Matching Items (29)
152091-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The Cave Creek Complex fires of June and July of 2005 north of Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.A. burned 248,310 acres of Sonoran desert, primarily on the Tonto National Forest, USFS. The fires consumed multiple stands of the keystone species Carnegiea gigantea, the saguaro cactus. Restoration efforts in late spring 2007 involved

The Cave Creek Complex fires of June and July of 2005 north of Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.A. burned 248,310 acres of Sonoran desert, primarily on the Tonto National Forest, USFS. The fires consumed multiple stands of the keystone species Carnegiea gigantea, the saguaro cactus. Restoration efforts in late spring 2007 involved the monitoring of 200 transplanted saguaro cacti over a two year period for overall establishment and success. Observation of local saguaro distribution suggests that soil factors might influence saguaro growth. Therefore, soil samples were collected from each transplant location and analyzed for percentage coarse fragments, texture, pH and electrical conductivity as soil collection and analysis of these variables are relatively inexpensive and expedient. Regression analysis was used to determine which, if any of these soil characteristics significantly correlated with plant growth. The results of this study found significant correlation between saguaro transplant growth and the soil variables of clay content and pH, but no correlation between saguaro growth and coarse fragment percentages or electrical conductivity.
ContributorsElliott, Todd (Author) / Green, Douglas (Thesis advisor) / Steele, Kelly (Committee member) / Alford, Eddie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
151750-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The Cape Floral Region (CFR) in southwestern South Africa is one of the most diverse in the world, with >9,000 plant species, 70% of which are endemic, in an area of only ~90,000 km2. Many have suggested that the CFR's heterogeneous environment, with respect to landscape gradients, vegetation, rainfall, elevation,

The Cape Floral Region (CFR) in southwestern South Africa is one of the most diverse in the world, with >9,000 plant species, 70% of which are endemic, in an area of only ~90,000 km2. Many have suggested that the CFR's heterogeneous environment, with respect to landscape gradients, vegetation, rainfall, elevation, and soil fertility, is responsible for the origin and maintenance of this biodiversity. While studies have struggled to link species diversity with these features, no study has attempted to associate patterns of gene flow with environmental data to determine how CFR biodiversity evolves on different scales. Here, a molecular population genetic data is presented for a widespread CFR plant, Leucadendron salignum, across 51 locations with 5-kb of chloroplast (cpDNA) and 6-kb of unlinked nuclear (nuDNA) DNA sequences in a dataset of 305 individuals. In the cpDNA dataset, significant genetic structure was found to vary on temporal and spatial scales, separating Western and Eastern Capes - the latter of which appears to be recently derived from the former - with the highest diversity in the heart of the CFR in a central region. A second study applied a statistical model using vegetation and soil composition and found fine-scale genetic divergence is better explained by this landscape resistance model than a geographic distance model. Finally, a third analysis contrasted cpDNA and nuDNA datasets, and revealed very little geographic structure in the latter, suggesting that seed and pollen dispersal can have different evolutionary genetic histories of gene flow on even small CFR scales. These three studies together caution that different genomic markers need to be considered when modeling the geographic and temporal origin of CFR groups. From a greater perspective, the results here are consistent with the hypothesis that landscape heterogeneity is one driving influence in limiting gene flow across the CFR that can lead to species diversity on fine-scales. Nonetheless, while this pattern may be true of the widespread L. salignum, the extension of this approach is now warranted for other CFR species with varying ranges and dispersal mechanisms to determine how universal these patterns of landscape genetic diversity are.
ContributorsTassone, Erica (Author) / Verrelli, Brian C (Thesis advisor) / Dowling, Thomas (Committee member) / Cartwright, Reed (Committee member) / Rosenberg, Michael S. (Committee member) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
151484-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
An understanding of diet habits is crucial in implementing proper management strategies for wildlife. Diet analysis, however, remains a challenge for ruminant species. Microhistological analysis, the method most often employed in herbivore diet studies, is tedious and time consuming. In addition, it requires considerable training and an extensive reference plant

An understanding of diet habits is crucial in implementing proper management strategies for wildlife. Diet analysis, however, remains a challenge for ruminant species. Microhistological analysis, the method most often employed in herbivore diet studies, is tedious and time consuming. In addition, it requires considerable training and an extensive reference plant collection. The development of DNA barcoding (species identification using a standardized DNA sequence) and the availability of recent DNA sequencing techniques offer new possibilities in diet analysis for ungulates. Using fecal material collected from controlled feeding trials on pygmy goats, (Capra hicus), novel DNA barcoding technology using the P6-loop of the chloroplast trnL (UAA) intron was compared with the traditional microhistological technique. At its current stage of technological development, this study demonstrated that DNA barcoding did not enhance the ability to detect plant species in herbivore diets. A higher mean species composition was reported with microhistological analysis (79%) as compared to DNA barcoding (50%). Microhistological analysis consistently reported a higher species presence by forage class. For affect positive species identification, microhistology estimated an average of 89% correct detection in control diets, while DNA barcoding estimated 50% correct detection of species. It was hypothesized that a number of factors, including variation in chloroplast content in feed species and the effect of rumen bacteria on degradation of DNA, influenced the ability to detect plant species in herbivore diets and concluded that while DNA barcoding opens up new possibilities in the study of plant-herbivore interactions, further studies are needed to standardize techniques and for DNA bar-coding in this context.
ContributorsMurphree, Julie Joan (Author) / Miller, William H. (Thesis advisor) / Steele, Kelly (Committee member) / Salywon, Andrew (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
152772-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
A phylogenetic revision of the broad-nosed weevil genera Minyomerus Horn, 1876, and Piscatopus Sleeper, 1960 (Entiminae: Tanymecini) is presented. These genera are distributed throughout western North America, from Canada to Mexico and Baja California, primarily in arid and desert habitats, and feed on shrubs such as creosote (Larrea tridentata (DC.)

A phylogenetic revision of the broad-nosed weevil genera Minyomerus Horn, 1876, and Piscatopus Sleeper, 1960 (Entiminae: Tanymecini) is presented. These genera are distributed throughout western North America, from Canada to Mexico and Baja California, primarily in arid and desert habitats, and feed on shrubs such as creosote (Larrea tridentata (DC.) Coville: Zygophyllaceae) and several Asteraceae. Piscatopus was considered monotypic, comprised solely of P. griseus Sleeper, 1960, whereas Minyomerus formerly was comprised of seven species: M. innocuus Horn, 1876 (designated as the type species for Minyomerus in Pierce, 1913), M. caseyi (Sharp, 1891), M. conicollis Green, 1920, M. constrictus (Casey, 1888), M. languidus Horn, 1876, M. laticeps (Casey, 1888), M. microps (Say, 1831). This revision includes comprehensive redescriptions of the previously described species in these genera and descriptions of ten new species: M. imberbus sp. nov., M. caponei sp. nov., M. reburrus sp. nov., M. cracens sp. nov., M. trisetosus sp. nov., M. puticulatus sp. nov., M. bulbifrons sp. nov., M. politus sp. nov., M. gravivultus sp. nov., and M. rutellirostris sp. nov. A cladistic analysis using 46 morphological characters of 22 terminal taxa (5 outgroup, 17 ingroup) was carried out in WinClada and yielded a single most-parsimonious cladogram (length = 82, consistency index = 65, retention index = 82). The monophyly of Minyomerus is supported by the preferred cladogram. The results of the cladistic analysis place Piscatopus griseus within the genus Minyomerus as sister to M. rutellirostris. Therefore, Piscatopus is demoted to a junior synonym of Minyomerus and its sole member P. griseus, is moved to Minyomerus as M. griseus (Sleeper), new combination. Additionally, the species M. innocuus Horn, 1876 is demoted to a junior synonym of M. microps (Say, 1831), based on the principle of priority, and M. microps is elevated to the rank of type for the genus. The species M. languidus, M. microps, and M. trisetosus are putatively considered parthenogenetic, and lack male specimens over a broad range of sampling events. The diversity in exterior and genitalic morphology, range of host plants, overlapping species distributions, and geographic extent suggests an origin during the Miocene (~15 mya).
ContributorsJansen, Michael Andrew (Author) / Franz, Nico M (Thesis advisor) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Rosenberg, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
153151-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Microalgae represent a potential sustainable alternative for the enhancement and protection of agricultural crops. The dry biomass and cellular extracts of Scenedesmus dimorphus were applied as a biofertilizer, a foliar spray, and a seed primer to evaluate seed germination, plant growth, and crop yield of Roma tomato plants. The dry

Microalgae represent a potential sustainable alternative for the enhancement and protection of agricultural crops. The dry biomass and cellular extracts of Scenedesmus dimorphus were applied as a biofertilizer, a foliar spray, and a seed primer to evaluate seed germination, plant growth, and crop yield of Roma tomato plants. The dry biomass was applied as a biofertilizer at 50 g and 100 g per plant, to evaluate its effects on plant development and crop yield. Biofertilizer treatments enhanced plant growth and led to greater crop (fruit) production. Timing of biofertilizer application proved to be of importance - earlier 50 g biofertilizer application resulted in greater plant growth. Scenedesmus dimorphus culture, growth medium, and different concentrations (1%, 5%, 10%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%) of aqueous cell extracts were used as seed primers to determine effects on germination. Seeds treated with Scenedesmus dimorphus culture and with extract concentrations higher than 50 % (0.75 g ml-1) triggered faster germination - 2 days earlier than the control group. Extract foliar sprays of 50 ml and 100 ml, were obtained and applied to tomato plants at various extract concentrations (10%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100%). Plant height, flower development and number of branches were significantly enhanced with 50 % (7.5 g ml-1) extracts. Higher concentration sprays led to a decrease in growth. The extracts were further screened to assess potential antimicrobial activity against the bacterium Escherichia coli ATCC 25922, the fungi Candida albicans ATCC 90028 and Aspergillus brasiliensis ATCC 16404. No antimicrobial activity was observed from the microalga extracts on the selected microorganisms.
ContributorsGarcia-Gonzalez, Jesus (Author) / Sommerfeld, Milton (Thesis advisor) / Steele, Kelly (Committee member) / Henderson, Mark (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
150180-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The oceans play an essential role in global biogeochemical cycles and in regulating climate. The biological carbon pump, the photosynthetic fixation of carbon dioxide by phytoplankton and subsequent sequestration of organic carbon into deep water, combined with the physical carbon pump, make the oceans the only long-term net sink for

The oceans play an essential role in global biogeochemical cycles and in regulating climate. The biological carbon pump, the photosynthetic fixation of carbon dioxide by phytoplankton and subsequent sequestration of organic carbon into deep water, combined with the physical carbon pump, make the oceans the only long-term net sink for anthropogenic carbon dioxide. A full understanding of the workings of the biological carbon pump requires a knowledge of the role of different taxonomic groups of phytoplankton (protists and cyanobacteria) to organic carbon export. However, this has been difficult due to the degraded nature of particles sinking into particle traps, the main tools employed by oceanographers to collect sinking particulate matter in the ocean. In this study DNA-based molecular methods, including denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, cloning and sequencing, and taxon-specific quantitative PCR, allowed for the first time for the identification of which protists and cyanobacteria contributed to the material collected by the traps in relation to their presence in the euphotic zone. I conducted this study at two time-series stations in the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean, one north of the Canary Islands, and one located south of Bermuda. The Bermuda study allowed me to investigate seasonal and interannual changes in the contribution of the plankton community to particle flux. I could also show that small unarmored taxa, including representatives of prasinophytes and cyanobacteria, constituted a significant fraction of sequences recovered from sediment trap material. Prasinophyte sequences alone could account for up to 13% of the clone library sequences of trap material during bloom periods. These observations contradict a long-standing paradigm in biological oceanography that only large taxa with mineral shells are capable of sinking while smaller, unarmored cells are recycled in the euphotic zone through the microbial loop. Climate change and a subsequent warming of the surface ocean may lead to a shift in the protist community toward smaller cell size in the future, but in light of these findings these changes may not necessarily lead to a reduction in the strength of the biological carbon pump.
ContributorsAmacher, Jessica (Author) / Neuer, Susanne (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Lomas, Michael (Committee member) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
151172-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
For the past 30 years wildlife biologists have debated the need of pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana) to drink freestanding water (free water). Some have suggested that pronghorn may feed at night to increase preformed water (plant moisture) intake, thus decreasing their dependence on free water. Pronghorn diet composition and nutrient

For the past 30 years wildlife biologists have debated the need of pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana) to drink freestanding water (free water). Some have suggested that pronghorn may feed at night to increase preformed water (plant moisture) intake, thus decreasing their dependence on free water. Pronghorn diet composition and nutrient intake is integral to understanding water available to pronghorn through preformed and metabolic sources. The dual purpose of this study was to determine plant composition of pronghorn diets, and to examine whether night feeding provides a water allocation advantage by testing for differences between day and night and modeling free water requirements during biologically critical seasons and years of different precipitation. I determined species composition, selected nutrients, and moisture content of American pronghorn diets on Perry Mesa, Arizona in March, May, June and August of 2008 and 2009. I used microhistological analysis of fecal samples to determine percent plant composition of pronghorn diets. I used forage samples to evaluate the nutrient composition of those diets for moisture, crude protein and structural carbohydrates, and to calculate metabolic water. I used calculations proposed by Fox et al. (2000) to model free water requirements and modified the equations to reflect increased requirements for lactation. Diet analysis revealed that pronghorn used between 67% and 99% forbs and suggested fair range conditions. Preformed water was not significantly different between night and day. Night feeding appeared to be of marginal advantage, providing an average potential 9% preformed water increase in 2008, and 3% in 2009. The model indicated that neither male nor female pronghorn could meet their water requirements from preformed and metabolic water during any time period, season or year. The average free water requirements for females ranged from 0.67 L/animal/day (SE 0.06) in March, 2008 to 3.12 L/animal/day (SE 0.02) in June, 2009. The model showed that American pronghorn on Perry Mesa require access to free water during biological stress periods.
ContributorsTluczek, Melanie (Author) / Miller, William H. (Thesis advisor) / Brown, David E. (Committee member) / Steele, Kelly (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
156011-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
A floristic analysis is essential to understanding the current diversity and structure

of community associations of plants in a region. Also, a region’s floristic analysis is key not only to investigating their geographical origin(s) but is necessary to their management and protection as a reservoir of greater biodiversity. With an area

A floristic analysis is essential to understanding the current diversity and structure

of community associations of plants in a region. Also, a region’s floristic analysis is key not only to investigating their geographical origin(s) but is necessary to their management and protection as a reservoir of greater biodiversity. With an area of 2,250,000 square kilometers, the country of Saudi Arabia covers almost four-fifths of the Arabian Peninsula. Efforts to document information on the flora of Saudi Arabia began in the 1700s and have resulted in several comprehensive publications over the last 25 years. There is no doubt that these studies have helped both the community of scientific researchers as well as the public to gain knowledge about the number of species, types of plants, and their distribution in Saudi Arabia. However, there has been no effort to use digital technology to make the data contained in various Saudi herbarium collections easily accessible online for research and teaching purposes. This research project aims to develop a “virtual flora” portal for the vascular plants of Saudi Arabia. Based on SEINet and the Symbiota software used to power it, a preliminary website portal was established to begin an effort to make information of Saudi Arabia’s flora available on the world- wide web. Data comprising a total of 12,834 specimens representing 175 families were acquired from different organizations and used to create a database for the designed website. After analyzing the data, the Fabaceae family (“legumes”) was identified as a largest family and chosen for further analysis. This study contributes to help scientific researchers, government workers and the general public to have easy, unlimited access to the plant information for a variety of purposes.
ContributorsAlbediwi, Albatool (Author) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Thesis advisor) / Franz, Nico (Committee member) / Makings, Elizabeth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
136816-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Overexpression of AVP1 (Arabidopsis vacuolar pyrophosphatase), a type I H+ pyrophosphatase, results in greater biomass, possibly due to a function in sucrose transport within the phloem. Overexpression of the phloem lipid-associated family protein (PLAFP) was shown to increase the number of vascular bundles in Arabidopsis. Could these two phenotypes complement

Overexpression of AVP1 (Arabidopsis vacuolar pyrophosphatase), a type I H+ pyrophosphatase, results in greater biomass, possibly due to a function in sucrose transport within the phloem. Overexpression of the phloem lipid-associated family protein (PLAFP) was shown to increase the number of vascular bundles in Arabidopsis. Could these two phenotypes complement one another additively? In this work, double mutants overexpressing both AVP1 and PLAFP were characterized. These double mutants have enhanced biomass, greater leaf area, and a larger number of vascular bundles than the single mutant lines. Overexpression of PLAFP does not result in any increase in rhizosphere acidification capacity.
ContributorsWilson, Sean (Co-author) / Furstenau, Tara (Co-author) / Gaxiola, Roberto (Thesis director) / Mason, Hugh (Committee member) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-05
136838-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Type I H+-PPase encoding genes, such as AVP1 (Arabidopsis thaliana), TsVP (Thellungiella halophilla), TaVP,( Triticum aestivum), and OVP1 (Oryza sativa) are highly conserved and.traditionally known to operate as vacuolar proton translocating pyrophosphatases. It is worth mentioning that Rocha-Facanha and de Meis presented in vitro evidence with tonoplast fractions of maize

Type I H+-PPase encoding genes, such as AVP1 (Arabidopsis thaliana), TsVP (Thellungiella halophilla), TaVP,( Triticum aestivum), and OVP1 (Oryza sativa) are highly conserved and.traditionally known to operate as vacuolar proton translocating pyrophosphatases. It is worth mentioning that Rocha-Facanha and de Meis presented in vitro evidence with tonoplast fractions of maize coleoptiles and seeds consistent with the reverse function of the H+-PPase (1998). These authors suggested that given the appropriate thermodynamic conditions in vivo, the H+-PPase could operate as a system of energy conservation with a role in the maintenance of cytosolic PPi levels. Further evidence in support for a PPi-synthase activity of plant H+-PPases came from work done on tonoplasts from mature oranges where PPi synthesis was demonstrated when a ΔpH of 3 units was imposed (Marsh et al. 2000).

Futher research has shown that transgenics overexpressing type I H+-PPases develop more root and shoot biomass, and have enhanced rhizosphere acidification capacity than wild types. The increased root biomass suggests that previous reports describing the response of these plants to water scarcity as drought tolerance are incomplete. Larger root systems indicate that an important component of the response is drought resistance. The enhanced rhizosphere acidification capacity has also been associated with an increase in nutrient use efficiency, conferring a growth advantage under nitrogen and phosphorous deficient conditions.
While a vacuolar localized H+-PPase easily explains the salt tolerant phenotypes, it does little to provide a mechanism for an increase in root and shoot biomass and/or an augmented rhizosphere acidification capacity. Several groups have argued that higher levels and transport of the growth hormone auxin could be responsible for the above phenotypes. An alternative model focusing on the function of a plasma membrane bound H+-PPase in sieve elements and companion cells links these phenotypes with enhanced phloem sucrose loading and transport.
The following paper reviews publications in which the H+-PPase overexpression technology has been used since 2006 in an attempt to identify cues that could help us test the compatibility of the the proposed models with the actual data.
ContributorsCoulter, Joshua (Author) / Gaxiola, Roberto (Thesis director) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Pizzio, Gaston (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-05