Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia
Samo za registrovane korisnike
2010
Autori
Akopian, JannaSarukhanyan, Nune
Gabrielyan, Ivan
Vanyan, Armen
Mikić, Aleksandar
Smykal, Petr
Kenicer, Gregory
Vishnyakova, Margarita
Sinjushin, Andrey
Demidenko, Natalia
Ambrose, Mike
Članak u časopisu (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
Vavilovia (Vavilovia Fed.) is one of the five genera in tribe Fabeae and consists of only one species, ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa (Stev.) Fed.). The main centre of distribution is the Central and Eastern Caucasus, with a disjunct distribution among high alpine areas in the region, extending as far as West Turkey, Lebanon and Iran. In Armenia, in situ studies on Vavilovia started in the late 1930s. In July and August 2009, three expeditions were conducted to two locations: two to the Ughtasar Mountain and one to the Geghama Mountains. The first expedition to Ughtasar resulted in fresh plant collections and soil analysis for one of the sites. The expedition to Geghama established the existence of Vavilovia in the region of Lake Aknalitch. The second expedition to Ughtasar provided immature fruits and seeds. Collected plant material was transplanted into the Flora and Vegetation of Armenia plot of the Yerevan Botanic Garden established in 1940. Today, along with other plant...s the plot contains more than 200 species of wild relatives of cultural plants from 130 genera, including indiginous species of tribe Fabeae such as Vavilovia. The transplanted plants will continue to be monitored to see if the plants go on to successfully flower and set seed or whether further sites, possibly at higher altitudes might need to be tested to meet the long term conservation requirements of this iconic legume. These co-ordinated efforts provide a good example of an ex situ conservation strategy for Vavilovia formosa, which, if successful will improve access and utility for the whole legume research community.
Ključne reči:
Armenia / ‘Beautiful’ vavilovia / ex situ conservation / genetic resources / in situ conservation / Vavilovia formosaIzvor:
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 2010, 57, 8, 1127-1134Izdavač:
- Springer
DOI: 10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0
ISSN: 0925-9864
WoS: 000284777400002
Scopus: 2-s2.0-78649893124
Kolekcije
Institucija/grupa
FiVeRTY - JOUR AU - Akopian, Janna AU - Sarukhanyan, Nune AU - Gabrielyan, Ivan AU - Vanyan, Armen AU - Mikić, Aleksandar AU - Smykal, Petr AU - Kenicer, Gregory AU - Vishnyakova, Margarita AU - Sinjushin, Andrey AU - Demidenko, Natalia AU - Ambrose, Mike PY - 2010 UR - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/3487 AB - Vavilovia (Vavilovia Fed.) is one of the five genera in tribe Fabeae and consists of only one species, ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa (Stev.) Fed.). The main centre of distribution is the Central and Eastern Caucasus, with a disjunct distribution among high alpine areas in the region, extending as far as West Turkey, Lebanon and Iran. In Armenia, in situ studies on Vavilovia started in the late 1930s. In July and August 2009, three expeditions were conducted to two locations: two to the Ughtasar Mountain and one to the Geghama Mountains. The first expedition to Ughtasar resulted in fresh plant collections and soil analysis for one of the sites. The expedition to Geghama established the existence of Vavilovia in the region of Lake Aknalitch. The second expedition to Ughtasar provided immature fruits and seeds. Collected plant material was transplanted into the Flora and Vegetation of Armenia plot of the Yerevan Botanic Garden established in 1940. Today, along with other plants the plot contains more than 200 species of wild relatives of cultural plants from 130 genera, including indiginous species of tribe Fabeae such as Vavilovia. The transplanted plants will continue to be monitored to see if the plants go on to successfully flower and set seed or whether further sites, possibly at higher altitudes might need to be tested to meet the long term conservation requirements of this iconic legume. These co-ordinated efforts provide a good example of an ex situ conservation strategy for Vavilovia formosa, which, if successful will improve access and utility for the whole legume research community. PB - Springer T2 - Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution T1 - Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia EP - 1134 IS - 8 SP - 1127 VL - 57 DO - 10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0 ER -
@article{ author = "Akopian, Janna and Sarukhanyan, Nune and Gabrielyan, Ivan and Vanyan, Armen and Mikić, Aleksandar and Smykal, Petr and Kenicer, Gregory and Vishnyakova, Margarita and Sinjushin, Andrey and Demidenko, Natalia and Ambrose, Mike", year = "2010", abstract = "Vavilovia (Vavilovia Fed.) is one of the five genera in tribe Fabeae and consists of only one species, ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa (Stev.) Fed.). The main centre of distribution is the Central and Eastern Caucasus, with a disjunct distribution among high alpine areas in the region, extending as far as West Turkey, Lebanon and Iran. In Armenia, in situ studies on Vavilovia started in the late 1930s. In July and August 2009, three expeditions were conducted to two locations: two to the Ughtasar Mountain and one to the Geghama Mountains. The first expedition to Ughtasar resulted in fresh plant collections and soil analysis for one of the sites. The expedition to Geghama established the existence of Vavilovia in the region of Lake Aknalitch. The second expedition to Ughtasar provided immature fruits and seeds. Collected plant material was transplanted into the Flora and Vegetation of Armenia plot of the Yerevan Botanic Garden established in 1940. Today, along with other plants the plot contains more than 200 species of wild relatives of cultural plants from 130 genera, including indiginous species of tribe Fabeae such as Vavilovia. The transplanted plants will continue to be monitored to see if the plants go on to successfully flower and set seed or whether further sites, possibly at higher altitudes might need to be tested to meet the long term conservation requirements of this iconic legume. These co-ordinated efforts provide a good example of an ex situ conservation strategy for Vavilovia formosa, which, if successful will improve access and utility for the whole legume research community.", publisher = "Springer", journal = "Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution", title = "Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia", pages = "1134-1127", number = "8", volume = "57", doi = "10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0" }
Akopian, J., Sarukhanyan, N., Gabrielyan, I., Vanyan, A., Mikić, A., Smykal, P., Kenicer, G., Vishnyakova, M., Sinjushin, A., Demidenko, N.,& Ambrose, M.. (2010). Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia. in Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution Springer., 57(8), 1127-1134. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0
Akopian J, Sarukhanyan N, Gabrielyan I, Vanyan A, Mikić A, Smykal P, Kenicer G, Vishnyakova M, Sinjushin A, Demidenko N, Ambrose M. Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia. in Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution. 2010;57(8):1127-1134. doi:10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0 .
Akopian, Janna, Sarukhanyan, Nune, Gabrielyan, Ivan, Vanyan, Armen, Mikić, Aleksandar, Smykal, Petr, Kenicer, Gregory, Vishnyakova, Margarita, Sinjushin, Andrey, Demidenko, Natalia, Ambrose, Mike, "Reports on establishing an ex situ site for ‘beautiful’ vavilovia (Vavilovia formosa) in Armenia" in Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 57, no. 8 (2010):1127-1134, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-010-9606-0 . .