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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Sexual plant reproduction 2 (1989), S. 11-14 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Boric acid ; Pollen ; Petunia hybrida ; Temperature discontinuities ; Protein release ; Calcium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Energy-driven protein secretion from Petunia hybrida pollen in 10% sucrose solution shaking culture does not change markedly with temperature, except over a narrow (6° C) temperature range with a midpoint at 17° C. Over this narrow temperature range, there is a very rapid increase from a low secretion plateau at low temperatures to a plateau of higher secretion at higher temperatures. Addition of calcium ions decreases the overall amount secreted, but does not change the critical temperature where the rapid rise in secretion is observed. Boric acid, when added to the culture, also decreases the overall amount released, but in a different way to calcium. While there is a sharp discontinuity at 17° C as before, the increase in protein release at this temperature is smaller than before. In addition, after a plateau at temperatures higher than 20° C, there is a second sharp increase in secreted protein over another narrow temperature range with a midpoint of 28° C, followed by another plateau at higher temperatures. The effects of calcium and boric acid are additive. The sharp discontinuities in protein release are interpreted in terms of lipid thermotropism in membranes and a boron involvement in the movement of proteins into the extending pollen tube membranes from secretory vesicles.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Theoretical and applied genetics 82 (1991), S. 169-173 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Almond orchard ; Gene flow ; Pollen ; Honeybee
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Gene flow by pollen between trees is essential for nut set in commercial almond orchards, due to the self-incompatibility of almond cultivars used. A study of gene flow has been carried out in an orchard composed of single rows of a “pollinating” cultivar between every double row of the most commercially desirable cultivar, Nonpareil. This “two-to-one” planting pattern was repeated throughout the orchard, and several “pollinating” cultivars were used in various parts of the orchard in an attempt to provide flowers for cross-pollination with Nonpareil at all stages of flowering of the latter. Using isozyme markers GPI-2, LAP-1, AAT-1, PGM-1, and PGM-2 and three newly-defined isozyme markers for almond — IDH, G6PD, and SDH — it has been shown that the gene flow resulting in nut set is quite restricted, taking place most strongly between neighboring halves of cross-compatibile pairs of trees. Even that half of a tree facing away from the “pollinating” tree has significantly less gene flow to it, while the next tree further on has few nuts set by fertilization from the “pollinating” tree under consideration. This result is surprising considering the comparatively large distances that the honeybee brought into the orchard in large numbers must travel within the orchard. To explain this apparent paradox and the observation that in most cases only a small proportion (〈20%) of flowers set nuts, it is suggested that the honeybee predominantly visits only one cultivar, flying along the row of the cultivar to do so, and that cross-pollination results from accidental or rare visits involving two or more compatible cultivars.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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