191 results on '"Myoporaceae"'
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2. Isolation and characterization of microsatellites in the bird-pollinated, autohexaploid, Eremophila glabra ssp. glabra (R.Br. (Ostenf.)) (Myoporaceae), an Australian endemic plant
- Author
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Elliott, Carole and Elliott, Carole
- Abstract
Thirty-eight microsatellite loci were developed for the bird pollinated, autohexaploid, Eremophila glabra ssp. glabra. A genomic library was screened with dinucleotide and trinucleotide sequence repeats. Polymorphism ranged from one to 21 alleles per locus. Twenty-four loci exhibited null alleles, based on patterns of inheritance between maternal and progeny phenotypes. Cross-species amplification of nine Eremophila species was successful for most primers, indicating wide applicability across the genus. These microsatellites will be used to study the gene flow patterns of fragmented populations of E. glabra ssp. glabra.
- Published
- 2009
3. Characterization and bioactivity of essential oils from novel chemotypes of Eremophila longifolia (F. Muell) (Myoporaceae): a highly valued traditional Australian medicine.
- Author
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Sadgrove, Nicholas J., Mijajlovic, Srdjan, Tucker, David J., Watson, Kenneth, and Jones, Graham L.
- Abstract
ABSTRACT Leaf specimens of Eremophila longifolia were collected from western New South Wales, Australia. Essential oils were extracted using hydro-distillation. Characterizations using GC-MS and GC-FID were consistent with those reported in previous work, but demonstrated greater chemo-variability. Antimicrobial activity from disc diffusions and broth dilutions indicated that oils dominated by hydrocarbon monoterpenes and monoterpenols had moderate antimicrobial activity for both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis. Oils dominated by ketones demonstrated less activity but showed substantially greater yields in wet-weight leaves. Bioautography revealed the most active constituents to be related to the most abundant - karahanaenone and menthone - but active constituents also included d-limonene, borneol, sabinene, terpinolene and α-terpineol. Antifungal capacity for Trichophyton interdigitalis, rubrum and mentagrophytes was determined using an agar transplant method. Results indicated very high activity from oils rich in borneol and also for oils that were distilled from leaves accidentally burnt or partially pyrolysed during hydro-distillation. This serendipitous observation may have relevance given the traditional manner of use in smoking ceremonies. Free radical scavenging was determined using the DPPH method in methanol and antioxidant capacity with the FRAP assay. Results indicated that oils dominated by monoterpenols had moderate ability, but became very high when the oils were partially pyrolysed. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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4. Isolation and characterization of microsatellites in the bird-pollinated, autohexaploid, Eremophila glabra ssp. glabra (R.Br. (Ostenf.)) (Myoporaceae), an Australian endemic plant.
- Author
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ELLIOTT, C. P.
- Subjects
- *
MICROSATELLITE repeats , *BIRDS , *EREMOPHILA (Birds) , *TRINUCLEOTIDE repeats , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *GENE amplification - Abstract
Thirty-eight microsatellite loci were developed for the bird pollinated, autohexaploid, Eremophila glabra ssp. glabra. A genomic library was screened with dinucleotide and trinucleotide sequence repeats. Polymorphism ranged from one to 21 alleles per locus. Twenty-four loci exhibited null alleles, based on patterns of inheritance between maternal and progeny phenotypes. Cross-species amplification of nine Eremophila species was successful for most primers, indicating wide applicability across the genus. These microsatellites will be used to study the gene flow patterns of fragmented populations of E. glabra ssp. glabra. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Antimicrobial activity of some Australian plant species from the genus Eremophila.
- Author
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Chi P. Ndi, Susan J. Semple, Hans J. Griesser, and Mary D. Barton
- Subjects
EREMOPHILA (Plants) ,ANTI-infective agents ,MYOPORACEAE ,STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus - Abstract
Plant species of the genus Eremophila (Myoporaceae) are native to Australia and are known to produce a diverse range of unusual secondary compounds. The purpose of this research was to examine the antimicrobial activity of 72 Eremophila species most of which had not been the subject of any previous pharmacological testing. Organic extracts of Eremophila species were screened for antimicrobial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and yeasts of medical importance. Extracts of a number of Eremophila species showed selective activity against Gram-positive bacteria with MICs for the most active species in the range of 16 to 62 μg/ml for Streptococcus species, and 62 to 250 μg/ml for standard strains of Staphylococcus aureus. Extracts with the greatest activity against standard strains were tested against 68 clinical isolates of multi-resistant methicillin-resistant S. aureus (mMRSA). The majority of the clinical isolates were susceptible to concentrations below 62.5 μg/ml for the extracts of E. drummondii, E. linearis, E. serrulata, E. acrida, E. neglecta, E. virens and a new undescribed species affiliated with E. prolata. The extract of E. virens inhibited growth of all 68 clinical mMRSA isolates at the minimum tested concentration of 31 μg/ml. This study has shown for the first time that a number of different Eremophila species manifest selective antibacterial activity against Gram-positive organisms which are important causes of human disease. It shows that there are several Eremophila species possessing interesting antibacterial activity besides those that have published traditional use. These may yield novel antibacterial compounds with potential to be used in biomedical applications. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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6. Leaf micromorphology and leaf glandular hair ontogeny of Myoporum bontioides A. Gray.
- Author
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Das, Sauren, Sheue, Chiou-Rong, and Yang, Yuen-Po
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LEAF anatomy ,GLANDULAR hairs ,PLANT morphology ,ULTRASTRUCTURE (Biology) ,MYOPORACEAE ,EREMOPHILA (Plants) - Abstract
Myoporum bontioides A. Gray (Myoporaceae), a red list plant in Japan, is restricted to only a few East Asian countries like China, Japan and Taiwan, associated to some true mangroves. The leaf is isolateral and has a thick cuticle; stomata are anomocytic, sunken and have a beak-shaped cuticular outgrowth at the inner and outer side of the stomatal pore (ledges); profuse glandular hairs are scattered on both leaf surfaces of young leaves. The mesophyll is compact with palisade and spongy parenchyma cells in the young stage, but at maturity profuse intercellular spaces can be observed. Secretory ducts occur in young leaves. Pear-shaped glandular hairs protrude from the epidermal layer. Hair primordia are well distinct by their larger size and undergo divisions to produce two laterally placed basal cells, two stalk cells and four radiating terminal cells. The cuticle layers of the terminal cells are often separated from the cell wall to form a space, in which ions accumulate for excretion. Inner walls of the basal cells are connected with the mesophyll. Though ontogeny and structure of glandular hairs have resemblance to typical mangroves, considering leaf micromorphology, this plant is better termed as 'mangrove associate' instead of 'true mangrove'. (© 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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7. Chemical and Biological Characterization of Novel Essential Oils from Eremophila bignoniiflora (F. Muell) (Myoporaceae): A Traditional Aboriginal Australian Bush Medicine.
- Author
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Sadgrove, Nicholas John, Hitchcock, Maria, Watson, Kenneth, and Jones, Graham Lloyd
- Abstract
Essential oils were extracted by hydrodistillation from the traditional Australian medicinal plant Eremophila bignoniiflora, characterized chemically and then screened for bioactivity. Characterization and quantification were completed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and GC-flame ionization detection, respectively. Antimicrobial capacity was assessed using disc diffusion and micro-titre plate broth dilution and further characterized using thin layer chromatography followed by bioautography to assign activity to separated individual active components. Antifungal capacity was investigated using micro-titre plate broth dilution against pathogenic Trichophyton species. Free radical scavenging ability was assessed using the diphenylpicrylhydradyl reaction in methanol. The predominant components of the essential oil were fenchyl-acetate and bornyl-acetate. However, bioautography indicated antimicrobial ability to be largely linked to the less abundant, more polar constituents. Oils displayed only modest antifungal ability against pathogenic Trichophyton species associated with dermatophytosis, but moderate to high antimicrobial activity, particularly against the yeast Candida albicans and the bacteria Staphylococcus epidermidis. Essential oils exhibited relatively low free radical scavenging ability. Speculation over the role of essential oils in the traditional medicinal applications of E. bignoniiflora follows, exploring correlations between traditional use and investigated bioactivities. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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8. Trans-Bass Strait speciation and trans-Pacific dispersal in the Myoporum thrips (Thysanoptera: Phlaeothripinae).
- Author
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Cameron, Stephen L. and Mound, Laurence A.
- Subjects
THRIPS ,BIOSECURITY ,GENETIC speciation ,DISPERSAL of insects ,MYOPORACEAE ,ECOLOGY ,BEHAVIOR - Abstract
Molecular and morphological data indicate that the pest thrips damaging Myoporum species in California and Hawai'i, Klambothrips myopori Mound and Morris, originated in Tasmania, Australia. This trans-Pacific dispersal presumably resulted from the international horticultural trade in Myoporum species. The data distinguish the pest from K. adelaideae sp.n. that induces leaf deformation on M. insulare along the coast of mainland Australia that is separated by ~300 km from Tasmania by the Bass Strait. K. myopori is more damaging to its non-native hosts in California and Hawai'i than to M. insulare in Tasmania, and further research is needed to determine if this is the result of release from its natural enemies. However, in certain areas of California, some Myoporum species are invasive weeds, and K. myopori may be considered an example of an accidental but beneficial introduction in this instance because of its detrimental impact on the plant species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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9. Herbivory of Eremophila R. Br. (Myoporaceae) by Pulvinaria dodonaeae Maskell (Hemiptera: Coccidae) in the Arid Shrublands of Western Australia.
- Author
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RICHMOND, GUY
- Published
- 1995
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10. ChemInform Abstract: The Chemistry of Eremophila spp. Part 32. A New Stereochemical Class of Bicyclic Sesquiterpenes from Eremophila virgata W.V. Fitzg. (Myoporaceae).
- Author
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GHISALBERTI, E. L., JEFFERIES, P. R., SKELTON, B. W., WHITE, A. H., and WILLIAMS, R. S. F.
- Published
- 1990
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11. ChemInform Abstract: A New Class of Tricyclic Diterpenes from Eremophila georgei ( Myoporaceae).
- Author
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SYAH, Y. M., GHISALBERTI, E. L., SKELTON, B. W., and WHITE, A. H.
- Published
- 1997
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12. Relationships between seed germination requirements and ecophysiological characteristics aid the recovery of threatened native plant species in Western Australia.
- Author
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Cochrane, Anne, Kelly, Anne, Brown, Kate, and Cunneen, Simone
- Subjects
BOTANY ,PLANT species ,GERMINATION - Abstract
Summary One of the foremost technical issues addressed in reintroduction and restoration projects is the feasibility of establishing living plants. To advance the recovery process, the germination requirements of 201 threatened Western Australian seed-bearing taxa representing a range of life forms, families and ecophysiological characteristics were studied. Procedures used to stimulate germination in otherwise dormant seed involved pretreatment using thermal shock, scarification, seed coat removal, soaking in an aqueous smoke solution and/or additions of the growth hormone gibberellic acid (GA
3 ). Sixty-one taxa germinated under the basic trial conditions of light (12- h photoperiod), temperature (constant 15°C) and moisture, without additional pretreatments. These taxa were generally those with canopy-stored seeds in the families Proteaceae and Casuarinaceae, and small-seeded taxa in Myrtaceae. Taxa with soil-stored seeds required single or multiple cues to stimulate germination. Seeds in the families Fabaceae and Mimosaceae were dependent on cracking of the seed coat, mechanically through nicking of the testa or through thermal shock, as were several non-leguminous species of the Sterculiaceae and Liliaceae. Complete or partial removal of seed coats, in conjunction with GA3 enhanced germination percentage in some taxa of the Myoporaceae, Lamiaceae and Myrtaceae. Application of GA3 also enhanced germination percentage in members of the Epacridaceae. Several taxa previously stimulated by aqueous smoke solutions were equally responsive to additions of GA3 after complete seed coat removal. In general, species with seed weights greater than 10 mg germinated better under a range of conditions than those with lighter seeds. There was no difference in germinability between resprouter and seeder species, and no obvious relationship between seed weight and germination rate. In the light of previous studies these results... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
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13. Survivorship of seedlings of false sandalwood ( Myoporum platycarpum) in the chenopod rangelands grazed by sheep, kangaroos and rabbits at Whyalla, South Australia.
- Author
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Tiver, Fleur and Kiermeier, Andreas
- Subjects
MYOPORUM ,CHENOPODIACEAE ,PLATYCARPUM ,PLANTS ,SHRUBLANDS ,SEEDLINGS ,GREENHOUSE gardening ,EFFECT of grazing on plants - Abstract
Myoporum platycarpum R. Br. (Myoporaceae) is widely distributed through semi-arid New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia and Victoria, where it occurs as an upper-storey dominant or co-dominant tree over chenopod shrublands. Previous studies have concluded that the seedlings and juveniles of many shrubs and trees, including M. platycarpum, are selectively grazed by sheep and rabbits, which threatens their long-term survival in rangelands. The aim of this study was to assess the survivorship of M. platycarpum seedlings grazed by sheep and rabbits in a rangeland setting. Seedlings of M. platycarpum were raised in the greenhouse and planted in the field and individually fenced to allow or prevent access by various herbivores. Over 1 year, the frequency of grazing and size of canopy was recorded. A flexible mixed model incorporating cubic smoothing splines was used to describe the relationship between change in canopy volume over time, fixed effects (exclosure type, time, rainfall and egesta weights) and random variability among plants, replicates and sites. The mixed models showed that there were no significant differences in canopy volume over time between sheep and rabbit-proof exclosures, indicating that rabbits were not significantly affecting the seedlings, browsing only five of those available to them, of which three survived. Large herbivores (sheep and/or kangaroos) grazed un-caged seedlings, resulting in significantly smaller canopy volumes, and higher death rates (80%). Although supplementary irrigation was applied, background losses due to desiccation in caged seedlings were up to 50%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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14. Identification of the antibacterial component of an ethanolic extract of the Australian medicinal plant, Eremophila duttonii.
- Author
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Shah, Arvind, Cross, Reg F., and Palombo, Enzo A.
- Abstract
Activity-guided fractionation was used to determine the antibacterial component of an ethanolic extract of the leaves of an Australian native medicinal plant, Eremophila duttonii F. Muell. (Myoporaceae). The extract, previously shown to have activity against Gram positive bacteria, was shown to have activity against additional Gram positive bacteria, including Clostridium perfringens, C. sporogenes and Listeria monocytogenes. Thin layer chromatography (TLC) was used to separate the extract into seven coloured fractions in visible light, one of which was shown by bioautography to contain antibacterial activity. Recovery of the component from the TLC plate and testing for antibacterial activity using a plate-hole diffusion assay supported this result. The purity of the component was verified by high-performance liquid chromatography and a time-kill experiment indicated that the purified component showed identical bactericidal activity to the whole extract. TLC spray reagents indicated that the component was a sterol, terpene or sugar but not a flavonoid, while the pigmented nature suggested a carotenoid. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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15. Availability of food resources, distribution of invasive species, and conservation of a Hawaiian bird along a gradient of elevation.
- Author
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Banko, Paul C, Oboyski, Peter T, Slotterback, John W, Dougill, Steven J, Goltz, Daniel M, Johnson, Luanne, Laut, Megan E, and Murray, T. Colleen
- Subjects
HAWAIIAN honeycreepers ,ANIMAL behavior ,BIOLOGICAL invasions - Abstract
Aim We evaluated how an elevation gradient affects: (1) the availability of food required by a specialist seed-eater, Loxioides bailleui Oustalet (Drepanidinae), or palila, and hence the distribution of this endangered Hawaiian bird, and (2) the distribution of alien threats to Loxioides populations, their primary foods, and their dry-forest habitat, and hence strategies for their conservation. Location We worked throughout the subalpine forest that encircles Mauna Kea Volcano, Hawai'i Island, but we focused our studies mainly on the western slope between 2000 and 3000 m elevation, where the gradient of elevation was greatest and palila were most abundant. Methods We determined phenology and productivity patterns of the endemic dry-forest tree species, Sophora chrysophylla (Salisb.) Seem. (Fabaceae), or mamane, which provides Loxioides with most of their food, and another common endemic tree, Myoporum sandwicense A. Gray (Myoporaceae), or naio, which provides some resources, along a 786-m elevation gradient at monthly intervals for 10 years (Sophora only). We also determined the availability each month of moth larvae (Lepidoptera) for that were important in the diet of nestling and adult palila. In addition, we documented the incidence of parasitism on moth larvae by several wasp (Hymenoptera) and fly (Diptera) species, and we determined the distribution of predatory wasps and ants (Hymenoptera), which potentially threaten insect prey of birds. Percentage cover of alien grass species that pose fire threats in palila habitat and other weeds were assessed during one survey. Small mammal abundance and distribution were determined by trapping during three (rodent) or five (carnivore) surveys. Results Sophora flower and seed (pod) availability varied predictably along the elevation gradient, with about 4 months separating peaks in reproduction at high and low elevations. This, together with highly variable production of flowers and pods within elevation strata,... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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16. Phylogenomics sheds new light on the drivers behind a long‐lasting systematic riddle: the figwort family Scrophulariaceae.
- Author
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Villaverde, Tamara, Larridon, Isabel, Shah, Toral, Fowler, Rachael M., Chau, John H., Olmstead, Richard G., and Sanmartín, Isabel
- Subjects
SCROPHULARIACEAE ,PHYTOGEOGRAPHY ,NUCLEAR families ,RIDDLES ,FAMILIES - Abstract
Summary: The figwort family, Scrophulariaceae, comprises c. 2000 species whose evolutionary relationships at the tribal level have proven difficult to resolve, hindering our ability to understand their origin and diversification.We designed a specific probe kit for Scrophulariaceae, targeting 849 nuclear loci and obtaining plastid regions as by‐products. We sampled c. 87% of the genera described in the family and use the nuclear dataset to estimate evolutionary relationships, timing of diversification, and biogeographic patterns.Ten tribes, including two new tribes, Androyeae and Camptolomeae, are supported, and the phylogenetic positions of Androya, Camptoloma, and Phygelius are unveiled. Our study reveals a major diversification at c. 60 million yr ago in some Gondwanan landmasses, where two different lineages diversified, one of which gave rise to nearly 81% of extant species. A Southern African origin is estimated for most modern‐day tribes, with two exceptions, the American Leucophylleae, and the mainly Australian Myoporeae. The rapid mid‐Eocene diversification is aligned with geographic expansion within southern Africa in most tribes, followed by range expansion to tropical Africa and multiple dispersals out of Africa.Our robust phylogeny provides a framework for future studies aimed at understanding the role of macroevolutionary patterns and processes that generated Scrophulariaceae diversity. This article is part of the Special Collection 'Global plant diversity and distribution'. See https://www.newphytologist.org/global-plant-diversity for more details. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Germination and seedling growth of Calluna vulgaris is sensitive to regional climate, heathland succession, and drought.
- Author
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Birkeli, Kristine, Gya, Ragnhild, Haugum, Siri Vatsø, Velle, Liv Guri, and Vandvik, Vigdis
- Subjects
DROUGHTS ,HEATHER ,FACTORIAL experiment designs ,GERMINATION ,LEAF area ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
The coastal heathlands of Northwest Europe are highly valued cultural landscapes, that are critically endangered due to land use and climatic changes, such as increased frequency and severity of drought events. Our study is the first to assess how the germination and early seedling growth of Calluna vulgaris respond to drought. In a factorial design field experiment, we exposed maternal plants to three in‐situ drought treatments (control, 60%, 90% roof coverage), across three successional stages after fire (pioneer, building, mature), and two regions (60°N, 65°N). Seeds from 540 plants within the experiment were, weighed, and exposed to five water potentials, ranging from −0.25 to −1.7 MPa, in a growth chamber experiment. We recorded germination (percentage, rate), seedling growth (above‐ vs. belowground allocation), and seedling functional traits (specific leaf area [SLA], specific root length [SRL]). Overall variation in germination between regions, successional stages, and maternal drought treatments was largely mediated by variation in seed mass. Plants from the northernmost region had higher seed mass and germination percentages. This is indicative of higher investment in seeds, likely linked to the populations' absence of vegetative root sprouting. Seeds from the mature successional stage germinated to lower final percentages than those from earlier successional stages, especially when the maternal plants had been exposed to drought (60% and 90% roof coverage). Exposure to reduced water availability decreased germination percentage and increased the time to 50% germination. Seedlings fully developed in the range −0.25 to −0.7 MPa, with increased root:shoot and lower SRL during reduced water availability, suggesting a resource‐conservative response to drought during the early stages of development. Our results thus suggest a sensitivity to drought during the germination and seedling life‐history stages that may reduce Calluna's ability to re‐establish from seeds as the incidence and severity of droughts are projected to increase under future climates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Monitoring the birds and the bees: Environmental DNA metabarcoding of flowers detects plant–animal interactions.
- Author
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Newton, Joshua P., Bateman, Philip W., Heydenrych, Matthew J., Kestel, Joshua H., Dixon, Kingsley W., Prendergast, Kit S., White, Nicole E., and Nevill, Paul
- Published
- 2023
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19. Description and systematic affinity of flower and seed fossils of Erica sect. Chlorocodon (Ericaceae) from the early Pleistocene of Madeira Island, Portugal.
- Author
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Góis‐Marques, Carlos A., de Nascimento, Lea, Fernández‐Palacios, José María, Madeira, José, and de Sequeira, Miguel Menezes
- Subjects
FLOWER seeds ,FOSSILS ,PLEISTOCENE Epoch ,ERICACEAE ,TEMPERATE forests ,EDIACARAN fossils - Abstract
Palaearctic Erica sect. Chlorocodon, known as the wind‐pollinated besom heaths (WPBH), includes the Macaronesian E. azorica, E. platycodon subsp. platycodon and E. platycodon subsp. maderincola together with the Mediterranean and North African E. scoparia. Despite the broad extant distribution, the mainland fossil record of this section is scarce and poorly preserved and dated, and Macaronesian fossils were so far unknown. Here we discuss the systematic affinities of the first fossils of a WPBH found in Macaronesia, within a 1.3 Ma (Pleistocene, Calabrian stage) Madeira Island fossiliferous deposit. One flower and dissociated seed fossils were found in the same sediment layer, being preserved as coalified compressions with cuticular preservation. Both the flower and seed fossils present unique WPBH characters. The flower fossil is characterised by an exserted, peltate and discoid stigma – an unequivocal adaptation to anemophily, unique within Palaearctic Erica taxa. The seed fossils are of small size, presenting a testa with channelled anticlinal cell‐walls, a characteristic only found in the extant Macaronesian WPBH. Morphological, anatomical, and biometric comparisons of the fossils to extant flowers and seeds suggest that the fossils are related to the Palaearctic E. sect. Chlorocodon, being morphologically close to E. azorica. Here we assign them to E. aff. azorica. These findings suggest a colonisation to Madeira Island prior to 1.3 Ma, corresponding to the oldest and unambiguous WPBH fossils, at least 0.90–1.2 Ma older than the oldest known record. The fossil flower also indicates the presence of anemophilous traits since at least the early Pleistocene. Finally, the presence of a WPBH could suggest the same ecological role in seral communities, important to the establishment of the Madeiran temperate stink‐laurel forest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. The anti‐Trypanosoma activities of medicinal plants: A systematic review of the literature.
- Author
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Nekoei, Shahin, Khamesipour, Faham, Habtemariam, Solomon, de Souza, Wanderley, Mohammadi Pour, Pardis, and Hosseini, Seyed Reza
- Subjects
MEDICINAL plants ,TRYPANOSOMIASIS ,PHENYLPROPANOIDS ,CULTIVARS - Abstract
Background: The existing drug treatments for trypanosomiases are limited and suffer from shortcomings due to their toxicity and the emergence of resistant parasites. Developing anti‐trypanosomal compounds based on natural products is a promising way of fighting trypanosomiases. Objectives: This study aims to identify through scientific review a large variety of medicinal plants (anti‐trypanosomal) used worldwide and scientifically shown to display anti‐trypanosomal effects. Methods: To collect data, the anti‐trypanosomal activities of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, South America, North America, Europe and Oceania medicinal plants have been checked by considering the published paper. Results: Based on collected data, 77 natural molecules were reported in the literature. Of which 59 were from the African region, 11 from Asia, 3 from Europe and 4 from Latin America. These active components belong to alkaloids, triterpenoids, lactone, quinoids, flavonoids, iridoids, lignans, steroids, lipids, oxygenated heterocycles, benzenoids, proteins, coumarins, phenylpropanoids and peptides. We also specified the prosperous plants with unique anti‐trypanosomal activities. Conclusions: However, there is a need for further studies on the ability of the isolated compounds to ameliorate the trypanosome‐induced pathological alterations and also the elucidation of their modes of actions and activities against other trypanosome species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. Biodiscoveries within the Australian plant genus Eremophila based on international and interdisciplinary collaboration: results and perspectives on outstanding ethical dilemmas.
- Author
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Semple, Susan J., Staerk, Dan, Buirchell, Bevan J., Fowler, Rachael M., Gericke, Oliver, Kjaerulff, Louise, Zhao, Yong, Pedersen, Hans Albert, Petersen, Malene J., Rasmussen, Line Fentz, Bredahl, Emilie Kold, Pedersen, Gustav Blichfeldt, McNair, Laura Mikél, Ndi, Chi P., Hansen, Nikolaj Lervad, Heskes, Allison M., Bayly, Michael J., Loland, Claus J., Heinz, Nanna, and Møller, Birger Lindberg
- Subjects
ETHICAL problems ,COLLECTION & preservation of plant specimens ,DNA sequencing ,DITERPENES ,NATURAL products - Abstract
SUMMARY: In a cross‐continental research initiative, including researchers working in Australia and Denmark, and based on joint external funding by a 3‐year grant from the Novo Nordisk Foundation, we have used DNA sequencing, extensive chemical profiling and molecular networking analyses across the entire Eremophila genus to provide new knowledge on the presence of natural products and their bioactivities using polypharmocological screens. Sesquiterpenoids, diterpenoids and dimers of branched‐chain fatty acids with previously unknown chemical structures were identified. The collection of plant material from the Eremophila genus was carried out according to a 'bioprospecting agreement' with the Government of Western Australia. We recognize that several Eremophila species hold immense cultural significance to Australia's First Peoples. In spite of our best intentions to ensure that new knowledge gained about the genus Eremophila and any potential future benefits are shared in an equitable manner, in accordance with the Nagoya Protocol, we encounter serious dilemmas and potential conflicts in making benefit sharing with Australia's First Peoples a reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. A snapshot of progenitor–derivative speciation in Iberodes (Boraginaceae).
- Author
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Otero, Ana, Vargas, Pablo, Fernández‐Mazuecos, Mario, Jiménez‐Mejías, Pedro, Valcárcel, Virginia, Villa‐Machío, Irene, and Hipp, Andrew L.
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,VICARIANCE ,BORAGINACEAE ,SYMPATRIC speciation ,GENE flow ,GENETIC speciation - Abstract
Traditional classification of speciation modes has focused on physical barriers to gene flow. Allopatric speciation with complete reproductive isolation is viewed as the most common mechanism of speciation. Parapatry and sympatry, by contrast, entail speciation in the face of ongoing gene flow, making them more difficult to detect. The genus Iberodes (Boraginaceae, NW Europe) comprises five species with contrasting morphological traits, habitats and species distributions. Based on the predominance of narrow and geographically distant endemic species, we hypothesized that geographical barriers were responsible for most speciation events in Iberodes. We undertook an integrative study including: (i) phylogenomics through restriction‐site‐associated DNA sequencing (RAD‐seq), (ii) genetic structure analyses, (iii) demographic modelling, (iv) morphometrics, and (v) climatic niche modelling and niche overlap analysis. The results revealed a history of recurrent progenitor–derivative speciation manifested by a paraphyletic pattern of nested species differentiation. Budding speciation mediated by ecological differentiation is suggested for the coastal lineage, deriving from the inland widespread Iberodes linifolia during the Late Pliocene. Meanwhile, geographical isolation followed by niche shifts are suggested for the more recent differentiation of the coastland taxa. Our work provides a model for distinguishing speciation via ecological differentiation of peripheral, narrowly endemic I. kuzinskyanae and I. littoralis from a widespread extant ancestor, I. linifolia. Ultimately, our results illustrate a case of Pliocene speciation in the probable absence of geographical barriers and get away from the traditional cladistic perspective of speciation as producing two species from an extinct ancestor, thus reminding us that phylogenetic trees tell only part of the story. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Inhibitory activity against plant pathogenic fungi of extracts from Myoporum bontioides A. Gray and indentification of active ingredients.
- Author
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Deng Yecheng, Yang Zhen, Yu Yanzhen, and Bi Xiulian
- Subjects
ANTIFUNGAL agents ,PATHOGENIC fungi ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,EXTRACTS ,PLANT extracts ,MYOPORUM ,METHANOL ,PLANT stems ,LEAVES - Abstract
The article presents a study which examines the inhibitory activity against plant pathogenic fungi of extracts from Myoporum bontioides A. Gray and indentification of active ingredients. The inhibitory activities if methanol extracts from M. bontioides against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. niveum, Pestalotia mangiferae. Thielaviopsis paradoxa, Collectotrichum musae, Alternaria alternata, Mycosphaerella sentina and Sphaceloma fawcettii were evaluated. According to the result, the extracts from stems and leaves of M. bontioides exhibited inhibitory activity against the seven fungi.
- Published
- 2008
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- View/download PDF
24. Two new furanosesquiterpenes from Myoporum crassifolium from New Caledonia.
- Author
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Menut, Chantal, Cabalion, Pierre, Hnawia, Edouard, Agnaniet, Huguette, Waikedre, Jean, and Fruchier, Alain
- Abstract
Two new furanoid sesquiterpenoid ketones were isolated from the wood essential oil of Myoporum crassifolium from New Caledonia and characterized by their
1 H- and13 C-NMR spectra. Besides these components, which represent about 12% of the oil, the sample was characterized by a high content (65.1%) of (−)-epi- α-bisabolol [or (−)-anymol] and its oxide derivatives. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
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- View/download PDF
25. Antibacterial activity of Australian plant extracts against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE).
- Author
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Palombo, Enzo A. and Semple, Susan J.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Biological Flora of the British Isles: Salvia pratensis.
- Author
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Moughan, Joseph, McGinn, Kevin J., Jones, Laura, Rich, Tim C. G., Waters, Elliot, and de Vere, Natasha
- Subjects
BOTANY ,POLLINATORS ,POLLINATION by insects ,CALCAREOUS soils ,SALVIA ,FLOWERING of plants - Abstract
This account presents information on all aspects of the biology of Salvia pratensis L. (Meadow Clary) that are relevant to understanding its ecological characteristics and behaviour. The main topics are presented within the standard framework of the Biological Flora of the British Isles: distribution, habitat, communities, responses to biotic factors, responses to environment, structure and physiology, phenology, floral and seed characters, herbivores and disease, history and conservation.Salvia pratensis is an erect, rosette‐forming, perennial herb with a broad native distribution covering much of Europe—from the British Isles, Spain and Morocco in the west, across Europe into Asia, as far east as the Urals. In the British Isles, the species is nationally scarce, confined to a few south‐ to west‐facing sites with calcareous soils in Southern England and one site in Wales. It is predominately found in unimproved pasture, hay meadows and grassy verges, but can occur on the fringes of scrub or woodland. Although the species is abundant in central Europe, changes to land management since the mid‐20th century have resulted in fragmented and threatened populations in several European countries. It is cultivated as an ornamental, as is S. × sylvestris, the hybrid with S. nemorosa.Populations are typically gynodioecious, having both female (male‐sterile) and hermaphrodite individuals at variable proportions. The species has a mixed mating system and is self‐compatible via insect pollination, but predominantly outcrosses. Honeybees and bumblebees are abundant pollinators, but a diverse range of bee species and other insect species visit S. pratensis flowers. Inbreeding depression has been documented, presenting a conservation concern for small, fragmented populations.The species is the focus of conservation efforts and has been reintroduced to sites where it had become locally extinct in Britain. To sustain favourable habitat, site management should maintain low soil nutrient levels, and prevent scrub encroachment and the dominance of coarse grasses. The removal of sward by hay cutting or grazing after plants have flowered and set seed is advised, in addition to maintaining a degree of disturbance to provide bare patches of soil for seedling recruitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Navigating through chemical space and evolutionary time across the Australian continent in plant genus Eremophila.
- Author
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Gericke, Oliver, Fowler, Rachael M., Heskes, Allison M., Bayly, Michael J., Semple, Susan J., Ndi, Chi P., Stærk, Dan, Løland, Claus J., Murphy, Daniel J., Buirchell, Bevan J., and Møller, Birger Lindberg
- Subjects
POLLINATION ,METABOLOMICS ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,LEAF morphology ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,BIOLOGICAL systems ,LEAF physiology ,TRADITIONAL medicine - Abstract
SUMMARY: Eremophila is the largest genus in the plant tribe Myoporeae (Scrophulariaceae) and exhibits incredible morphological diversity across the Australian continent. The Australian Aboriginal Peoples recognize many Eremophila species as important sources of traditional medicine, the most frequently used plant parts being the leaves. Recent phylogenetic studies have revealed complex evolutionary relationships between Eremophila and related genera in the tribe. Unique and structurally diverse metabolites, particularly diterpenoids, are also a feature of plants in this group. To assess the full dimension of the chemical space of the tribe Myoporeae, we investigated the metabolite diversity in a chemo‐evolutionary framework applying a combination of molecular phylogenetic and state‐of‐the‐art computational metabolomics tools to build a dataset involving leaf samples from a total of 291 specimens of Eremophila and allied genera. The chemo‐evolutionary relationships are expounded into a systematic context by integration of information about leaf morphology (resin and hairiness), environmental factors (pollination and geographical distribution), and medicinal properties (traditional medicinal uses and antibacterial studies), augmenting our understanding of complex interactions in biological systems. Significance Statement: The chemical space of the Australian genus Eremophila, used in traditional medicine by Indigenous Australians, is explored using a novel large‐scale computational metabolomics‐based molecular network approach combined with phylogenetic analyses to provide a detailed overview of the complex metabolite diversity and chemo‐evolutionary relationships present. Integration of information about leaf morphology (resin and hairiness), environmental factors (pollination and biogeographical distribution), and medicinal properties (Aboriginal uses and antibacterial studies) brings the chemical information into a systematic context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
28. SEASONAL HISTORY, HOSTS AND NATURAL ENEMIES OF MONISTRIA DISCREPANS (WALKER) (ORTHOPTERA: PYRGOMORPHIDAE) IN SOUTH-WEST QUEENSLAND.
- Author
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Allsopp, P. G.
- Published
- 1978
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- View/download PDF
29. Molecular phylogeny of tribe Myoporeae (Scrophulariaceae) using nuclear ribosomal DNA: Generic relationships and evidence for major clades.
- Author
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Fowler, Rachael M., Murphy, Daniel J., McLay, Todd G.B., Buirchell, Bevan J., Chinnock, Robert J., and Bayly, Michael J.
- Subjects
RIBOSOMAL DNA ,NUCLEAR DNA ,MOLECULAR phylogeny ,SCROPHULARIACEAE ,TRIBES ,ARID regions - Abstract
Eremophila is a significant component of the Australian arid zone flora, but its generic limits and relationships to the other six genera of tribe Myoporeae remain largely untested. In this study, we assembled a dataset of the nuclear ribosomal cistron (ca. 6000 bases including ITS1+2, ETS regions, non‐transcribed spacer and associated genes) for all genera in tribe Myoporeae with a particular focus on Eremophila (205 of total 233 formally described species of Eremophila, and 28 species of related genera sampled). Phylogenetic analyses were performed using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference methods. These resolved four major clades that were well supported. Eremophila was paraphyletic, with all other genera of tribe Myoporeae nested in it. We discuss two taxonomic options for addressing the paraphyly of Eremophila. As an immediate step, we propose that the small genera, Calamphoreus and Diocirea, should be placed in synonymy under Eremophila, and herein make the necessary new nomenclatural combinations. Additional phylogenetic data are needed, ideally in the form of multiple independent nuclear loci, to clarify the positions of Bontia, Glycocystis and Myoporum relative to Eremophila before further taxonomic changes are proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
30. Rapid authentication of agarwood by using liquid extraction surface analysis mass spectrometry (LESA‐MS).
- Author
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Xie, Yanqiao, Li, Linnan, Chen, Yilin, Yang, Yuangui, Xu, Hong, Wang, Zhengtao, and Yang, Li
- Abstract
Introduction: Agarwood is a highly valuable fragrant resinous wood which is widely used as traditional Chinese medicines, perfumes, incense and decorations. Due to its high economic value and excessive demand, this leads to a rising price and proliferation of fake commodities. Thus, strict authenticity identification and quality evaluation of agarwood are of great significance. Objective: To establish a simple, rapid and non‐destructive technique for identifying the authenticity of agarwood. Methods: Liquid extraction surface analysis mass spectrometry (LESA‐MS) was firstly proposed to identify the authenticity of 62 agarwood samples without sample preparation. In addition, multivariate statistical models and thin‐layer chromatography (TLC) method were used to analyse and verify the results of LESA‐MS. Results: Representative compounds of agarwood were detected by LESA‐MS. A characteristic 2‐(2‐phenylethyl)chromone compound (m/z 319.1) was treated as a key chemical marker to identify agarwood and its counterfeits rapidly. Several other chromones ions were identified and used as additional evidence for authentic samples. A total of 62 samples were visually discriminated as two groups by principal component analysis (PCA) and orthogonal projection to latent structures discriminant analysis (OPLS‐DA), and the specific characteristic marker was highlighted. Moreover, the qualitative results of the conventional TLC method were in agreement with the LESA‐MS approach. Conclusion: The proposed LESA‐MS method was successfully applied in the direct qualitative analysis of agarwood from different sources. This study indicated great feasibility and practicality of LESA‐MS in the rapid identification of agarwood, and provided a non‐destructive and meaningful preliminary screening tool for the agarwood industry. Agarwood is a highly valuable fragrant resinous wood and has been listed as endangered species in recent years. A new LESA‐MS method was established to rapidly identify authenticity of agarwood without sample preparation, some 2‐(2‐phenylethyl)chromone derivatives were detected and the characteristic 5,6,7,8‐tetrahydro‐2‐(2‐phenylethyl)chromone (m/z 319.1) was the most important compound to differentiate authentic agarwood from counterfeits. The developed LESA‐MS approach was demonstrated to be a simple, automated and non‐destructive technique for direct qualitative determination of agarwood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
31. The biosynthesis of the anti‐microbial diterpenoid leubethanol in Leucophyllum frutescens proceeds via an all‐cis prenyl intermediate.
- Author
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Miller, Garret P., Bhat, Wajid Waheed, Lanier, Emily R., Johnson, Sean R., Mathieu, Davis T., and Hamberger, Björn
- Subjects
BIOSYNTHESIS ,PLANT products ,CYTOCHROME P-450 ,CHEMICAL synthesis ,DITERPENES ,NATURAL products - Abstract
SUMMARY: Serrulatane diterpenoids are natural products found in plants from a subset of genera within the figwort family (Scrophulariaceae). Many of these compounds have been characterized as having anti‐microbial properties and share a common diterpene backbone. One example, leubethanol from Texas sage (Leucophyllum frutescens) has demonstrated activity against multi‐drug‐resistant tuberculosis. Leubethanol is the only serrulatane diterpenoid identified from this genus; however, a range of such compounds have been found throughout the closely related Eremophila genus. Despite their potential therapeutic relevance, the biosynthesis of serrulatane diterpenoids has not been previously reported. Here we leverage the simple product profile and high accumulation of leubethanol in the roots of L. frutescens and compare tissue‐specific transcriptomes with existing data from Eremophila serrulata to decipher the biosynthesis of leubethanol. A short‐chain cis‐prenyl transferase (LfCPT1) first produces the rare diterpene precursor nerylneryl diphosphate, which is cyclized by an unusual plastidial terpene synthase (LfTPS1) into the characteristic serrulatane diterpene backbone. Final conversion to leubethanol is catalyzed by a cytochrome P450 (CYP71D616) of the CYP71 clan. This pathway documents the presence of a short‐chain cis‐prenyl diphosphate synthase, previously only found in Solanaceae, which is likely involved in the biosynthesis of other known diterpene backbones in Eremophila. LfTPS1 represents neofunctionalization of a compartment‐switching terpene synthase accepting a novel substrate in the plastid. Biosynthetic access to leubethanol will enable pathway discovery to more complex serrulatane diterpenoids which share this common starting structure and provide a platform for the production and diversification of this class of promising anti‐microbial therapeutics in heterologous systems. Significance Statement: Serrulatane diterpenoids are natural products known for their anti‐microbial activities, and access is currently limited to chemical synthesis or extraction from natural sources. Here we report the full biosynthetic pathway to the serrulatane diterpenoid leubethanol from Leucophyllum frutescens, which is active against multi‐drug‐resistant tuberculosis. The pathway involves an uncommon diterpene precursor, and further steps yield the archetypal diterpenoid structure shared across nearly all serrulatanes, which may enable development of a new class of anti‐microbial therapeutics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Lipophilic 9,10‐Dehydrofukinone Action on Pathogenic and Non‐Pathogenic Bacterial Biofilms. Why Is This Main Volatile Metabolite in Senecio?
- Author
-
Verni, María C., Garay, José A., Mendoza, Lucía, Bardón, Alicia, Borkosky, Susana, Arena, Mario E., and Cartagena, Elena
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Recognising Indigenous customary law of totemic plant species: Challenges and pathways.
- Author
-
Robinson, Daniel F. and Raven, Margaret
- Subjects
CUSTOMARY law ,TRADITIONAL knowledge ,PLANTS ,ANIMALS ,TOTEMS - Abstract
The Nagoya Protocol encourages academics, government bureaucrats, and traditional owners to look at how customary law might be utilised within state law frameworks to improve and resolve "access and benefit‐sharing" processes. This paper examines and reviews legal, anthropological, and historical texts relating to biodiversity and associated knowledge to explore Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island peoples' customary laws and governance. Understanding the broader place of Indigenous customs, laws, and belief, as sitting on the oral–written continuum and expressed through the Dreaming, provides the foundation for understanding Indigenous customary laws as they relate to plants and animals. The paper highlights, through examples, that plants and animals may be regarded as totemic species, that are rights controlled and/or relational to specific individuals or families. Looking towards native title, community protocols and a "competent cultural authority," the paper seeks out tools which might expand the regulatory toolbox and help connect Indigenous law and state law relating to Indigenous knowledge and totemic species. Understanding the broader place of Indigenous customs, laws and belief, as sitting on the oral‐written continuum and expressed through the Dreaming, provides the foundation for understanding Indigenous customary laws as they relate to plants and animals. The paper highlights, through examples, that plants and animals may be regarded as totemic species, that are rights‐controlled and/or relational to specific individuals or families. Looking towards native title, community protocols and a "competent cultural authority," the paper seeks out tools which might expand the regulatory toolbox and help connect Indigenous law and state law relating to Indigenous knowledge and totemic species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Chemical compositions and bioefficacy against Spodoptera litura of essential oil and ethyl acetate fraction from Myoporum bontioides leaves.
- Author
-
Minh, Tran Thi, Ngoan, Tran Thi, Thuong, Nguyen Thi Minh, Toan, Ho Khanh, Truong, Nguyen Xuan, Huong, Tran Thu, Ly, Giang Thi Phuong, Ai, Doan Thi Thuy, and Khanh, Nguyen Duc
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Plant‐derived medicinal entomochemicals: an integrated approach to biodiscovery in Australia.
- Author
-
Faast, Renate and Weinstein, Philip
- Subjects
INSECT ecology ,CHEMICAL ecology ,LEPIDOPTERA ,BOTANICAL chemistry ,TRADITIONAL medicine ,CATERPILLARS ,BIOACTIVE compounds - Abstract
Despite an ancient and well‐established use of insects in traditional medicine, our understanding of their bioactive compounds (entomochemicals) lags far behind that of medicinal plants (phytochemicals). In this review, we focus particularly on insect–plant interactions, to examine the possible dependence of the medicinal properties of insects on phytochemicals that they bioaccumulate or chemically modify. We suggest that a cross‐disciplinary approach including ethnobiology, insect ecology and phytochemistry can provide new opportunities in bioprospecting. Such opportunities lie not only in identifying medicinal entomochemicals that are based on phytochemical accumulation or modification but also on using insects as bioindicators of what plants may contain novel phytochemicals that have not yet been studied. Firstly, evidence is drawn from the international literature on the medicinal use of insects, many of which have pharmacological properties now well established in the Western scientific paradigm. Secondly, we highlight the value of a cross‐disciplinary approach to bioprospecting in an Australian context, where records of traditional Aboriginal use of medicinal insects are scant. Particularly, we explore the Aboriginal use of Lepidoptera as a case study, including witchetty grubs, hawkmoths and processionary caterpillars. We conclude that opportunities remain to connect traditional, ecological and chemical knowledge for biodiscovery, in collaboration with Indigenous communities. Ultimately, the success of any such endeavour is dependent on the successful conservation management of insect biodiversity into the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. (2758) Proposal to conserve the name Eremophila against Bontia, Myoporum and Andreusia (Scrophulariaceae: Myoporeae).
- Author
-
Bayly, Michael J., Fowler, Rachael M., Buirchell, Bevan J., Chinnock, Robert J., and Murphy, Daniel J.
- Subjects
SCROPHULARIACEAE ,CHLOROPLAST DNA ,BOTANICAL chemistry ,NUCLEAR DNA - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Relationships between plant drought response, traits, and climate of origin for green roof plant selection.
- Author
-
Du, Pengzhen, Arndt, Stefan K., and Farrell, Claire
- Subjects
EVAPOTRANSPIRATION ,BIOMASS ,BIODIVERSITY ,DROUGHTS ,RAINFALL - Abstract
Abstract: The ideal species for green or vegetated roofs should have high water use after rainfall to maximize stormwater retention but also survive periods with low water availability in dry substrates. Shrubs have great potential for green roofs because they have higher rates of water use, and many species are also drought tolerant. However, not all shrub species will be suitable and there may be a trade‐off between water use and drought tolerance. We conducted a glasshouse experiment to determine the possible trade‐offs between shrub water use for stormwater management and their response to drought conditions. We selected 20 shrubs from a wide range of climates of origin, represented by heat moisture index (HMI) and mean annual precipitation (MAP). Under well‐watered (WW) and water‐deficit (WD) conditions, we assessed morphological responses to water availability; evapotranspiration rate (ET) and midday water potential (Ψ
MD ) were used to evaluate species water use and drought response. In response to WD, all 20 shrubs adjusted their morphology and physiology. However, there were no species that simultaneously achieved high rates of water use (high ET) under WW and high drought tolerance (low ΨMD ) under WD conditions. Although some species which had high water use under WW conditions could avoid drought stress (high ΨMD ). Water use was strongly related to plant biomass, total leaf area, and leaf traits (specific leaf area [SLA] and leaf area ratio [LAR]). Conversely, drought response (ΨMD ) was not related to morphological traits. Species’ climate of origin was not related to drought response or water use. Drought‐avoiding shrubs (high ΨMD ) could optimize rainfall reduction on green roofs. Water use was related to biomass, leaf area, and leaf traits; thus, these traits could be used to assist the selection of shrubs for stormwater mitigation on green roofs. The natural distribution of species was not related to their water use or drought response, which suggests that shrubs from less arid climates may be suitable for use on green roofs. Selecting species based on traits and not climate of origin could both improve green roof performance and biodiversity outcomes by expanding the current plant palette. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Toxicological Aspects of the Essential Oil from Cinnamodendron dinisii.
- Author
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Andrade, Milene A., Cardoso, Maria das Graças, Preté, Paulo S. C., Soares, Maurílio J., de Azeredo, Camila M. O., Trento, Marcus V. C., Braga, Mariana A., and Marcussi, Silvana
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Effects of habitat loss on the plant-flower visitor network structure of a dune community.
- Author
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Traveset, Anna, Castro‐Urgal, Rocío, Rotllàn‐Puig, Xavier, and Lázaro, Amparo
- Subjects
POLLINATION ,BIOTIC communities ,POLLINATORS ,MUTUALISM (Biology) ,FLOWERS - Abstract
Pollination is a valuable ecosystem service, and plant-pollinator interactions in particular are known to play a crucial role in conservation and ecosystem functioning. These mutualisms, like other ecological interactions, are currently threatened by different drivers of global change, mainly habitat loss, fragmentation, or modification of its quality. Most studies so far have focused on the impact of such disturbances on particular species interactions and we thus need more empirical evidence on the responses at a community-level. Here we evaluated how habitat loss influenced the pattern of interactions between plants and their flower visitors in a coastal dune marshland community. Using data from four years (2008-2011), we assessed the effect of a large disturbance in the area (occurring in 2010) that represented the loss of more than 50% of the vegetation cover. We found a considerable decrease in species richness and abundance of flower visitors, which resulted in a lower number of interactions after the disturbance. Not all functional groups, however, responded similarly. Contrary to the expected from previous findings, bees and wasps were less negatively influenced than beetles, flies and ants, possibly due to their higher movement capacity. Species interactions in the community were more specialized after habitat loss, resulting in a lower level of network nestedness and a higher modularity. At a species level, the number of flower visitors per plant decreased after the disturbance, and plants were visited by less abundant flower visitors. Our findings lead us to predict that the overall plant-flower visitor network became less robust and resilient to future perturbations. However, the fact that each functional group responds distinctly to disturbances makes it more difficult to foresee the final consequences on community composition and ecosystem functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Identification of a Triterpenoid as a Novel PPARγ Activator Derived from Formosan Plants.
- Author
-
Weng, Jing ‐ Ru, Bai, Li ‐ Yuan, and Lin, Wei ‐ Yu
- Abstract
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ), one of the transcription factors that regulate lipid metabolism and energy use in tumor cells, is a viable target for cancer therapy. In our search for potential PPARγ activator, extracts from five Formosan plants were tested. Among them, Momordica charantia L. showed the highest ability to activate PPARγ, which led us to identify its potential constituents. Among the seven compounds isolated from M. charantia, a triterpenoid, 5β,19-epoxy-19-methoxycucurbita-6,23-dien-3β,25-diol (compound 1), was identified as a PPARγ activator with an IC50 of 10 μM in breast cancer MCF-7 cells. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that compound 1 induced G1 cell cycle arrest which might be attributable to the modulation of phosphorylation and expression of numerous key signaling effectors, including cyclin D1, CDK6, and p53. Notably, compound 1 downregulated the expression of histone deacetylase 1, leading to increased histone H3 acetylation. Taken together, these findings suggest that compound 1 may have therapeutic applications in cancer treatment through PPARγ activation. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Growth races in The Mallee: Height growth in woody plants examined with a trait-based model.
- Author
-
Thomas, Freya M. and Vesk, Peter A.
- Subjects
WOODY plants ,PLANT growth ,ECOSYSTEM dynamics ,VEGETATION management ,LEAF area - Abstract
Plant height and growth are fundamental to the understanding of species ecological strategies, to the description and prediction of ecosystem dynamics and to vegetation management, such as plant species' fire responses. However, a convenient way to characterize the height growth strategies for multiple species have been elusive. We examine the height growth trajectories in 18 woody plant species in a light-saturated, fire-prone, semi-arid environment as well as the influence of functional traits on those trajectories. We test trait-growth relationships by examining the influence of specific leaf area, woody density, seed size and leaf nitrogen content on three aspects of plant growth; maximum relative growth rate, age at maximum growth and asymptotic height. Woody plant species in the semi-arid mallee exhibit fast growth trajectories. Small seeded species were likely to be the fastest to reach maximum height, while large-seeded species with high leaf nitrogen were likely the slowest. Tall species had low stem densities and tended to have low specific leaf area. We modelled plant growth using a hierarchical multi-species model that formally incorporates plant functional traits as species-level predictors of growth, which provides a method for predicting species height growth strategies as a function of their traits. We extend this approach by using the modelled relationships from our trait-growth model to predict: growth trajectories of species with limited data; real species with only trait data and; hypothetical species based only on trait coordination. We hope this highlights the potential to use trait information for ecological inference and to generate predictions that could be used for management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Australopapuan leaf beetle diversity: the contributions of hosts plants and geography.
- Author
-
Reid, Chris AM
- Subjects
CHRYSOMELIDAE ,INSECT diversity ,SPECIES distribution ,ERICALES ,MYRTALES ,INSECT ecology ,HOST plants - Abstract
The diversity of Chrysomelidae (Coleoptera) in Australia and New Guinea (Australopapua) is reviewed. There are 3100 described species in 244 genera, with a further 2300 species to be described or confirmed. Approximately 11.6% of the world species of Chrysomelidae are found in Australopapua. Among the larger subfamilies, there is a relative dearth of Bruchinae, Cassidinae and Criocerinae and a relative abundance of Chrysomelinae, Cryptocephalinae and Eumolpinae. In the smaller subfamilies, Lamprosomatinae and Synetinae are absent, whereas Sagrinae and Spilopyrinae are strongly represented. Endemicity at generic level is high, exceeding 30% in all subfamilies, except Donaciinae (one species), and exceeding 50% in Chrysomelinae, Cryptocephalinae, Eumolpinae, Sagrinae and Spilopyrinae. The most diverse and ecologically dominant plant orders host the most chrysomelid genera (39 genera on Myrtales, 34 on Fabales, 15 genera on both orders), but many major plant orders in the region, such as Ericales, are almost ignored. Processes contributing to the diversity of Chrysomelidae in Australopapua are discussed, particularly co-speciation, co-evolution, dispersal and vicariance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. First Report on Rare Unifloral Honey of Endemic Moltkia petraea ( Tratt.) Griseb. from Croatia: Detailed Chemical Screening and Antioxidant Capacity.
- Author
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Jerković, Igor, Marijanović, Zvonimir, Zekić, Marina, and Tuberoso, Carlo I. G.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Quarantine host range testing of Pseudophilothrips ichini, a potential biological control agent of Brazilian peppertree, Schinus terebinthifolia, in North America and Hawaii.
- Author
-
Wheeler, Gregory S., Manrique, Veronica, Overholt, William A., McKay, Fernando, and Dyer, Kirsten
- Subjects
BRAZILIAN pepper tree ,BIOLOGICAL control of plant parasites ,INTEGRATED pest control ,THRIPS ,INSECT host plants - Abstract
Brazilian peppertree, Schinus terebinthifolia Raddi ( Anacardiaceae), is an invasive weed of natural and agricultural areas of Florida, Hawaii, and Texas ( USA). Biological control presents an environmentally safe and cost-effective control method for invasive populations of this weed. Though many potential agents have been tested for specificity, nearly all have been rejected due to a broad host range. However, one species, a thrips Pseudophilothrips ichini ( Hood) ( Thysanoptera: Phlaeothripidae), shows promise from field observations and quarantine host range tests. A series of no-choice, choice, and multiple-generation tests was conducted on 127 plant taxa (including five mango and four pistachio varieties) from 45 families and 33 orders. In no-choice starvation tests, the thrips fed and produced offspring on the target weed (124 F
1 adults per plant), whereas no or few (<4 F1 adults per plant) were obtained on non-target species. The primary exception was another exotic invasive tree Schinus molle L., on which an average 20 F1 thrips adults were produced. No-choice tests indicated that small numbers of F1 offspring were produced on nine other non-target plant species. The numbers of F1 offspring produced on these plants were <3% of those produced on the target weed. In choice tests, on average two or fewer F1 adults were produced on four non-target species tested, compared with 64 F1 adults on the target weed. Multiple-generation tests indicated that three generations of thrips were maintained only on the target weed and S. molle with no differences between these two plant species or across generations. Thus, this thrips species has a narrow host range that includes the two invasive Schinus spp. tested here. If released, the thrips P. ichini will constitute safe and potentially effective biological control of Brazilian peppertree in North America and Hawaii. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Delayed dehiscence of the pericarp: role in germination and retention of viability of seeds of two cold desert annual Brassicaceae species.
- Author
-
Lu, J. J., Tan, D. Y., Baskin, C. C., Baskin, J. M., and Bekker, R.
- Subjects
DEHISCENCE (Botany) ,SEED viability ,GERMINATION ,BRASSICACEAE ,PLANT species ,PLANT phenology - Abstract
Considerable variation occurs in post-maturity timing of dehiscence in fruits of Brassicaceae species, and several studies have shown that the pericarp plays an important role in seed germination and retention of viability in species with indehiscent fruits. However, little is known about the significance to seed biology of delay in pericarp dehiscence for <1 year in the field. Thus, we determined the role of the pericarps of Leptaleum filifolium and Neotorularia korolkovii, which open in <1 year after fruit maturity and dispersal, in seed germination and retention of seed viability. We compared dormancy-break via after-ripening in the laboratory and germination phenology and retention of seed viability in intact siliques and isolated seeds buried in an experimental garden. Seeds of both species have Type 6 non-deep physiological dormancy, which is enhanced by the pericarp. Seeds of both species after-ripened during summer 2013, and some of them germinated in autumn and some in the following spring in watered and non-watered soil. Germination percentages of seeds in siliques increased in soil in spring 2014, after the pericarps had opened. Most isolated seeds of L. filifolium and N. korolkovii had germinated or were dead by spring 2014 and summer 2015, respectively, whereas 60% of the seeds of both species in the (opened) pericarps were viable after 24 months. Thus, although the pericarp opened 9-10 months after burial, its presence had a significant effect on seed dormancy, germination phenology and retention of viability of seeds of L. filifolium and N. korolkovii. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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46. Both morph- and species-dependent asymmetries affect reproductive barriers between heterostylous species.
- Author
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Keller, Barbara, Vos, Jurriaan M., Schmidt‐Lebuhn, Alexander N., Thomson, James D., and Conti, Elena
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ANGIOSPERMS ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,PRIMROSES ,BIODIVERSITY ,SPECIES hybridization ,GENETIC speciation - Abstract
The interaction between floral traits and reproductive isolation is crucial to explaining the extraordinary diversity of angiosperms. Heterostyly, a complex floral polymorphism that optimizes outcrossing, evolved repeatedly and has been shown to accelerate diversification in primroses, yet its potential influence on isolating mechanisms remains unexplored. Furthermore, the relative contribution of pre- versus postmating barriers to reproductive isolation is still debated. No experimental study has yet evaluated the possible effects of heterostyly on pre- and postmating reproductive mechanisms. We quantify multiple reproductive barriers between the heterostylous Primula elatior (oxlip) and P. vulgaris (primrose), which readily hybridize when co-occurring, and test whether traits of heterostyly contribute to reproductive barriers in unique ways. We find that premating isolation is key for both species, while postmating isolation is considerable only for P. vulgaris; ecogeographic isolation is crucial for both species, while phenological, seed developmental, and hybrid sterility barriers are also important in P. vulgaris, implicating sympatrically higher gene flow into P. elatior. We document for the first time that, in addition to the aforementioned species-dependent asymmetries, morph-dependent asymmetries affect reproductive barriers between heterostylous species. Indeed, the interspecific decrease of reciprocity between high sexual organs of complementary floral morphs limits interspecific pollen transfer from anthers of short-styled flowers to stigmas of long-styled flowers, while higher reciprocity between low sexual organs favors introgression over isolation from anthers of long-styled flowers to stigmas of short-styled flowers. Finally, intramorph incompatibility persists across species boundaries, but is weakened in long-styled flowers of P. elatior, opening a possible backdoor to gene flow through intramorph pollen transfer between species. Therefore, patterns of gene flow across species boundaries are likely affected by floral morph composition of adjacent populations. To summarize, our study highlights the general importance of premating isolation and newly illustrates that both morph- and species-dependent asymmetries shape boundaries between heterostylous species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Quality Assessment of Two Spectrophotometric Procedures for Polyphenol Determination and Application in Moltkia petraea Species.
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Rodríguez, Jadranka Vuković, Grubešić, Renata Jurišić, Kremer, Dario, and Kokot, Virna
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SPECTROPHOTOMETRY ,POLYPHENOLS ,PHYTOCHEMICALS ,PHENOLS ,SIGNAL resolution - Abstract
A comparison study of quality of two spectrophotometric procedures: Schneider's (T-Sch) and 4-aminoantipyrine (T-AAP) procedures for total polyphenols determination was carried out using informative prevalidation strategy. Good quality of the measurements at the lower analyte level, excellent resolution of signals, homogenous data material, ideal linear calibration and analytical evaluation functions, very low limit of quantitation (0.13 μg/mL), and high precision (from ±0.60 % to ±3.43 %) and accuracy (from −4.26 % to +4.00 %) confirmed the high quality of the T-Sch procedure. Although favorable performance characteristics of T-AAP procedure were obtained, the signal resolution, sensitivity, precision and accuracy are somewhat lower than in T-Sch procedure. Both prevalidated procedures were successfully applied to determine total polyphenols in leaves, stems, and flowers in three populations of endemic IllyricBalkan species Moltkia petraea (Tratt.) Griseb. growing in Croatia. Total concentrations of polyphenols obtained by T-Sch procedure in all plant organs of all populations were somewhat lower than determined by T-AAP procedure. However, the relative abundance of polyphenols obtained by both methods is the same. Prevalidation results demonstrated the reliability of the T-AAP and T-Sch procedures as valuable tools in polyphenols analysis and their application provided new information regarding phytochemical characterization of endemic M. petraea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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48. Tree of life for the genera of Chinese vascular plants.
- Author
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Chen, Zhi‐Duan, Yang, Tuo, Lin, Li, Lu, Li‐Min, Li, Hong‐Lei, Sun, Miao, Liu, Bing, Chen, Min, Niu, Yan‐Ting, Ye, Jian‐Fei, Cao, Zhi‐Yong, Liu, Hong‐Mei, Wang, Xiao‐Ming, Wang, Wei, Zhang, Jing‐Bo, Meng, Zhen, Cao, Wei, Li, Jian‐Hui, Wu, Sheng‐Dan, and Zhao, Hui‐Ling
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VASCULAR plants ,GENES ,CHLOROPLASTS ,PHYLOGENY ,PLANT species - Abstract
We reconstructed a phylogenetic tree of Chinese vascular plants (Tracheophyta) using sequences of the chloroplast genes atpB, matK, ndhF, and rbcL and mitochondrial matR. We produced a matrix comprising 6098 species and including 13 695 DNA sequences, of which 1803 were newly generated. Our taxonomic sampling spanned 3114 genera representing 323 families of Chinese vascular plants, covering more than 93% of all genera known from China. The comprehensive large phylogeny supports most relationships among and within families recognized by recent molecular phylogenetic studies for lycophytes, ferns (monilophytes), gymnosperms, and angiosperms. For angiosperms, most families in Angiosperm Phylogeny Group IV are supported as monophyletic, except for a paraphyletic Dipterocarpaceae and Santalaceae. The infrafamilial relationships of several large families and monophyly of some large genera are well supported by our dense taxonomic sampling. Our results showed that two species of Eberhardtia are sister to a clade formed by all other taxa of Sapotaceae, except Sarcosperma. We have made our phylogeny of Chinese vascular plants publically available for the creation of subtrees via SoTree (), an automated phylogeny assembly tool for ecologists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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49. A brief review of the application and pharmacology of ethnomedicines of Indigenous Australians.
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Tucci, Joseph and Wilkens, Sabine
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BACTERIAL disease prevention ,GASTROINTESTINAL disease diagnosis ,SCABIES treatment ,STREPTOCOCCAL disease diagnosis ,DEHYDRATION ,SKIN disease treatment ,ALLERGIES ,ANALGESICS ,ANTI-infective agents ,ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,DATABASES ,DRUG prescribing ,ECOLOGY ,HEALTH ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,INFLAMMATION ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,PHARMACOLOGY ,RURAL conditions ,TRADITIONAL medicine ,TUMORS ,VIRUS diseases ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,LITERATURE reviews ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objective Indigenous Australians suffer higher mortality and have statistically worse outcomes for many chronic disease states than the non-Indigenous population. Although many of these people are prescribed pharmaceutical drugs for their illnesses, some still use medicines that were traditional to their culture. This report reviews some of the traditional medicines used for ailments seen in Indigenous Australian communities. Design A literature search was conducted, with the period between the publication of an 'Aboriginal Pharmacopoeia' in 1988 and 'current' our target interval for searching. The ethics of publishing knowledge belonging to Aboriginal people is briefly discussed in this context. Results Ailments were grouped into communicable diseases, pain and inflammation, skin disorders and gastrointestinal disorders. Although cancer is regarded as a disease of the 'white man', it is briefly discussed in the context that several traditional medicines and foods may have provided some protective effects. Where known, the ethnopharmacology of these medicines is discussed, as well as a brief description of their preparation and application. Conclusion Some Indigenous Australians continue to use traditional medicines. We have tabulated these according to ailment, and have listed pharmacological actions where known. What is not known, however, is their potential to interact with pharmaceutical drugs. Further study in this area is needed to optimise health outcomes for Indigenous Australians, especially those in remote communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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50. Ethnopharmacology in Australia and Oceania.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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