From peter from eblen.com.au Tue Jan 1 18:23:09 2008 From: peter from eblen.com.au (Peter Eblen) Date: Wed Jan 2 13:04:46 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Staghorn fern Message-ID: <044B56527A646B4F92E9335FE9A6806D707D29@SERVER.EblenSubaru.local> Pierre I have a stag horn that was left to me by my late father. It would be at least 25 years old and measures about 1 metre square. I have remounted it onto a timber board several times in the past 15 years, however it is too large and heavy to remain sustainable. As a consequence it has fallen off the board, or the board has rotted and the whole thing has come tumbling off the wall. If possible I would like to rejuvenate the poor old thing and dissect it into smaller plants, one for each of my 3 children. I have no gardening ability however this is something of sentimental importance. I would very much appreciate some advice. Regards Peter Peter J Eblen Dealer Principal Eblens at Glenelg. Subaru 114 Brighton Rd Glenelg South Australia 5045 Australia +618 8350 7777 Eblens at Angaston. Subaru and Suzuki 71 Murray St. Angaston 5353 South Australia Australia +618 85613700 dealerprincipal@eblen.com.au Mobile: 0418827830 From LLmen from wi.rr.com Sun Jan 13 20:43:28 2008 From: LLmen from wi.rr.com (Don Martinson) Date: Mon Jan 14 12:55:59 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Thladiantha dubia seed Message-ID: I am looking for seed of Thladiantha dubia or other Asian cucurbits, preferably caudiciform. Please reply to: mumtaz@wi.rr.com Thanks From mhachadourian from nybg.org Tue Jan 15 08:13:31 2008 From: mhachadourian from nybg.org (Hachadourian, Marc) Date: Tue Jan 15 09:44:19 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Sources for Leucocoryne, Moraea, Message-ID: <319FD9EAB7A43E43895ACA5AA1F81E0506B1B9A0@xmail.nybg.org> Dear Levi Mansur I have been interested in your Leucocoryne Breeding project for some time now and was thinking of ordering a quantity of bulbs to have you ship to the US. I went to your website (leucocoryne.cl) and found that it was not working. Are you still growing and producing the Leucocoryne? If so I would be interested in knowing more about the products that you offer. Some time ago I met a man at a conference who was researching the growing of Chlorea (Orchidaceae) for a potential cut flower crop in Chlie. Do you know of this person and whether there was any success with his research. Sincerely Marc Hachadourian Curator of Glasshouse Collections New York Botanical Garden 200th St. and Kazimiroff Blvd. Bronx, New York 10458 phone (718) 817-8044 fax (718) 817-8041 From agbiok4 from gmail.com Thu Jan 24 07:52:47 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Thu Jan 24 12:06:50 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Good morning Message-ID: Respected sir, I am working on plant transformation. Please I want to know the details regarding Agrobacterium strains which useful for Plant transformation along with their antibiotic doses. Thanking you very much. Hope to c the appropriate reply soon. -- URS Kamalaker Nasani "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" -George Bernard Shaw From agbiok4 from gmail.com Thu Jan 24 22:26:14 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Thu Jan 24 23:07:47 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] agrobacterium strains Message-ID: Hi, Any one can help me to get the list of agrobacterium strains used for plant transformation and their host range. -- URS Kamalaker Nasani "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" -George Bernard Shaw From eimert from web.de Fri Jan 25 03:52:08 2008 From: eimert from web.de (Dr. Klaus Eimert) Date: Fri Jan 25 09:38:32 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: agrobacterium strains References: Message-ID: "kamalaker nasani" wrote in news:mailman.346.1201234067.2451.plantbio@net.bio.net: > Hi, > > Any one can help me to get the list of agrobacterium strains used for > plant transformation and their host range. > Hi, their is a nice short review on agro strains, their "history" and their respective plasmids by Roger Hellens and Philip Mullineaux (2000, Trends in Plant Science, vol 5 (10):446-451). If you want to know, whether a certain strain/plasmid will work on "your" species, you'd better search the lit databanks with the species' and the strains names. Good luck, Klaus From agbiok4 from gmail.com Fri Jan 25 22:16:49 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Sat Jan 26 13:13:20 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] thanking you very much Message-ID: thanking you very much to Klaus this information will be sufficient for me -- URS Kamalaker Nasani "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" -George Bernard Shaw From agbiok4 from gmail.com Fri Jan 25 22:22:20 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Sat Jan 26 13:13:26 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] cotton and oakra tissueculture Message-ID: Hi everyone, Anybody working on cotton or Oakra tissueculture and Agrobacterium mediated transformation. Please respond to my request so that we can share our knowledge and ideas and updates. Thanking you very much. -- URS Kamalaker Nasani "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" -George Bernard Shaw From agbiok4 from gmail.com Tue Jan 29 03:30:06 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Tue Jan 29 08:57:56 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] DNA extraction Message-ID: Hi good morning to everyone I have to extract DNA from seeds. I am facing many problems due to fat content. Anybody having protocol for extraction of DNA from high fat content seed protein. Please provide me the details. Thanking you very much -- URS Kamalaker Nasani "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" -George Bernard Shaw From bhuvan.pathak from gmail.com Tue Jan 29 12:16:38 2008 From: bhuvan.pathak from gmail.com (Bhuvaneshwari Pathak) Date: Tue Jan 29 13:02:59 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Plantbio Digest, Vol 32, Issue 7 In-Reply-To: <200801291706.m0TH6nL06913@net.bio.net> References: <200801291706.m0TH6nL06913@net.bio.net> Message-ID: <4f60f91a0801290916w3bcbc7x16eab94373686dfe@mail.gmail.com> Which plant speices you are using? Bhuvan Pathak On Jan 29, 2008 12:06 PM, wrote: > Send Plantbio mailing list submissions to > plantbio@net.bio.net > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/plantbio > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > plantbio-request@net.bio.net > > You can reach the person managing the list at > plantbio-owner@net.bio.net > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of Plantbio digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. DNA extraction (kamalaker nasani) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2008 14:00:06 +0530 > From: "kamalaker nasani" > Subject: [Plant-biology] DNA extraction > To: plantbio@magpie.bio.indiana.edu > Message-ID: > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 > > Hi good morning to everyone > > I have to extract DNA from seeds. I am facing many problems due to fat > content. Anybody having protocol for extraction of DNA from high fat > content seed protein. > > Please provide me the details. > > Thanking you very much > > -- > URS > Kamalaker Nasani > > > > "The illiterate of the 21st Century will not be those > who cannot read or write. The illiterate will be those > who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn" > -George Bernard Shaw > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Plantbio mailing list > Plantbio@net.bio.net > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/plantbio > > End of Plantbio Digest, Vol 32, Issue 7 > *************************************** > -- Bhuvan Pathak, Cancer/ Genetics Institute, University of Florida Room # 330G, PO Box 103610, 1376 Mowry Road Gainesville, FL 32610 USA From bulucanagria from no.where Wed Jan 30 18:11:32 2008 From: bulucanagria from no.where (bulucanagria) Date: Wed Jan 30 18:26:56 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Strange Fungi Message-ID: http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/562324067tCDHJq At least I believe that's what it is. They look like flowers but have no foliage and are growing on an old rotting stump. It's fairly deep down in a steep wooded valley with a stream flowing down the hill from it. It's a very humid, lush area, especially for being located in south central NH. I've always loved these pictures (the second one is my desktop)and would really love to know what these beautiful plants are. Thanks would go to anyone who could enlighten me. Danny Blue My apologies for earlier trying to post photo attachments. The absence of large files should have alerted me to the protocol. From bulucanagria from no.where Wed Jan 30 18:16:19 2008 From: bulucanagria from no.where (bulucanagria) Date: Wed Jan 30 19:42:52 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Strange Fungi References: Message-ID: <1z7oj.75$Xi2.22@newsfe02.lga> If you click 'albums' on that page, you can also open an album of pictures I took at Krohn Conservatory in Cincinnati, Ohio. Some truly wonderful plants there, including spectacular bonsai. I recommend Krohn to anyone who loves plants. Danny Blue "bulucanagria" wrote in message news:xu7oj.73$Xi2.18@newsfe02.lga... > http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/562324067tCDHJq > > At least I believe that's what it is. They look like flowers but have no > foliage and are growing on an old rotting stump. It's fairly deep down in a > steep wooded valley with a stream flowing down the hill from it. It's a very > humid, lush area, especially for being located in south central > NH. I've always loved these pictures (the second one is my > desktop)and would really love to know what these beautiful plants are. > Thanks would go to anyone who could enlighten me. > Danny Blue > > My apologies for earlier trying to post photo attachments. The absence of > large files should have alerted me to the protocol. > > From ladyluna from pa.net Thu Jan 31 12:36:04 2008 From: ladyluna from pa.net (Luna) Date: Thu Jan 31 19:17:08 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re:Strange Fungi In-Reply-To: <200801311706.m0VH6NL08075@net.bio.net> References: <200801311706.m0VH6NL08075@net.bio.net> Message-ID: <6.1.2.0.0.20080131122757.02755ec0@mail.pa.net> At Wed, 30 Jan 2008, "bulucanagria" wrote: >http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/562324067tCDHJq > > would really love to know what these beautiful plants are. >Thanks would go to anyone who could enlighten me. >Danny Blue Danny, The browser on my ancient machine crashed when I tried to look at the photos full-sized, but your "fungi" appear to me to be what is locally known as "ice plant" or "Indian pipe." They're not fungi but a saprophyte. Try doing a search online for images of "Monotropa uniflora" and see if they match your plants. Your description of their microclimate sounds right. They are a lovely sight to behold on a mid to late summer's walk in the deep woods, usually in the vicinity of eastern hemlocks in my experience. Hope this helps Luna (wildcrafting herbalist based in PA, USA) From monique from mail.bio.tamu.edu Thu Jan 31 11:19:37 2008 From: monique from mail.bio.tamu.edu (monique) Date: Thu Jan 31 19:17:22 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Strange Fungi In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Oh, nice find! Indianpipes. Flowering plants in the genus Monotropa. They have no chlorophyll but are thought to be parasitic on fungi (mycotrophic) which are in turn parasitic on trees. Cool, yes? Monique Reed bulucanagria wrote: > http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/562324067tCDHJq > > At least I believe that's what it is. They look like flowers but have no > foliage and are growing on an old rotting stump. It's fairly deep down in a > steep wooded valley with a stream flowing down the hill from it. It's a very > humid, lush area, especially for being located in south central > NH. I've always loved these pictures (the second one is my > desktop)and would really love to know what these beautiful plants are. > Thanks would go to anyone who could enlighten me. > Danny Blue > > My apologies for earlier trying to post photo attachments. The absence of > large files should have alerted me to the protocol. > > From bulucanagria from no.where Thu Jan 31 17:08:20 2008 From: bulucanagria from no.where (bulucanagria) Date: Thu Jan 31 19:17:46 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Strange Fungi References: Message-ID: <%4soj.42$f53.24@newsfe02.lga> Very cool, very beautiful and now named! Thank you. Danny Blue "monique" wrote in message news:fnsseq$jqo$1@news.tamu.edu... > Oh, nice find! Indianpipes. Flowering plants in the genus Monotropa. > They have no chlorophyll but are thought to be parasitic on fungi > (mycotrophic) which are in turn parasitic on trees. Cool, yes? > > Monique Reed > > bulucanagria wrote: > > http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/562324067tCDHJq > > > > At least I believe that's what it is. They look like flowers but have no > > foliage and are growing on an old rotting stump. It's fairly deep down in a > > steep wooded valley with a stream flowing down the hill from it. It's a very > > humid, lush area, especially for being located in south central > > NH. I've always loved these pictures (the second one is my > > desktop)and would really love to know what these beautiful plants are. > > Thanks would go to anyone who could enlighten me. > > Danny Blue > > > > My apologies for earlier trying to post photo attachments. The absence of > > large files should have alerted me to the protocol. > > > >