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rhododendron/nicotine

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4 results

Molecular characterization of atmospheric NO2-responsive germin-like proteins in azalea leaves.

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Atmospheric nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)) is an environmental oxidant that is removed through direct uptake by foliage, but plant responses to this highly reactive gas are not well understood at the molecular level. From NO(2)-exposed leaves of a woody azalea (Rhododendron mucronatum), we cloned two

Anatomy of shoots and tumors of in vitro habituated Rhododendron 'Montego' (Ericaceae) cultures with tissue proliferation.

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Tissue proliferation (TP) is characterized primarily by the formation of galls or tumors at the crown of container-grown rhododendrons that were initially propagated in vitro. In the cultivar 'Montego', TP-like symptoms are first observed in vitro as shoot clusters with small leaves and nodal

Toxicity of Leaf and Stem Extracts to Tylenchorhynchus dubius.

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Plant extracts, made by grinding 2 g of fresh tissue in 5 ml of water, were toxic to Tylenchorhynchus dubius and Hoplolaimus spp. Such extracts from leaves and stems of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) were most toxic; those from leaves of corn (Zea mays L.),

Photosynthetic Declines in Phytophthora ramorum-Infected Plants Develop Prior to Water Stress and in Response to Exogenous Application of Elicitins.

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ABSTRACT Phytophthora ramorum, causal agent of sudden oak death, is responsible for widespread oak mortality in California and Oregon, and has the potential to infect 100 or more species. Symptoms range from stem girdling and shoot blight to leaf spotting. In this study, we examined the
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