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Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic relevance of seed coat anatomy in the European heathers (Ericeae, Ericaceae)

TLDR
The anatomy of the seed coat of the European species of tribe Ericeae (Calluna, Daboecia and Erica) of the Ericaceae family was studied, and the taxonomic importance of their characters was analyzed.
Abstract
The anatomy of the seed coat of the European species of tribe Ericeae (Calluna, Daboecia and Erica) of the Ericaceae family was studied, and the taxonomic importance of their characters was analyzed. The seed coat is mostly formed by a one-cell layer with thick, pitted inner walls and thin outer walls that collapse at maturity over the inner walls. The cell junctions are either raised with anticlinal walls up to four times the height of the periclinal walls or are not raised with similar values for the height of both the anticlinal and periclinal walls. Three main cell junction types were found and described. The thickness of the inner walls is variable, but there is a large overlap among the results for different species. Calluna vulgaris is the only species with no pits, and E. multiflora has a pitted pattern on its inner walls, which is distinctive from the rest of the species. Our main results agree with the external seed morphology, and valuable new data were obtained for certain groups such as the E. cinerea-E. terminalis or the E. scoparia complex. The similarities that are found in seed coat characters are not in accordance with the classical taxonomic delimitation of infrageneric groups within Erica.

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TRY plant trait database : Enhanced coverage and open access

Jens Kattge, +754 more
TL;DR: The extent of the trait data compiled in TRY is evaluated and emerging patterns of data coverage and representativeness are analyzed to conclude that reducing data gaps and biases in the TRY database remains a key challenge and requires a coordinated approach to data mobilization and trait measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disturbance regimes, gap-demanding trees and seed mass related to tree height in warm temperate rain forests worldwide.

TL;DR: Whether in warm temperate rain forests the proportion of tree species needing canopy gaps for establishment reflects the frequency and/or extent of canopy disturbance by wind, landslide, volcanic eruptions, flood or fire is sought.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of dilute acid pretreatment conditions on the enzymatic saccharification of Erica spp. for bioethanol production

TL;DR: The addition of PEG 4000 affects the adsorption of cellulase and influences the yield of enzymatic saccharification, leading to an improvement of 13–74% depending on the pretreatment applied to biomass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testing reticulate versus coalescent origins of Erica lusitanica using a species phylogeny of the northern heathers (Ericeae, Ericaceae).

TL;DR: It is identified consistent, strongly supported conflict between gene trees inferred from ITS and chloroplast DNA sequences with regard to the position of Erica lusitanica, and its morphological similarities to E. arborea.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population genetic structure of a sandstone specialist and a generalist heath species at two levels of sandstone patchiness across the Strait of Gibraltar.

TL;DR: Average levels of within-population genetic diversity and gene flow between populations were significantly lower in Tangier than in Algeciras (low patchiness) for the sandstone specialist, whereas no differences between both sides of the Strait were detected in the edaphic generalist.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Seeds of the Dicotyledons

R. M. Polhill, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1978 - 
Book

The seeds of dicotyledons

TL;DR: The contents of this volume consist of the Figures described in volume I, and descriptions of seeds by families described in that volume.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phylogenetic Classification of Ericaceae: Molecular and Morphological Evidence

TL;DR: A new classification of Ericaceae is presented based on phylogenetic analyses of nuclear and chloroplast DNA sequence data, morphology, anatomy, and embryology, and three new taxa are described: Oligarrheneae, Richeeae, and Cosmelieae (all within Styphelioideae).
Journal ArticleDOI

A classification of the Ericaceae: subfamilies and tribes

TL;DR: The variation shown by 60 characters (morphological, anatomical, embryological, chemical and cytological) is tabulated for the whole of the Ericaceae.
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