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51. Climatic influence on tree wood anatomy: a review

52. A new Chrysomelid-Pinaceae relationship: Calomicrus foveolatus (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae) feeding on the Andalusian fir, Abies pinsapo (Pinaceae) in the Sierra de las Nieves National Park (Málaga, Spain)

53. Assessing the Gene Content of the Megagenome: Sugar Pine (Pinus lambertiana).

54. miR160 Interacts in vivo With Pinus pinaster AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 18 Target Site and Negatively Regulates Its Expression During Conifer Somatic Embryo Development.

55. Torreya dapanshanica (Taxaceae), a new species of gymnosperm from Zhejiang, East China.

56. Heterochrony and repurposing in the evolution of gymnosperm seed dispersal units.

57. Ginkgo biloba and Helianthus annuus show different strategies to adjust photosynthesis, leaf water relations, and cell wall composition under water deficit stress

58. A Reference Genome Sequence for Giant Sequoia

59. miR160 Interacts in vivo With Pinus pinaster AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 18 Target Site and Negatively Regulates Its Expression During Conifer Somatic Embryo Development

60. Loss of the IR region in conifer plastomes: Changes in the selection pressure and substitution rate of protein‐coding genes

61. Loss of the IR region in conifer plastomes: Changes in the selection pressure and substitution rate of protein‐coding genes.

62. Assembled and annotated 26.5 Gbp coast redwood genome: a resource for estimating evolutionary adaptive potential and investigating hexaploid origin.

63. Full-length transcriptomic identification of R2R3-MYB family genes related to secondary cell wall development in Cunninghamia lanceolata (Chinese fir).

64. Hydrasperman pteridosperm ovules from the Permian of China: palaeoecological and palaeobiogeographic implications.

65. complex genetic structure of Tetraclinis articulata (Cupressaceae) in the western Mediterranean.

66. Distribution and conservation of threatened gymnosperms in China

67. Efficient Multi-Sites Genome Editing and Plant Regeneration via Somatic Embryogenesis in Picea glauca.

68. Morphological descriptions and DNA barcodes of Oziella viscida n. sp. (Eriophyoidea, Phytoptidae) and two infrequently reported Trisetacus species (Nalepellidae) from Crimea.

69. Morphological characterization of some gymnosperm non-saccate pollen grains.

70. The genome of the gymnosperm Picea glauca encodes a single Nucleobase Cation Symporter 1 (PgNCS1) that displays a broad yet unique solute specificity profile.

71. Tree stem methane emissions: Global patterns and controlling factors.

72. Tissue-specific transposon-associated small RNAs in the gymnosperm tree, Norway spruce

73. Investigation Into Different Wood Formation Mechanisms Between Angiosperm and Gymnosperm Tree Species at the Transcriptional and Post-transcriptional Level

74. Both Conifer II and Gnetales are characterized by a high frequency of ancient mitochondrial gene transfer to the nuclear genome.

75. Investigation Into Different Wood Formation Mechanisms Between Angiosperm and Gymnosperm Tree Species at the Transcriptional and Post-transcriptional Level.

76. Diurnal variations in the thickness of the inner bark of tree trunks in relation to xylem water potential and phloem turgor.

77. Comparative Analyses of Full-Length Transcriptomes Reveal Gnetum luofuense Stem Developmental Dynamics

78. Competition and Niche Differentiation of Water and Nutrients between Broussonetia papyrifera and Platycladus orientalis under Prolonged Drought Stress

79. Plastome phylogenomics of Cephalotaxus (Cephalotaxaceae) and allied genera.

80. Comparative Analyses of Full-Length Transcriptomes Reveal Gnetum luofuens e Stem Developmental Dynamics.

81. Climatic influence on tree wood anatomy: a review.

82. Mitochondrial bioenergetics and enzymatic antioxidant defense differ in Paraná pine cell lines with contrasting embryogenic potential.

83. Reconstructing development of the earliest seed integuments raises a new hypothesis for the evolution of ancestral seed‐bearing structures.

84. Unbiased Subgenome Evolution in Allotetraploid Species of Ephedra and Its Implications for the Evolution of Large Genomes in Gymnosperms.

85. Does ontogeny matter for the spring temperature requirement for bud burst of two coniferous species in cool temperate forests?

86. Central Cell in Flowering Plants: Specification, Signaling, and Evolution

87. High-throughput sequencing-based assembly of chloroplast genomes of five pine tree species

88. Arboreta reveal the invasive potential of several conifer species in the temperate forests of western Europe.

89. A Review of Taxonomic Perspective of Diversity in Gymnosperms of Kashmir Himalaya.

90. Darwin's second 'abominable mystery': trait flexibility as the innovation leading to angiosperm diversity.

91. Effect of Host, Environment and Fungal Growth on Fungal Leaf Endophyte Communities in Taiwan.

92. The genomic architecture of the sex‐determining region and sex‐related metabolic variation in Ginkgobiloba.

93. Ginkgo biloba and Helianthus annuus show different strategies to adjust photosynthesis, leaf water relations, and cell wall composition under water deficit stress.

94. A Reference Genome Sequence for Giant Sequoia.

95. Effect of methyl jasmonate on in-vitro pollen germination and tube elongation of Pinus nigra.

96. Polycomb Repressive Complex 2-mediated histone modification H3K27me3 is associated with embryogenic potential in Norway spruce.

97. Central Cell in Flowering Plants: Specification, Signaling, and Evolution.

98. MicroRNA comparison between poplar and larch provides insight into the different mechanism of wood formation.

99. Nitrate reductase activities in plants from different ecological and taxonomic groups grown in Japan.

100. Molecular underpinnings of methyl jasmonate‐induced resistance in Norway spruce.

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