Publications by authors named "R M S Isaias"

Andean ecosystems are characterized by high humidity, mainly from rain and fog events. Because of differences in altitude two Andean ecosystems - sub-Andean forest and Páramo -face different environmental pressures that affect leaf anatomy and cell wall composition and, consequently, species foliar water uptake (FWU) capacity. Here, FWU capacity of eight species in the Melastomataceae was evaluated and found to be related to proportions of cell wall components and aquaporins in the two ecosystems.

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Article Synopsis
  • The adaptive behavior of galler organisms is influenced by nutrition, microenvironment, and enemy interactions, with soil characteristics playing a key role in these dynamics.
  • Previous research primarily focused on nitrogen and carbon, but new insights emphasize the significance of other elements, particularly iron, in gall development, physiology, and nutrition.
  • Understanding the interplay between soil attributes and plant traits is crucial to comprehending plant-herbivore interactions and the resulting diversity of galls, especially in iron-rich soils.
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Alterations in cell wall composition imply in new structural and functional traits in gall developmental sites, even when the inducer is a sucking exophytophagous insect with strict feeding sites as the aphid associated to Malus domestica Borkh. This host plant is an economically important, fruit-bearing species, susceptible to gall induction by the sucking aphid Eriosoma lanigerum Hausmann, 1802. Herein, the immunocytochemical detection of arabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs), pectins, and hemicelluloses using monoclonal antibodies was performed in samples of non-galled roots and stems, and of root and stem galls on M.

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Gall anatomical and metabolic peculiarities are determined by the feeding habit of the gall inducer, but develop under the constraints of the host plants. The chewing habit of the Lepidoptera larvae imposes a high impact on the host plant cells, and supposedly drives peculiar structural and histochemical patterns. So, our starting point was the search of such patterns in literature, and the test of these traits on the Andescecidium parrai (Cecidosidae)-Schinus polygama (Anacardiaceae) system, as a case study in Chilean flora.

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Gall cytological and histochemical features established by the constant feeding activity of the associated gall inducer may be changed due to the attack of parasitoids. We accessed two tri-trophic systems involving the globoid bivalve-shaped gall on Mimosa gemmulata Barneby (Fabaceae) and its galling undescribed species of Lopesia (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), which may be ectoparasitized by Torymus sp. (Hymenoptera: Torymidae) or endoparasitized by a polyembryonic Platygastridae (Hymenoptera), as models of study.

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