C Sun, F Chen, N Teng, Y Xu, Z Dai - Aquatic Botany, 2021 - Elsevier
Although there has been a long history of cultivation and research on Nymphaea, the taxonomic relationships and evolutionary relationships among Nymphaea species remain …
ZH Qian, JM Munywoki, QF Wang, I Malombe, ZZ Li… - Plants, 2022 - mdpi.com
The genus Nymphaea L.(water lily) is the most diverse genus in the family Nymphaeaceae, with more than 50 species worldwide, including 11 species distributed in Africa. The …
The flora of the southwestern Australian biodiversity hotspot is rich in endemic species, many of which remain to be discovered or properly described; estimates of species diversity …
S Yang, X Li, F Huang, Y Huang, X Liu, J Wu, Q Wang… - PLoS …, 2018 - journals.plos.org
The identification of germplasm resources is an important aspect of sugarcane breeding. The aim of this study was to introduce a new method for identifying Saccharum spontaneum …
S Yang, K Zeng, K Chen, J Wu, Q Wang, X Li… - Scientific Reports, 2019 - nature.com
Intergeneric hybrids between Saccharum spp. and Erianthus arundinaceus and clones derived from these hybrids and backcrosses to Saccharum spp. were used to study the …
Hybridisation of alien invasive plants complicates efforts to develop biological control, because variations in the genetic makeup of the target plant can impact the survival of host …
W Song, W Shi, H Wang, Z Zhang, R Tao, J Liu… - Marine Life Science & …, 2024 - Springer
The aquatic plant Nymphaea, a model genus of the early flowering plant lineage Nymphaeales and family Nymphaeaceae, has been extensively studied. However, the …
Although classical biological control makes use of natural enemies from the native range of an invasive alien species, there are occurrences in which species in the invaded range …
Y Huang, X Ji, T Su, L Wang, C Deng, W Li, H Luo… - Science Bulletin, 2015 - Elsevier
Euryale (Nymphaeaceae) is a monotypic genus distributed in eastern Asia, but fossils in its native distribution are sparse as compared to Europe where the genus has disappeared …