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dc.rights.licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ve/
dc.contributor.authorOliveros Bastidas, Albertoes_VE
dc.contributor.authorAlonso Amelot, Migueles_VE
dc.contributor.authorCalcagno P., María Píaes_VE
dc.contributor.authorArellano, Elidaes_VE
dc.date2005-07-01es_VE
dc.date.accessioned2005-07-01T09:00:00Z
dc.date.available2005-07-01T09:00:00Z
dc.date.created2001-01-01es_VE
dc.date.issued2005-07-01T09:00:00Zes_VE
dc.identifier.otherT016300002002/0es_VE
dc.identifier.urihttp://www.saber.ula.ve/handle/123456789/16806
dc.description.abstractBracken adaptation mechanisms and xenobiotic chemistry (Alonso Amelot, Miguel; Oliveros, Alberto; Calcagno Pisarelli, María Pía and Arellano, Elida) Abstract As opposed to animals, plants have to cope with the resources, environmental restrictions, herbivores, and pathogens they find in the particular spot where they are bound to grow. Hence, resource sequestration, predation and competition relationships, and adaptation to various sources of other environmental stresses and their seasonal variation must be flexible enough to ensure survival and successful reproduction. Plants express this fitness by a combination of biological traits and chemical arsenals which operate under the reign of a genome of considerable plasticity. For the great majority of plants it is either the biological characters or the chemical composition that are explored independently to understand their fitness. But only in a few instances is the combination of these two avenues examined jointly. The extensive studies on the ecology, chemistry, and toxicology of bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) make this fern one of the few examples where a reasonable explanation for its extraordinary success is beginning to emerge by the combined perception of these two most important aspects of plant life. It is the purpose of this article to briefly review how the sum of biological and chemical traits cooperates to make of bracken one of the five most pernicious weeds in the world today. © 2001 IUPAC Pure Appl. Chem., Vol. 73, No. 3, pp. 549-553, 2001 Lecture presented at the 22nd IUPAC International Symposium on the Chemistry of Natural Products, São Carlos, Brazil, 3-8, September 2000. Other presentations are published in this issue, pp. 549-626.es_VE
dc.format.extent45140es_VE
dc.language.isoeses_VE
dc.publisherSABER ULAes_VE
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subjectGrupo de Química Ecológicaes_VE
dc.titleBracken adaptation mechanisms and xenobiotic chemistry.es_VE
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.description.emailaloliver@ula.vees_VE
dc.description.emailalonso@ula.vees_VE
dc.description.emailmariapia@ula.vees_VE
dc.description.tiponivelNivel monográficoes_VE
dc.subject.departamentoDepartamento de Químicaes_VE
dc.subject.escuelaEscuela de Ciencias.es_VE
dc.subject.facultadFacultad de Ciencias.es_VE
dc.subject.keywordsBrackenes_VE
dc.subject.keywordsPteridiumes_VE
dc.subject.keywordsXenobiotices_VE
dc.subject.keywordsAdaptationes_VE
dc.subject.tipoArtículoses_VE


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