCH (G3P[24]) were determined. These data allowed the genotype constellations of each virus to be determined and the phylogenetic relationships of the simian strains with each other and with nonsimian RVs to be elucidated. The results indicate that PTRV was likely transmitted from a bovine or other ruminant into pig-tailed macaques (its host of origin), since its genes have genotypes and encode outer-capsid proteins similar to those of bovine RVs. In contrast, most of the genes of rhesus-macaque strains, RRV and TUCH, have genotypes more typical of canine-feline RVs. However, the sequences of the canine and/or feline (canine/feline)-like genes of RRV and TUCH are only distantly related to those of modern canine/feline RVs, indicating that any potential transmission of a progenitor of these viruses from a canine/feline host to a simian host was not recent. The remaining genes of RRV and TUCH appear to have originated through reassortment with bovine, human, or other RV strains. Finally, comparison of PTRV, RRV, and TUCH genes with those of the vervet-monkey RV SA11-H96 (G3P[2]) indicates that SA11-H96 shares little genetic similarity to other simian strains and likely has evolved independently. Collectively, our data indicate that simian RVs are of diverse ancestry with genome constellations that originated largely by interspecies transmission and reassortment with nonhuman animal RVs.Group A rotaviruses (RVs) are a major cause of acute dehydrating diarrhea in infants and children under the age of 5 years worldwide. These infections lead to approximately 527,000 deaths each year, the vast majority occurring in developing countries (33). RVs are also responsible for gastroenteritis in many other animal species, notably mammals and birds (16, 38). RVs are members of the family Reoviridae and possess a genome consisting of 11 segments of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). The prototypic genome of a group A RV encodes six structural proteins (VP) and six nonstructural proteins (NSP) (5). The mature RV virion is a nonenveloped triple-layered icosahedral particle. The inner most protein layer is formed by the core lattice protein VP2. Attached to the interior surface of the VP2 layer near the fivefold axes are complexes of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase VP1 and the RNA capping enzyme VP3. Collectively, VP1, VP2, VP3, and the dsRNA genome form the core of the virion (5, 11). The core is surrounded by VP6, the sole constituent of the intermediate protein layer of the virion. The antigenic properties of VP6 are used in classifying RV isolates into groups. The outer protein layer of the virion is composed of trimers of the VP7 glycoprotein penetrated by spikes of the VP4 attachment protein (50). The properties of VP7 and VP4 form the basis of a dual classification system defining RV G types (glycosylated) and P types (protease sensitive), respectively. At present, 23 G genotypes and 31 P genotypes have been recognized in the literature based on sequence analyses (17, 39, 42, 45, 47). Recently, a comprehensive sequence-based classification system was established for the RVs which, together with a uniform nomenclature, allows each genome segment of the virus to be assigned to a particular genotype. In the comprehensive classification system, the acronym Gx-P[x]-Ix-Rx-Cx-Mx-Ax-Nx-Tx-Ex-Hx defines the genotypes of VP7-VP4-VP6-VP1-VP2-VP3-NSP1-NSP2-NSP3-NSP4-NSP5 encoding genome segments (17, 18).Several years ago, Nakagomi et al. provided evidence by RNA-RNA hybridization assays that RVs originating from different animal species could be resolved into genogroups based upon the existence of unique species-specific genome constellations (29-31). More recently, the concept that RVs preferentially retain certain species-related genome constellations has been further supported by whole-genome sequencing (8, 24). For human RVs, two major genogroups (Wa-like genogroup 1 and DS-1-like genogroup 2) and one minor genogroup (AU-1-like genogroup 3) have been described (8, 17, 30). Although these genogroups are generally species specific, it is believed that the human AU-1 genogroup is of feline origin (31) and that the human Wa and DS-1 genogroups share common ancestor with porcine and bovine RVs, respectively (17). Another recent study based on full genome sequence data has indicated that the rarely seen human G3P[3] RVs are of feline or canine origin (46). Two additional sequence-based studies have indicated that human RVs with P[14] specificity may have originated after interspecies transmission from rabbit RVs and RVs from hosts belonging to the order Artiodactyla (i.e., hoofed mammals with even toes, including ruminants and pigs) (19, 20). These examples indicate that interspecies transmission of entire RV gene constellations from one host species to another may contribute significantly to viral evolution. In addition to interspecies transmission, complete genome sequencing of RVs have revealed multiple examples of naturally occurring inter- and intragenogroup reassortment (17, 19, 21-23, 37, 41).The simian RV strains, notably RRV and the SA11 derivatives (e.g., SA11-Cl3 and SA11-4F), have been used extensively as models in the study of all aspects of RV biology, including characterizing genome replication and virion assembly, delineating high-resolution structures of viral proteins and the virion capsid, and describing the functions of viral proteins. Moreover, the RRV strain was used to create a set of human-simian reassortant viruses that formed the basis of the first commercially licensed RV vaccine (Rotashield; Wyeth Laboratories) (10). Serological analyses have indicated that simian RVs are probably endemic in wild nonhuman primate (NHP) species in Africa (32). However, whether or not unique genogroups or preferred genome constellation exist for the simian RVs has not been determined, because of the lack of comprehensive genetic data. Most simian RVs isolated to date (e.g., rhesus macaque viruses RRV [43] and TUCH [25] and the pig-tailed macaque virus PTRV [9]) have been recovered from monkeys kept in captivity in the United States. An important exception is the SA11 isolate, which was recovered from a vervet monkey in South Africa (15). Simian RV infections occur mostly in young monkeys, similar to human RV infections in children (32, 40).To gain further insight into the origins and properties of simian RVs, we sequenced and contrasted the genomes of PTRV, RRV, and TUCH with other RVs, including SA11-H96 (G3P[2]), the only previously fully sequenced simian RV (41). Our results reveal that these four simian RVs are of divergent ancestry and have evolved by combinations of interspecies transmission and reassortment with RVs naturally occurring in other animal species. Thus, the simian RVs do not possess a common genome constellation nor define a unique genogroup. Although frequently used as disease models, the simian RVs show limited genetic similarity with the human RVs (genogroups 1 and 2) responsible for most human disease.  相似文献   
37.
A cypovirus from the mosquito Culex restuans (named CrCPV) was isolated and its biology, morphology, and molecular characteristics were investigated. CrCPV is characterized by small (0.1-1.0 microm), irregularly shaped inclusion bodies that are multiply embedded. Laboratory studies demonstrated that divalent cations influenced transmission of CrCPV to Culex quinquefasciatus larvae; magnesium enhanced CrCPV transmission by approximately 30% while calcium inhibited transmission. CrCPV is the second cypovirus from a mosquito that has been confirmed by using molecular analysis. CrCPV has a genome composed of 10 dsRNA segments with an electropherotype similar to the recently discovered UsCPV-17 from the mosquito Uranotaenia sapphirina, but distinct from the lepidopteran cypoviruses BmCPV-1 (Bombyx mori) and TnCPV-15 (Trichoplusia ni). Nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence analysis of CrCPV segment 10 (polyhedrin) suggests that CrCPV is closely related (83% nucleotide sequence identity and 87% amino acid sequence identity) to the newly characterized UsCPV-17 but is unrelated to the 16 remaining CPV species from lepidopteran hosts. A comparison of the terminal segment regions of CrCPV and UsCPV-17, an additional method for differentiating various Cypovirus species, revealed a high level of conservation. Therefore, we propose that CrCPV is a member of the Cypovirus-17 group and designate this species as CrCPV-17.  相似文献   
38.
An entomopathogenic fungus (IndGH 96), identified as Paecilomyces reniformis, was isolated from long-horned grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) in Sulawesi, Indonesia. The phenotypic and molecular data identified the IndGH 96 as a P. reniformis. We present the first comprehensive characterization of this species using morphological features, sequencing of the ITS1-5.8s-ITS2 region, D1/D2 region of 28S of rDNA, and a portion of the tubulin gene, and laboratory bioassays. Distinguishing features include a hyphal body stage during vegetative growth and the production of distinctly curved, light-green conidia. High dosage bioassays showed that IndGH 96 was infectious to both long-horned and short-horned grasshoppers but not to the house cricket, Acheta domestica, or to the lepidopterans velvetbean caterpillar, Anticarsia gemmatalis or fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda. Phenotypic and genetic analyses suggest that IndGH 96 and other isolates of P. reniformis are more closely related to Nomuraea rileyi than to other species of Paecilomyces.  相似文献   
39.
In seasonal environments with limited time and energy resources, double‐brooded birds face trade‐offs in the timing of their two reproductive attempts and in the effort allocated to the first and the second broods. In the Barn Swallow Hirundo rustica a long care period for the first brood enhances the survival of first‐brood chicks, but also delays the start of the second brood, which in turn reduces the survival prospects of second‐brood chicks. Probably as a response to this trade‐off, double‐brooded Barn Swallows reduce the period of post‐fledging care for first‐brood fledglings. By radiotracking whole families, we investigated the determinants of this behaviour and its consequences for the survival of the first‐brood fledglings. The end of the females’ investment in post‐fledging care of the first brood was related to the beginning of egg synthesis for the second clutch. With the start of egg synthesis, females significantly reduced provisioning rates to the first‐brood fledglings to less than one‐fifth of the previous rates, while the proportion of time they spent foraging remained high. Assuming that the females’ foraging success was constant, we conclude that their energy income was allocated to egg production rather than fledgling provision. Males did not compensate for the females’ reduced feeding rates. Thus the start of egg production for the second clutch had a marked effect on the quantity of food received by first‐brood fledglings. In parallel with the changes in parental behaviour and provisioning rates, we observed a marked drop in the daily survival rate of first‐brood chicks. These results support the hypothesis that females face a strong trade‐off in the allocation of energy to subsequent broods. Energy allocation to a second clutch involves a cost in terms of reduced provisioning, and as a result the survival of first‐brood chicks is compromised. This is probably outweighed by the improved success of an early second brood.  相似文献   
40.
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