ABSTRACT: Herbaceous vegetation is more suitable for rapid and efficient soil restoration: an evidence of ecological restoration of quarries in Yanshan Mountains, China
Project description:Herbaceous vegetation is more suitable for rapid and efficient soil restoration an evidence of ecological restoration of quarries in Yanshan Mountains, China
| PRJNA857576 | ENA
Project description:Insect diversity based on metabarcoding in Yanshan Mountains
| PRJNA804856 | ENA
Project description:Ecological restoration
| PRJNA879288 | ENA
Project description:Soil microbiome along karst vegetation restoration
| PRJNA913838 | ENA
Project description:Vegetation restoration influence on soil microbes
| PRJNA778339 | ENA
Project description:Vegetation restoration shifted bacterial community composition
Project description:Cannabis sativa L. is an annual herbaceous crop grown for the production of long extraxylary fibers, the bast fibers, rich in cellulose and used both in the textile and biocomposite sectors. Despite being herbaceous, hemp undergoes secondary growth and this is well exemplified by the hypocotyl. The hypocotyl was already shown to be a suitable model to study secondary growth in other herbaceous species, namely Arabidopsis thaliana and it shows an important practical advantage, i.e. elongation and radial thickening are temporally separated. This study focuses on the mechanisms marking the transition from primary to secondary growth in the hemp hypocotyl by analysing the suite of events accompanying vascular tissue and bast fiber development. RNA-Seq transcriptomics, imaging and quantification of phytohormones were carried out on four representative developmental stages (i.e. 6-9-15-20 days after sowing) to provide a first comprehensive profiling of the events associated with primary and secondary growth in hemp. This multidisciplinary approach provides cell wall-related snapshots of the growing hemp hypocotyl and identifies marker genes associated with the young (expansins, β-galactosidases and transcription factors involved in light-related processes) and the older hypocotyl (secondary cell wall biosynthetic genes and transcription factors).
2016-11-18 | GSE85144 | GEO
Project description:Bacteria are more sensitive than fungi to moisture in eroded soil by natural grass vegetation restoration on the Loess Plateau