From avijit_bio from yahoo.com Sat Mar 1 05:27:47 2008 From: avijit_bio from yahoo.com (Avijit Das) Date: Sat Mar 1 12:42:37 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] (no subject) Message-ID: <682815.80740.qm@web50808.mail.re2.yahoo.com> My E. coli DH5a culture not seems to be the right one. Can any body send me a pure culture of this strain? Thanks. Dr. Avijit Das Division of Biochemistry Central Rice Research Institute PO: CRRI, Cuttack-753006, Orissa INDIA --------------------------------- Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your homepage. From miller_nospam_eric from bellsouth.net Sat Mar 8 22:17:56 2008 From: miller_nospam_eric from bellsouth.net (Eric Miller) Date: Sun Mar 9 15:15:13 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Shrub ID sought Message-ID: Can anyone ID the shrubs pictured at the following link? http://www.dyesscreek.com/hidden_pages/030908.html TIA, Eric Miller www.colibrihotsauce.com From kheron from gmail.com Tue Mar 11 19:07:32 2008 From: kheron from gmail.com (Karen) Date: Wed Mar 12 12:44:33 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Plantbio Digest, Vol 34, Issue 2 RE PLANT ID SOUGHT Message-ID: <257688da0803111707y23fa0d84rdfe61b313d8aff24@mail.gmail.com> I think it looks like an Embothrium http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embothrium Karen On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 5:06 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. Shrub ID sought (Eric Miller) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Sat, 08 Mar 2008 21:17:56 -0600 > From: Eric Miller > Subject: [Plant-biology] Shrub ID sought > To: plantbio@net.bio.net > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > > Can anyone ID the shrubs pictured at the following link? > > http://www.dyesscreek.com/hidden_pages/030908.html > > TIA, > > Eric Miller > www.colibrihotsauce.com > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Plantbio mailing list > Plantbio@net.bio.net > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/plantbio > > End of Plantbio Digest, Vol 34, Issue 2 > *************************************** > From monique from mail.bio.tamu.edu Thu Mar 13 08:58:09 2008 From: monique from mail.bio.tamu.edu (monique) Date: Thu Mar 13 12:50:20 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: Shrub ID sought In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Eric Miller wrote: > Can anyone ID the shrubs pictured at the following link? > > http://www.dyesscreek.com/hidden_pages/030908.html > > TIA, > > Eric Miller > www.colibrihotsauce.com Is this not a pomegranate? M. Reed From agbiok4 from gmail.com Fri Mar 14 01:37:28 2008 From: agbiok4 from gmail.com (kamalaker nasani) Date: Fri Mar 14 09:51:30 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] tissue culture Message-ID: Good morning, I am working on Okra(Ablemoschus esculantus) ladies finger tissue culture. I am not getting any regeneration other than the meristematic region. Please help me if anybody there related to this. If anybody knows regarding the meristematic gene transformation please share your experience. -- URS Kamalaker Nasani -- 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 brewhaha from freenet.edmonton.ab.ca Mon Mar 17 03:25:05 2008 From: brewhaha from freenet.edmonton.ab.ca (Ded Objekts In Veevoh) Date: Mon Mar 17 12:00:37 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: (no subject) References: Message-ID: On Mar 1, 4:27?am, Avijit Das wrote: > My E. coli DH5a culture not seems to be the right one. Can any body send me a pure culture of this strain? > ? Thanks. > ? Dr. Avijit Das > ? Division of Biochemistry > ? Central Rice Research Institute > ? PO: CRRI, Cuttack-753006, Orissa > ? INDIA > > --------------------------------- > Never miss a thing. ? Make Yahoo your homepage. Pure cultures of anything are rather difficult. I think Pasteur said something to the effect that microbes tend to suit the medium. IOW, if you start from E. coli and strain the medium in various ways (starting with 5mL of the last batch), then you'll end up with something that only resembles E. coli. Different genes express in different media, and of course natural selection will kill jerms that don't express the right genes. Pure? Start from one microbe in a rich growth medium. So, the question is what do you want it for? Are you prepared to strain the medium yourself? From a.ordelman from agripartner.nl Tue Mar 18 07:46:19 2008 From: a.ordelman from agripartner.nl (a.ordelman@agripartner.nl) Date: Tue Mar 18 10:09:30 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: breeding software References: Message-ID: On 3 feb, 21:55, HALDUN CEYHAN wrote: > Dear All, > > Do you know any simple software for plant breeding, assist to breeder. > If yes, can you inform please? > > Kind Regards > Haldun Hello Haldun, Please take a look at http://www.e-brida.com/home-en.aspx Best regards Ad From moradi1360 from gmail.com Sun Mar 23 16:53:30 2008 From: moradi1360 from gmail.com (babak m) Date: Mon Mar 24 12:38:51 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] question Message-ID: >-----Original Message----- I am Babak Moradi educated student of Plant Physiology from University of Tehran. I live in western part of Iran, Ilam province. Here is one of mountainous part of the country. Zagros Mountains are extended here. There are so many plant species, which live here. It is oak (Quercus spp.) dominant plant species on the mountains. There is something interesting which happen on these wild trees. The oak s fruits secrete some sweet compounds namely Shooka on their sides that visually are white and sugarlike. People who live here extract these compounds and use them as a sweet thing using in their regimes. This phenomenon has eight to ten years cycle. Unfortunately, I do not have enough equipment to determine their entity, but I guess it could be sucrose. I have some question based on this information. Why these plants do this? With regard to its long period what can be the advantage of this phenomenon for the plant? What factors can be the effectors of this phenominon? Dear Mr. Moradi: Your message to Plant Physiology was forwarded to me. I'm afraid we can't help you with your questions. However, there is a group that you might wish to look into that has a mailing list where people post questions. I'm not sure what the requirements are to join, but here is the information: Plantbio mailing list Plantbio@net.bio.net http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/plantbio Good luck. Nancy Winchester Director of Publications From aaaaaaaa from aaaaaa.com Thu Mar 27 02:21:45 2008 From: aaaaaaaa from aaaaaa.com (Marco Achury) Date: Thu Mar 27 13:24:36 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Re: question References: Message-ID: babak m escribi?: >> -----Original Message----- > > > I am Babak Moradi educated student of Plant Physiology from University > of Tehran. I live in western part of Iran, Ilam province. Here is one > of > mountainous part of the country. Zagros Mountains are extended here. > There are so many plant species, which live here. It is oak (Quercus > spp.) dominant plant species on the mountains. > There is something interesting which happen on these wild trees. The > oak > s fruits secrete some sweet compounds namely Shooka on their sides that > visually are white and sugarlike. People who live here extract these > compounds and use them as a sweet thing using in their regimes. This > phenomenon has eight to ten years cycle. Unfortunately, I do not have > enough equipment to determine their entity, but I guess it could be > sucrose. > I have some question based on this information. > Why these plants do this? > With regard to its long period what can be the advantage of this > phenomenon for the plant? > What factors can be the effectors of this phenominon? > If you have register of the cycles you can compare with climate data. Rains, temp, and other factors. Ten years cicle sound like solar storms cycle!!! If not correlation with wheater, may be you can try to reproduce the phenomen with UV and other radiation exposure. Marco Antonio Achury Caracas, Venezuela From antispam from antispam.com Fri Mar 28 20:30:29 2008 From: antispam from antispam.com (Antonio Palma) Date: Sat Mar 29 12:59:58 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] OT Hummimbird bait Re: Shrub ID sought References: Message-ID: Eric Miller escribi?: > Can anyone ID the shrubs pictured at the following link? > > http://www.dyesscreek.com/hidden_pages/030908.html > > TIA, > > Eric Miller > www.colibrihotsauce.com > From - Fri Very nice web site. What do you use as bait for the colibri. Commercial pre-formulated mix? Sugar - water? Honey - water? -- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Antonio Palma Caracas, Venezuela From sferox from gmail.com Mon Mar 31 00:39:30 2008 From: sferox from gmail.com (Satzan Subedi) Date: Mon Mar 31 13:04:34 2008 Subject: [Plant-biology] Help for the articles Message-ID: <4f3d9eda0803302239k3a2cdbe9i338ed8f7aafb9056@mail.gmail.com> Dear All, I am enrolling Ph.D in climate change from Tribhubhan University Nepal. I am going to analyze the vegetation of the ecotones in the alpine region using the GLORIA methodology and reconstructing the climate of the eastern Himalaya using dendro-chronological tools. In this regard, I am needing the literatures related to impact of climate change on vegetation and the dendrochronological research related with climate change. I humbly request you all to provide me support if you have any articles on these matters. I have very limited access to the electronic journals and beyond my reach as they are very costly to purchase. I want to clear that I am needing these articles purely for academic review purpose, not for sale or any kind of dissemination. Regards, Sajan Subedi Nepal