G
Gerlinde Wieshammer
Researcher at University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna
Publications - 5
Citations - 666
Gerlinde Wieshammer is an academic researcher from University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salix caprea & Hyperaccumulator. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 613 citations.
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Rhizosphere bacteria affect growth and metal uptake of heavy metal accumulating willows
TL;DR: The isolates showed resistance to high Zn concentrations, indicating an adaptation to high concentrations of mobile Zn in the rhizosphere of Salix caprea, and other mechanisms than the production of IAA, ACC deaminase and siderophores were involved in the observed plant–microbe interactions.
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Hydroponic screening for metal resistance and accumulation of cadmium and zinc in twenty clones of willows and poplars.
TL;DR: In spite of smaller Cd and Zn concentrations, the metal-tolerant clones Salix matsudana, Salix fragilis-1, and Salix purpurea-1 hold promise for phytoextraction as they produced large biomass and metal contents in leaves.
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Phytoextraction of Cd and Zn from agricultural soils by Salix ssp. and intercropping of Salix caprea and Arabidopsis halleri
Gerlinde Wieshammer,Reinhard Unterbrunner,Teresa Bañares García,Michael F. Zivkovic,Markus Puschenreiter,Walter W. Wenzel +5 more
TL;DR: While total Cd concentrations in soils were reduced by up to 20%, 1 M NH4NO3-extractable metal concentrations did not significantly decrease within 3 years, and total metals extraction rates remained reasonable, but reasonable phytoextraction rates remain to be demonstrated.
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Differentiation of metallicolous and non-metallicolous Salix caprea populations based on phenotypic characteristics and nuclear microsatellite (SSR) markers.
Markus Puschenreiter,Mine Türktaş,Peter Sommer,Gerlinde Wieshammer,Gregor Laaha,Walter W. Wenzel,Marie-Theres Hauser +6 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that natural populations are a profitable source to uncover genetic mechanisms of heavy metal accumulation and biomass production, traits that are essential for improving phytoextraction strategies.
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Plant and fertiliser effects on rhizodegradation of crude oil in two soils with different nutrient status
Reinhard Unterbrunner,Gerlinde Wieshammer,Ursula Hollender,Bernd Felderer,Michael Wieshammer-Zivkovic,Markus Puschenreiter,Walter W. Wenzel +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the phytodegradation potential of common reed (Phragmites australis) and poplar (Populus nigra × maximowiczii) in fertilised and non-fertilised control treatments of two topsoils (E, G) were mixed with crude oil.