Academic literature on the topic 'Anthyllis vulneraria species complex'

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Journal articles on the topic "Anthyllis vulneraria species complex"

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Conti, Fabio, and Adriano Stinca. "Anthyllis dalmatica (Fabaceae), a New Endemic Species from Croatia." Systematic Botany 48, no. 3 (2023): 435–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1600/036364423x16936046516372.

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Abstract— Following a morphometric approach, in this paper a new species, Anthyllis dalmatica, is described and illustrated from Croatia (Southeastern Europe). It belongs to the A. vulneraria species complex (Fabaceae), a poorly investigated and critical taxonomic group for Eurasian vascular flora. The new species is a restricted endemic to the montane belt of Mt. Mosor in central Dalmatia, where it grows on limestone rocky slopes. Anthyllis dalmatica is morphologically closely related to the Italian endemic A. apennina, occurring in the central Apennine, from which it differs by a less-wide c
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Conti, Fabio, and Fabrizio Bartolucci. "Anthyllis apennina (Fabaceae), a new species from central Apennine (Italy)." PhytoKeys 176 (April 19, 2021): 111–29. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.176.62774.

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A new species of Anthyllis endemic to central Apennine growing in dry pastures on limestone in the montane belt, within Abruzzo and Lazio administrative regions (central Italy), is here described and illustrated and the IUCN assessment is proposed. This new species belongs to the morphologically very variable Anthyllis vulneraria species complex and it is close to A. pulchella (south-eastern Europe and Caucasus), but it can be clearly distinguished by its smaller flowers, mainly light yellow-coloured, bracts longer than flowers, calyx pink-coloured (usually only at apex) and size of cauline le
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Conti, Fabio, and Fabrizio Bartolucci. "Anthyllis apennina (Fabaceae), a new species from central Apennine (Italy)." PhytoKeys 176 (April 19, 2021): 111–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.176.62774.

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A new species of Anthyllis endemic to central Apennine growing in dry pastures on limestone in the montane belt, within Abruzzo and Lazio administrative regions (central Italy), is here described and illustrated and the IUCN assessment is proposed. This new species belongs to the morphologically very variable Anthyllis vulneraria species complex and it is close to A. pulchella (south-eastern Europe and Caucasus), but it can be clearly distinguished by its smaller flowers, mainly light yellow-coloured, bracts longer than flowers, calyx pink-coloured (usually only at apex) and size of cauline le
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Köster, Egle, Elena Bitocchi, Roberto Papa, and Silvia Pihu. "Genetic structure of the Anthyllis vulneraria L. s. l. species complex in Estonia based on AFLPs." Open Life Sciences 3, no. 4 (2008): 442–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/s11535-008-0033-6.

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AbstractAnthyllis vulneraria L. (Fabaceae) s. lato includes many cryptic taxa, ranging from 25 to 60 subspecies according to different authors. The delimitation of intraspecific taxa of A. vulneraria s. lato has always been complicated and inconsistent. Different data sets (multivariate analyses of morphological variation, allozymes, chloroplast SSRs and ITS) have not resolved the existing problem with distinguishing some subspecies. We used the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis to describe the differentiation in this species complex and to characterize variation on a geog
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Csepregi, Rita, Viktória Temesfői, Sourav Das, et al. "Cytotoxic, Antimicrobial, Antioxidant Properties and Effects on Cell Migration of Phenolic Compounds of Selected Transylvanian Medicinal Plants." Antioxidants 9, no. 2 (2020): 166. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox9020166.

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Medicinal plants are widely used in folk medicine but quite often their composition and biological effects are hardly known. Our study aimed to analyze the composition, cytotoxicity, antimicrobial, antioxidant activity and cellular migration effects of Anthyllis vulneraria, Fuchsia magellanica, Fuchsia triphylla and Lysimachia nummularia used in the Romanian ethnomedicine for wounds. Liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was used to analyze 50% (v/v) ethanolic and aqueous extracts of the plants’ leaves. Antimicrobial activities were estimated with a standard microdilution met
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Sujkowska-Rybkowska, Marzena, Anna Lisek, Beata Sumorok, Edyta Derkowska, Magdalena Szymańska, and Lidia Sas-Paszt. "Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi as an Important Factor Enabling the Adaptation of Anthyllis vulneraria L. to Zn-Pb-Polluted Tailings." Plants 12, no. 11 (2023): 2092. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12112092.

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The old Zn-Pb-contaminated (calamine) tailings in southern Poland are spontaneously colonized by metal-tolerant Anthyllis vulneraria L. (Fabaceae), which can form simultaneously symbiotic association with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia and phosphorus-acquiring arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). So far, fungal colonization and the AMF diversity of calamine-inhabiting legumes have been poorly studied. Thus, we determined AMF spore density in the substratum and the mycorrhizal status of nodulated A. vulneraria plants occurring on calamine tailings (M) and on a reference non-metallicolous (NM) site. Th
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Byalt, Vyacheslav V., Alexander A. Egorov, Elena V. Pismarkina, and Olga V. Galanina. "Additions to the flora of northern Asia: alien vascular plant records in the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous District (Russia)." Check List 16, no. 1 (2020): 137–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/16.1.137.

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The north of Western Siberia has seen intensive economic development. Exploration and mining for mineral resources, active road and pipeline construction, urban development, and agriculture favor invasion and dispersal of alien plant species across the Subarctic region. The paper reports new records for eight alien species and hybrids previously unknown from northwest Siberia and the flora of northern Asia: Alopecurus geniculatus L., Anthyllis vulneraria L. subsp. vulneraria, Aquilegia atrata W.D.J. Koch, A. vulgaris L., Epilobium franciscanum Barbey, Galium album Mill. subsp. album, Petunia a
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Byalt, Vyacheslav V., Alexander A. Egorov, Elena V. Pismarkina, and Olga V. Galanina. "Additions to the flora of northern Asia: alien vascular plant records in the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous District (Russia)." Check List 16, no. (1) (2020): 137–53. https://doi.org/10.15560/16.1.137.

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The north of Western Siberia has seen intensive economic development. Exploration and mining for mineral resources, active road and pipeline construction, urban development, and agriculture favor invasion and dispersal of alien plant species across the Subarctic region. The paper reports new records for eight alien species and hybrids previously unknown from northwest Siberia and the flora of northern Asia: <em>Alopecurus geniculatus </em>L., <em>Anthyllis vulneraria </em>L. subsp. <em>vulneraria</em>, <em>Aquilegia atrata </em>W.D.J. Koch, <em>A. vulgaris </em>L., <em>Epilobium franciscanum <
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Marinas, A., R. García-González, and M. Fondevila. "The nutritive value of five pasture species occurring in the summer grazing ranges of the Pyrenees." Animal Science 76, no. 3 (2003): 461–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1357729800058689.

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AbstractFive species of alpine pasture plants from the Pyrenees representing 3 botanical groups: grasses (Festuca eskia, Nardus stricta), forbs (Anthyllis vulneraria, Galium verum) and shrubs (Echinospartum horridum), were collected monthly from June to September and analysed for nitrogen (N) content, cell wall composition, in vitro enzymatic digestibility (DMDe) and volume of gas produced by microbial fermentation. Among the dicotyledenous varieties, A. vulneraria and G. verum showed the highest nutritive value whilst that of E. horridum was low due to high lignin content. Grasses showed mode
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Lodetti, Silvano, Alessandro Petraglia, Marcello Tomaselli, et al. "Expansion of nutrient-demanding plant species in high mountains as a consequence of Climate Change: recent evidence in the N-Apennines, Italy (SENTINEL PRIN-MUR project)." ARPHA Conference Abstracts 8 (June 2, 2025): e156864. https://doi.org/10.3897/aca.8.e156864.

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<em>Background</em>Climate change (CC) is regarded as the main factor behind changes in alpine vascular plant assemblages (Gottfried et al. 2012, Pauli et al. 2012). In the alpine life zone, a shift in the floristic composition is often a consequence of upward species migration and local loss (Pauli et al. 2012). Moreover, local changes in abundance have led to species' distribution ranges expanding or retracting (Staude et al. 2022), resulting in a shift towards more nutrient- and warm-demanding plant assemblages as well as drought-adapted vegetation types (Liberati et al. 2019, Gottfried et
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Book chapters on the topic "Anthyllis vulneraria species complex"

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Bihanic, Camille, Martine Hossaert, Claire M. Grison, and Claude Grison. "Ecology: Ecosystem Conservation and Restoration as the Starting Point of Ecocatalysis." In Ecocatalysis. Royal Society of Chemistry, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1039/978837672394-00009.

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This chapter is dedicated to the starting point of ecocatalysis: the conservation and restoration of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. An assessment of the phytoremediation programmes conducted by the Grison group in the last two decades is presented here. Pioneering endemic plant species, such as Noccaea caerulescens, Anthyllis vulneraria, Geissois pruinosa and various species of Grevillea, have been reintroduced on large-scale open fields in severely degraded areas of South of France and New Caledonia for removal of trace elements (mainly Zn, Ni and Mn) by phytoextraction. Aquatic plant sp
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