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Curtis C. Clevinger

Researcher at Kent State University

Publications -  6
Citations -  294

Curtis C. Clevinger is an academic researcher from Kent State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Maytenus & Celastraceae. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 275 citations. Previous affiliations of Curtis C. Clevinger include University of Texas at Austin.

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Phylogeny of the Celastraceae Inferred from 26S Nuclear Ribosomal DNA, Phytochrome B, rbcL, atpB, and Morphology

TL;DR: Phylogenetic relationships within Celastraceae (spindle-tree family) were inferred from nucleotide sequence characters from the 5' end of 26S nuclear ribosomal DNA, and the diversification of the fruit and aril appears to be complex, with multiple origins of most fruit andAril forms.
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Phylogeny of the Celastraceae inferred from phytochrome B gene sequence and morphology.

TL;DR: Phylogenetic relationships within Celastraceae were inferred using a simultaneous analysis of 61 morphological characters and 1123 base pairs of phytochrome B exon 1 from the nuclear genome, suggesting that the gene tree topology suggests that the primers were specific to a single locus that did not duplicate among the lineages sampled.
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Phylogeny of the Celastreae (Celastraceae) and the relationships of Catha edulis (qat) inferred from morphological characters and nuclear and plastid genes.

TL;DR: All eight genera of Celastraceae tribe Celastreae, which includes about 350 species of trees and shrubs in 15 genera, are candidates for containing cathinone- and/or cathine-related alkaloids.
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Temporal dynamics and depth variations of dissolved free amino acids and polyamines in coastal seawater determined by high-performance liquid chromatography

TL;DR: This article investigated the relative contributions of DFAAs and PAs to the total DON pool and their diurnal dynamics at different depths at the Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary (GRNMS) in the spring and fall of 2011.
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Oxygen use by nitrification in the hypolimnion and sediments of Lake Erie

TL;DR: For example, in Lake Erie, Nitrification is an oxygen consumptive process, consuming 2 -mol of oxygen per mol of ammonium oxidized Hypolimnion and sediment samples were collected during the summers of 2008-2010 in Lake Ontario to determine the total oxygen consumption and oxygen consumption from nitrification by blocking nitrification with selective inhibitors.