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Biblioteca(s):  Embrapa Milho e Sorgo.
Data corrente:  25/07/2012
Data da última atualização:  28/09/2017
Tipo da produção científica:  Artigo em Periódico Indexado
Autoria:  DUARTE, N. de F.; KARAM, D.; BUCEK, E. U.; MUZZI, M. R. S.
Afiliação:  DECIO KARAM, CNPMS.
Título:  Tolerance of Anadenanthera peregrina to Eucalyptus camaldulensis and Eucalyptus grandis essential oil as condition for mixed plantation.
Ano de publicação:  2012
Fonte/Imprenta:  Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology, Curitiba, v. 55, n. 3, p. 417-424, maio 2012.
DOI:  10.1590/S1516-89132012000300013
Idioma:  Inglês
Conteúdo:  With the purpose of selecting the species of woody Caatinga for mixed plantations with Eucalyptus spp., the allelophatic effects of E. camaldulensis and E. grandis essential oil were studied on the growth activities of Anadenanthera peregrina. The plants were closed in glass chambers in the presence of volatile oil of E. camaldulensis or E. grandis at the concentration of 13 nl.cm-3. The number of leaves, height and diameter at soil lever were compared before, immediately after and after 30 days. Chlorophyll a and b, carotenoids and dry mass were evaluated after the treatment application. There was no inhibitory effect of E. camaldulensis and E. grandis oils on A. peregrina. E. camaldulensis, which was more adapted to semi-arid conditions, was planted in mixture stands with two native legume species, inoculated with Rhizobium and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. E. camaldulensis did not inhibit native species growth after two years of cultivation.
Palavras-Chave:  Angico.
Thesagro:  Caatinga.
Categoria do assunto:  --
URL:  https://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/bitstream/doc/929225/1/ToleranceAnadenanthera.pdf
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Registro original:  Embrapa Milho e Sorgo (CNPMS)
Biblioteca ID Origem Tipo/Formato Classificação Cutter Registro Volume Status URL
CNPMS24516 - 1UPCAP - DD
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Biblioteca(s):  Embrapa Florestas.
Data corrente:  19/09/2008
Data da última atualização:  19/09/2008
Autoria:  HASSALL, M.; WARD, N.
Título:  Effects of climate change on faunal stimulation of CO2 emissions from soils.
Ano de publicação:  2008
Fonte/Imprenta:  In: INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON SOIL ZOOLOGY, 15; INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM ON APTERYGOTA, 12., 2008, Curitiba. Biodiversity, conservation and sustainabele management of soil animal: abstracts. Colombo: Embrapa Florestas. Editors: George Gardner Brown; Klaus Dieter Sautter; Renato Marques; Amarildo Pasini. 1 CD-ROM.
Idioma:  Inglês
Conteúdo:  Ten times as much CO2 is currently emitted from the world?s soils as from all anthropogenic sources combined. It follows that a 1% change in CO2 output from soils would have a greater effect on atmospheric concentrations than the all the changes proposed in the Kyoto protocol combined together. The potential for positive feedback resulting from increased microbial metabolism in the soil resulting from climate change is very high but changes in soil metabolism are also the least well understood part of how the whole global C cycle will respond to the effects of climate change. What is known, as a result of decades of Soil Zoology, is that microbial activity is strongly regulated by soil animals (Hassall et al. 2006), partly because of the ?Sleeping Beauty paradox? (Lavelle et al 1995). If the faunal regulators are affected differently to the microbes by climate change then predictions from current models of the global carbon cycle are likely to be erroneous. The life cycles, metabolic pathways, ecology and physiology of animals are so different to those of microbes they are very unlikely to respond in the same way, particularly to future changes in precipitation, which in many regions is predicted to involve both changes in both intensity and periodicity. Soil animals will respond to these changes by alterations in the trade-off between times spent feeding and sheltering, the degree to which they aggregate, their life histories and population processes. Particularly good arth... Mostrar Tudo
Categoria do assunto:  --
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Registro original:  Embrapa Florestas (CNPF)
Biblioteca ID Origem Tipo/Formato Classificação Cutter Registro Volume Status
CNPF43636 - 1UPEPL - --CD0305
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