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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic and environmental control of glycolic acid oxidase activity in ecotypic populations of typha latifolia

Samuel J. McNaughton
- 01 Jan 1969 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 1, pp 37-41
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TLDR
Glycolic acid oxidase activity at 25 C in leaf homogenates of ecotypic populations of Typha latifolia varied according to native climate of the population and current growing conditions.
Abstract
A B S T R A C T Glycolic acid oxidase activity at 25 C in leaf homogenates of ecotypic populations of Typha latifolia varied according to native climate of the population and current growing conditions. Activity of plants grown under warm/short day conditions was positively correlated with maximum summer temperature at the site of population origin. Activity of plants grown under cool/ long day conditions was negatively correlated with length of growing season at the site of origin. Populations from sites characterized by a long growing season are much less susceptible to environmental regulation of enzymic level than populations originating in short growing season sites. Enzyme activity is not a secondary reflection of differentiation at the level of chlorophyll or cofactor concentration. Enzymic differences between ecotypic populations reflect differences in control systems at the level of protein synthesis and genetic structure. SINCE the discovery of ecotypes by Turesson (1922), there has been substantial progress toward description of the morphological and phenological variation in plant species occupying

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dominance and the Niche in Ecological Systems

TL;DR: In the article "Dominance and the niche in ecological systems" by S. J. McNaughton and L. L. Wolf (p. 131, 9 Jan.), equation 4 on page 132 should read w = w = [σ( y p • p 2 ) - w = 2 / σ y ] ½ ρ y.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic variation among typha populations of the southeastern united states.

TL;DR: A systematic revision of the Ptomaphagus (Adelops) beetles of North America (Coleoptera: Leiodidae), with emphasis on caveinhabiting species, and genetic variation among vertebrate species is published.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of isozymes among typha species in the eastern united states

TL;DR: Biochemical phenotypes of four taxa of Typha from the eastern United States were determined by starch gel electrophoresis and the isozyme banding patterns of T. latifolia, T. angustifolia and T. domingensis are distinct and allow unambiguous species identification when morphological characters are inadequate or unsuitable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photosynthesis and Photorespiration in Typha latifolia.

TL;DR: Photosynthetic rates of Typha latifolia, the broad-leaved cattail, are the equivalent of rates reported in tropical grasses and other plants which assimilate carbon by the phosphopyruvate carboxylase reaction, but photosynthesis in T. Latifolia proceeds by a typical Calvin cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 14C-Assay for Photorespiration in Aquatic Plants

TL;DR: Results in laboratory cultures of Najas flexilis suggest that photorespiration occurs but is limited in comparison to terrestrial C(3) plants and is related to the rate of diffusion of CO(2) from the plant and to the carrying capacity of water for dissolved oxygen.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Copper enzymes in isolated chloroplasts. polyphenoloxidase in beta vulgaris

TL;DR: Evidence that a copper enzyme, polyphenoloxidase (otherwise known as tyrosinase or catecholase), is localized in the chloroplasts of spinach beet (chard), Beta vu?garis is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The species and the variety as ecological units

Göte Turesson
- 09 Jul 2010 - 
Book ChapterDOI

Forty Years of Genecology

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the position of genecology and attempt to distinguish the general principles that appear to have emerged and illustrates the synthesis of approaches––genetical, ecological, and taxonomical––which can be accommodated within the discipline ofgenecology.