The following question is addressed here: do healthy leaves absorb, as the spectra published over the last 50 years indicate, some 5-20% of incident radiation in the 780-900 nm region? The answer is found to be negative, and previous findings result from incomplete collection of the transmitted light by the detection system (even when the leaf is placed next to, but outside, the entrance port of an integrating sphere). A simple remedy for this inherent flaw in the experimental arrangement is applied successfully to leaves (of 10 unrelated species) differing in thickness, age and pigment content. The study has shown that, from an optical standpoint, a leaf tissue is a highly scattering material, and the infinite reflectance of a leaf is exceedingly sensitive to trace amounts of absorbing components. It is shown that water contributes, in a thick leaf (Kalanchoe blossfeldiana), an easily detectable signal even in the 780-900 nm region. The practical benefits resulting from improved measurements of leaf spectra are pointed out.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1019823303951 | DOI Listing |
Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol
March 2013
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University,Bangkok, Thailand.
The mechanisms by which the hexane extract of Curcuma comosa increases femoral blood flow (FBF) in ovariectomized rats are not known. Thus, the aim of the present study was to investigate the acute effects and modes of action of the diarylheptanoid (3R)-1,7-diphenyl-(4E,6E)-4,6-heptadien-3-ol (D3), a phyto-oestrogen isolated from C. comosa, on FBF in ovariectomized rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Surg Oncol
October 2012
Department of Gynecologic Oncology, AC Camargo Cancer Hospital, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Objectives: Analyze morbidity, mortality and prognostic factors after pelvic exenteration (PE) for gynecological malignancies.
Methods: We reviewed a series of 107 individuals who underwent PE at A.C.
Photosynth Res
January 2002
Department of Cell Physiology and Immunology, Faculty of Biology, Moscow State University, 119899 GSP, Moscow W-234, Russia.
The following question is addressed here: do healthy leaves absorb, as the spectra published over the last 50 years indicate, some 5-20% of incident radiation in the 780-900 nm region? The answer is found to be negative, and previous findings result from incomplete collection of the transmitted light by the detection system (even when the leaf is placed next to, but outside, the entrance port of an integrating sphere). A simple remedy for this inherent flaw in the experimental arrangement is applied successfully to leaves (of 10 unrelated species) differing in thickness, age and pigment content. The study has shown that, from an optical standpoint, a leaf tissue is a highly scattering material, and the infinite reflectance of a leaf is exceedingly sensitive to trace amounts of absorbing components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied 513 males, permanently living in the high-mountain regions of Tian Shan and the Pamirs (2800 - 4000 m above sea level). A control group consisted of 404 males permanently living at low altitudes (780-900 m above sea level) in the Kemin District, Kirghiz SSR. The probands' ages were 30-59 years.
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