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3.
Science ; 208(4443): 492-3, 1980 May 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17744556
4.
Science ; 202(4373): 1183-6, 1978 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17735402

RESUMO

Direct and indirect carbon fluxes in lakes Marion (British Columbia), Findley (Washington), Wingra (Wisconsin), and Mirror (New Hampshire) are compared, using budgets and input-output analysis. Overall differences in carbon flow between the lakes are shown with cycling indices of .031, .108, .572, and .661, respectively. The results suggest that lake ecosystems may be considered unique aggregatins of similar components.

5.
Radiat Environ Biophys ; 15(2): 141-65, 1978 Aug 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-724980

RESUMO

Working from the general postulate that natural selection of plant form operates so as to maximize the survival potential of a species, this paper examines the hypothesis that the mechanical support of tree foliage must approach optimality in the use of wood, i.e., that tree stems and branches will have "optimal form" with respect to the amount of support tissue. Mathematical models of bole and branch form are presented, based on the proposition that either wind or gravity are the primary limiting factors for tree size and shape. Predictions of trunk and branch diameter as a function of tree size were tested with dimensional measurements of Populus tremuloides. The individual stems were selected from close-grown stands of differing ages. For small and intermediate trees, trunk diameter is such that stems have only 1.6 times as much wood as the minimum required to keep the tree from buckling under its own weight due to elastic instability. Branch diameters are shown to be close to the minimum required to maintain the spatial position of growing branches, as well as withstand wind forces. This minimal branch cost not only reduces the load which the stem must support against elastic instability, but allows the crown to flex in high winds. The flexing, in turn, reduces the drag force exerted by the wind on the trunk. Thus, the hypothesis that the observed tree form is an optimal design cannot be rejected on the basis of these results. Additional studies are planned with respect to optimal foliage distribution.


Assuntos
Árvores/anatomia & histologia , Ecologia , Modelos Biológicos , Estresse Mecânico , Vento
7.
8.
Science ; 152(3723): 771-3, 1966 May 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17797449

RESUMO

A common test for the presence of toxic organic substances in plant tissues, and therefore of the potential role of antibiosis (specifically allelopathy) in native plant cozmmunities, has been to apply a water extract of the tissues in germination tests of cultivated annuals. The observed osmotic pressure of the extracts can be high, and sucrose solutions of similar osmotic pressure result in a depression of germnination and early development. Thus in the aforementioned type of test, extracts must be diluted to an osmotic pressure no greater than 0.5 atmopheres.

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