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Genus

About: Genus is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 68921 publications have been published within this topic receiving 590966 citations. The topic is also known as: monospecies genus & genus (zoology).


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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1959-Botany
TL;DR: The generalized short-day flowering response in this genus supports the hypothesis that Xanthium has a tropical–subtropical origin, a hypothesis supported by a review of its systematics.
Abstract: The following paper is an evaluation of the taxonomic and ecological status of the genus Xanthium L. A review of its systematics demonstrates that many so-called "species" described on material fro...

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Kimor et al. as discussed by the authors found that the N2 fixation associated with Hemiaulus is 21 to 4 5 times greater than that from the Rhizosolenia-Richelia association in the southwestern Atlantic Ocean.
Abstract: Nitrogen-fixation by cyanobacterial symbionts in the oceanic diatoms Hemiaulus mernbranaceus, H. hauckii, and H. sinensis was documented in the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean. All Herniaulus cells with diatom chlorophyll autofluorescence contained fluorescent symbionts undetectable by standard light microscopy. Average cell-specific ethylene reduction rates (2.3 to 5.3 X 10-l3 M ethylene cell h-') were 2.2 to 5.2 tlmes lower than calculated rates from RhizosoleniaRichelia blooms in the central Pacific gyre and 26 times lower than results from fichelid-containing Rhizosolenia cultures. Calculations suggest that the N2 fixation associated with Herniaulus is 21 to 4 5 times greater than that from the Rhizosolenia-Richelia association in the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. Hemiaulus is a common and ubiquitous diatom genus typically dominating or CO-dominating the diatom community after seasonal stratification in warm oligotrophic seas (Guillard & Kilham 1977). A puzzling aspect of its ecology is its persistence over large areas dominated by nanoand pico-plankton despite low ambient nutrients. Periodic blooms of this genus occur in the central Pacific gyre and have been associated with the nitrogen-fixing Rhizosolenia-Richelia symbiosis (Venrick 1974). Cyanobacterial symbionts usually identified as Richelia intracellularis Schmidt are also known in Hemiaulus; however, the identity of the symbiont is uncertain (Sundstrom 1984). The presence of a heterocyst suggests N2-fixation is likely in this symbiosis (Kimor et al. 1978, Heinbokel 1986), but NZ-fixation by Hemiaulus symbionts has never been examined. Current address: Environmental Sciences Program, University of Massachusetts, Boston Harbor Campus, Boston, Massachusetts 02125-3393, USA Although the host is frequently seen, the symbiont is rarely reported. Kimor et al. (1978) noted that up to 62 % of the Hemiaulus membranaceus Cleve collected off southern California contained symbionts, although more extensive collections offshore contained only 16.1 to 18.6 % symbiotic Hemiaulus. Heinbokel (1986) noted that the Hemiaulus symbionts were frequently visible only under epifluorescent illumination, and that ca 80 % (n = 668) of the Hemiaulus hauckii and H. m e m branaceus in samples north of Hawaii contained symbionts. He suggested that symbiont abundance, and their role in oceanic nitrogen fixation, may have been underestimated due to the need to use epifluorescence to reliably identify the symbiont. In this report, I document NZ-fixation by the Hemiaulus symbioses, and present some additional observations on the cryptic nature of the symbiont. Methods and materials. Hen~iaulus cells were isolated by micropipet from surface tows (30 cm net, 20 pm mesh) north of St. Johns, U.S. Virgin Islands (13 Feb 1991; 18O36.43' N, 65O27.49' W), and north of Haiti (15 Feb 1991; 2Oo40.15'N, 72\"54.43'W). Hemiaulus cells (130 to 200 each) were placed into 2 m1 screwcap vials equipped with a Teflon lined septum and containing 1 m1 of 0.45 pm filtered seawater. Care was taken to exclude trichomes of Trichodesmium and cells of Richelia-containing Rhizosolenia from the vials. Curved chains of H. hauckii were present, but were not examined for acetylene reduction due to the difficulty in picking the chains with the micropipet. A blank of filtered seawater was run concurrently. Vials were incubated at 26°C and 306 pE m-' S-'. Two experiments were run with each net tow collection O Inter-Research/Printed in Germany 0171-8630/91/0076/0201/$ 03.00 202 Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 76: 201-204, 1991 and consisted of one vial of H. membranaceus and one vial of combined H. hauckii and H. sinensis. Acetylene was injected (0.2 ml) into the headspace and subsequent ethylene generation was measured on a Shimadzu Mini 2 gas chromatograph. Ethylene concentrations were corrected for liquid-phase solubility, and successive time series points were corrected for the sample volume withdrawn in the previous assays. The small headspace volume (1 ml) precluded replication of time series samples. Rates of ethylene evolution were determined from the slope of the time-series data. Symbiont enumeration was performed on a Zeiss Axiomat microscope equipped with epifluorescence capabilities using freshly collected samples. Approximately 10 to 100 cells of each species (depending on its abundance) were examined from the same net tow as the acetylene reduction experiments. Results and conclusions. Ethylene evolution occurred in all experimental vials containing Hemiaulus. Rates of ethylene evolution were linear for a t least 4 h (Fig. l ) . H. membranaceus-containing vials evolved ethylene at rates of 2.3 and 3.6 x 10-l3 m01 ethylene cell-' h-', and H. hauckii-H. sinensjs evolved ethylene at 3.0 and 5.3 x 10-l3 m01 ethylene cell-' h-'. No symbionts were visible under brightfield or Nomarski illumination; however, under epifluorescence, all Hemiaulus spp. except the curved morph of H. hauckii contained 1 or 2 symbionts (Fig. 2). The curved H. hauckii (n = 30) showed no host chlorophyll autofluorescence, contained no symbionts, and appeared dead. These observations are similar to Heinbokel's (1986) observations of ca 8 0 % symbiont-containing Hemiaulus cells north of Hawaii. Although H. hauckii and H. sinensis were not examined individually for acetylene reduction, it is reasonable to assume the symbionts of both species were fixing nitrogen. Average host cell-specific rates of ethylene evolution for the

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Peter Zwick1
TL;DR: An illustrated dichotomous key to larvae of all genera of Plecoptera in the West Palaearctic region is presented and brief comments on included species are added for each genus, plus diagnostic details of selected bioindicator species.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several families are shown to be polyphyletic within some orders, especially in the Capnodiales, Chaetothyriales and Pleosporales.
Abstract: The recently generated molecular phylogeny for the kingdom Fungi, on which a new classification scheme is based, still suffers from an under representation of numerous apparently asexual genera of microfungi. In an attempt to populate the Fungal Tree of Life, fresh samples of 10 obscure genera of hyphomycetes were collected. These fungi were subsequently established in culture, and subjected to DNA sequence analysis of the ITS and LSU nrRNA genes to resolve species and generic questions related to these obscure genera. Brycekendrickomyces (Herpotrichiellaceae) is introduced as a new genus similar to, but distinct from Haplographium and Lauriomyces. Chalastospora is shown to be a genus in the Pleosporales, with two new species, C. ellipsoidea and C. obclavata, to which Alternaria malorum is added as an additional taxon under its oldest epithet, C. gossypii. Cyphellophora eugeniae is newly described in Cyphellophora (Herpotrichiellaceae), and distinguished from other taxa in the genus. Dictyosporium is placed in the Pleosporales, with one new species, D. streliziae. The genus Edenia, which was recently introduced for a sterile endophytic fungus isolated in Mexico, is shown to be a hyphomycete (Pleosporales) forming a pyronellea-like synanamorph in culture. Thedgonia is shown not to represent an anamorph of Mycosphaerella, but to belong to the Helotiales. Trochophora, however, clustered basal to the Pseudocercospora complex in the Mycosphaerellaceae, as did Verrucisporota. Vonarxia, a rather forgotten genus of hyphomycetes, is shown to belong to the Herpotrichiellaceae and Xenostigmina is confirmed as synanamorph of Mycopappus, and is shown to be allied to Seifertia in the Pleosporales. Dichotomous keys are provided for species in the various genera treated. Furthermore, several families are shown to be polyphyletic within some orders, especially in the Capnodiales, Chaetothyriales and Pleosporales.

107 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20232,790
20226,199
20212,431
20202,299
20192,015
20182,000