Academic literature on the topic 'Typha orientalis'

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Journal articles on the topic "Typha orientalis"

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Xu, Yi Xin, Hua Yong Zhang, Zong Han Li, Fei Li, and Xiang Xu. "Assessing the Eutrophication Status of Qixing Wetland and the Effect of Plants." Advanced Materials Research 807-809 (September 2013): 1870–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.807-809.1870.

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The comprehensive trophic level index has been applied to assess eutrophication status of QiXing Wetland. The five subzones of QiXing Wetland with different vegetation pattern have different eutrophication status. The comprehensive trophic level index is mainly affected by TN and TP at high concentration of nitrogen and phosphorus. Therefore, the plant communities can significantly influence on eutrophication status of the wetland through removing nitrogen and phosphorus in water. Three mainly dominant plants in wetland are Phragmites australis, Nelumbo nucifera and Typha orientalis Presl. The ability to remove nitrogen and phosphorus of these three plant communities were investigated. Typha orientalis Presl community has the maximum efficiency in removing nitrogen and phosphorus in water. Therefore, Typha orientalis Presl is more suitable for the purification of the water.
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Lu, Min, Zhen Guo, and Dong He Li. "Purification Efficiency of Several Constructed Wetland Plants in COD Disposal in Domestic Sewage." Advanced Materials Research 518-523 (May 2012): 2690–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.518-523.2690.

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The research on the species selection of constructed wetland plants and the purification effects of the plants is crucial in ecological wastewater treatment technology. This paper studies the purification effects of different residence time of sewage water, different constructed wetland plants and their synergistic effect on COD disposal in domestic sewage. The results indicate that the best plant combination in purifying COD is that of Phragmites communis, Typha orientalis and Canna generalis, followed by that of Phragmites communis, Arundo donax and Canna generalis. The best plant species in purifying COD is Typha orientalis, followed by Phragmites communis.
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Xu, X. Y., Y. Y. Hou, Y. K. Xu, Y. Ji, and Y. G. Jin. "Responses of Typha orientalis Roots to Pb2+ Stress." Russian Journal of Plant Physiology 65, no. 4 (July 2018): 563–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1134/s1021443718040180.

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Ganie, Aijaz Hassan, A. R. Dar, Mehboob Ashraf, and Zafar A. Reshi. "Typha orientalis Presl (Typhaceae): a new species record for India." Check List 11, no. 2 (February 2, 2015): 1567. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/11.2.1567.

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Typha orientalis C. Presl (Typhaceae) is recorded for the first time from the Kashmir Himalaya, India.and for the first time in the entire Indian sub-continent. A detailed taxonomic description and photographs of the diagnostic characters are provided to facilitate its identification in the field. Also provided are diagnostic characters used to distinguish T. orientalis C. Presl from T. latifolia L.
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Wang, Yangyang, Ningqing Lv, Xuhui Mao, Zheng Yan, Jinsheng Wang, Wenbing Tan, Xiang Li, Hui Liu, Lei Wang, and Beidou Xi. "Cadmium tolerance and accumulation characteristics of wetland emergent plants under hydroponic conditions." RSC Advances 8, no. 58 (2018): 33383–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra04015j.

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Four kinds of wetland emergent plants (Iris sibirica L., Acorus calamus L., Typha orientalis Presl and Cyperus alternifolius L.) were investigated for their cadmium tolerance and accumulation characteristics under hydroponic conditions.
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Lin, Yang, Yunan Jiao, Meifang Zhao, Guangjun Wang, Deming Wang, Wei Xiao, Huajun Li, Zhuo Xu, and Yuqi Jiang. "Ecological Restoration of Wetland Polluted by Heavy Metals in Xiangtan Manganese Mine Area." Processes 9, no. 10 (September 23, 2021): 1702. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pr9101702.

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Due to manganese mining and slag accumulation, the geological structure of the wetland polluted by heavy metals in Xiangtan Manganese Mine area was seriously damaged, hence biodiversity loss, severe soil, and water pollution, as well as serious heavy metal pollution to food, vegetables, and other natural sources. In order to restore the ecological environment of the mining area, in 2015, the ecological restoration test of heavy metal polluted wetlands in the mining area was carried out. The results showed that the Mn content of different parts of Koelreuteria paniculata root from high to low order: fine root > small root > medium root > large root. The Mn content of different parts of Elaeocarpus decipiens root from high to low order: large root > medium root > small root > fine root. The order of Mn content in plants of the wetland restoration from high to low is as follows: Canna warscewiezii > Thalia dealbata > Boehmeria > Pontederia cordata > Typha orientalis > Nerium oleander > Softstem bulrush > Iris germanica > Acorus calamus > Arundo donax > Phragmites australis; The order of Internal Cu content from high to low is as follows: Acorus calamus > Thalia dealbata > Softstem bulrush > Canna warscewiezii > Typha orientalis > Arundo donax > Boehmeria > Iris germanica > Pontederia cordata > Nerium oleander > Phragmites australis; Zn content from high to low order is as follows: Canna warscewiezii > Acorus calamus > Thalia dealbata > Typha orientalis > Pontederia cordata > Arundo donax > Softstem bulrush > Iris germanica > Boehmeria > Phragmites australis > Nerium oleander; Cd content from high to low order is as follows: Phragmites australis > Softstem bulrush > Thalia dealbata > Nerium oleander > Boehmeria > Canna warscewiezii > Acorus calamus > Iris germanica > Typha orientalis > Pontederia cordata > Arundo donax. The results of this study have provided a theoretical basis and decision-making reference for the evaluation of heavy metals polluted wetland restoration, protection, and reconstruction effects and the selection of ecological restoration modes.
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Seun Olade, Oladipupo, Adewoye Olanipekun, and Samuel Olatunde D. "Municipal Runoff Remediation Using Typha orientalis and Sorghum arundinaceum." Journal of Environmental Science and Technology 12, no. 1 (December 15, 2018): 47–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.3923/jest.2019.47.54.

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Roberts, J., and GG Ganf. "Annual production of Typha orientalis Presl. in inland Australia." Marine and Freshwater Research 37, no. 5 (1986): 659. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf9860659.

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The annual aboveground production of T. orientalis was estimated from harvest data by three techniques. The first calculated production as the difference between maximum and minimum standing crop and gave a value of 1175 g m-2. Demographic data showed this was an underestimate. The second estimate by Smalley's method of 3824 g m-2 was considered an overestimate since no account was taken of stand variability. The third estimate, 2334 g m-2, used data fitted by splined regression and was considered the most reliable since it accounted for stand variability, continuous growth, shoot mortality and the translocation of carbon substrate. Annual aboveground production of inland T. orientalis was greater than most estimates from temperate climates, and whole plant production, 4379 g m-2, greatly exceeded the suggested maximum of 3000 g m-2 for freshwater emergent macrophytes.
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Inoue, Tomomi Matsui, and Takayoshi Tsuchiya. "Growth strategy of an emergent macrophyte, Typha orientalis Presl, in comparison with Typha latifolia L. and Typha angustifolia L." Limnology 7, no. 3 (August 28, 2006): 171–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10201-006-0178-9.

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Wu, Aijing, Yongbo Zhang, Xuehua Zhao, Jiamin Li, Guowei Zhang, Hong Shi, Lina Guo, and Shuyuan Xu. "Experimental Study on the Hydroponics of Wetland Plants for the Treatment of Acid Mine Drainage." Sustainability 14, no. 4 (February 14, 2022): 2148. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su14042148.

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Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) has become an important issue due to its significant ecological pollution. In this paper, phytoremediation technology and mechanism for AMD were investigated by hydroponic experiments, using six wetland plants (Phragmites australis, Typha orientalis, Cyperus glomeratus, Scirpus validus, Iris wilsonii, Juncus effusus) as research objects. The results showed that (1) the removal of sulfate from AMD was highest for Juncus effusus (66.78%) and Iris wilsonii (40.74%) and the removal of Mn from AMD was highest for Typha orientalis (>99%) and Phragmites australis (>99%). In addition, considering the growth condition of the plants, Juncus effusus, Iris wilsonii, and Phragmites australis were finally selected as the dominant plants for the treatment of AMD. (2) The removal pathway of pollutants in AMD included two aspects: one part was absorbed by plants, and the other part was removed through hydrolysis and precipitation processes. Our findings provide a theoretical reference for phytoremediation technology for AMD.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Typha orientalis"

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Njume, Collise. "Bioactive Components of Australian Native Plant species and their Potential Antidiabetic Application within the Indigenous Community." Thesis, 2020. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/41825/.

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Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), driven by overweight and obesity linked to unhealthy diets, is the fastest-growing non-communicable disease in Australia. Considering that food is an important parameter in the regulation of blood glucose response, replacing ‘junk food’ with products that are good regulators of postprandial blood glucose (PPG) may go a long way to reduce the rate of T2DM in Australia. This study was designed to develop new food products that have the potential for use as nutritional preventatives against escalating levels of T2DM within the Australian Indigenous community. Edible portions of eight Australian native plant species namely; Leucopogon parviflorus, Arthropodium strictum, Carpobrotus rossii, Rhagodia candolleana, Typha orientalis, Correa alba, Dianella revoluta and Acacia longifolia were collected from the coast of Warrnambool, Victoria Australia. The plant species were analysed for proximate, minerals, fatty acids and phenolic composition following the methods of the Association of Official Analytical Chemistry (AOAC), Inductively Coupled Plasma Spectometry (ICP), High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and gas chromatography/Mass spectrometry analysis (GCMS). Plant species that exhibited significantly high amounts of nutrients, antioxidants and antidiabetic polyphenols were selected for development of potential antidiabetic food preventatives. The developed food products (Acabungi flakes and crackers) were evaluated for acceptability and the cracker was further studied for stability and microbiological load. Its Glycaemic index (GI) was estimated by in-vitro enzymatic starch hydrolysis. All eight plant species were found to be sources of carbohydrates (39.7 - 65.5%), proteins (2.6 - 15.1%), fats (1 - 14.3%), total dietary fibre (1.5 - 17.2%) and contained Ca, Mg, Na and K. The species exhibited consistent antioxidant activity with phyto-components of gallic acid (GA), epigallocatechin (EPC), catechin (CH), epigallocatechingallate (EPG), dihydroquinidine (DHQ), ρ-coumaric acid (PCA) and luteolin (LT). The betacyanin, betanidin 5-O-β-glucoside (BT) was detected in R. candolleana (700 mg/kg) and C. rossi (244 mg/kg) while the alkaloid, Dihydroquinidine (DHQ) was detected in D. revoluta (101 ± 5.7 mg/kg) and T. orientalis (17 ± 7.1 mg/kg). However, not all the compounds were isolated from a single plant species and except for BT, higher quantities of components were extractable in methanol than water (P<0.05). Palmitic, oleic and linoleic acids were the dominant of 10 fatty acids detected in the native species with record quantities of 4.2 - 39%, 12.3 - 39% and <0.5 - 44% respectively. No single species had all 10 fatty acids. The cracker, with a record overall consumer acceptability of 70.5% remained stable and unchanged with no microbial growth after 35-days storage at room temperature under light and in the dark. The cracker contained significant amounts of total dietary fiber, proteins, complex carbohydrates and exhibited a low GI of 47.7. R. candolleana and A. longifolia were found to have high contents of betanin and linoleic acid respectively, two components with potentially wide industrial application. Further studies to determine the antidiabetic mechanism of action of the cracker would shed more light on its potential application.
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Book chapters on the topic "Typha orientalis"

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Lim, T. K. "Typha orientalis." In Edible Medicinal and Non Medicinal Plants, 788–91. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-8748-2_66.

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Liu, Bo, and Rainer W. Bussmann. "Typha orientalis C. Presl Typhaceae." In Ethnobotany of the Mountain Regions of Central Asia and Altai, 1–6. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77087-1_145-1.

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Liu, Bo, and Rainer W. Bussmann. "Typha orientalis C. Presl Typhaceae." In Ethnobotany of the Mountain Regions of Central Asia and Altai, 805–9. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28947-8_145.

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