Handbook of Plant and Crop Physiology

(Steven Felgate) #1

  1. LJ Musselman. Taxonomy and spread of Orobanche. In: AH Pieterse, JAC Verkleij, SJ ter Borg, eds. Biology
    and Management of Orobanche. Amsterdam: Royal Tropical Institute, 1994, pp 27–35.

  2. DL Nickrent, R Joel Duff. Molecular studies of parasitic plants using ribosomal RNA. In: MT Moreno, J
    Cubero, eds. Advances in Parasitic Plants Research. Proceedings 6th International Symposium Parasitic Plants,
    Cordoba, Spain, 1996, pp 28–52.

  3. JH Visser, I Dorr. The haustorium. In: LJ Musselman ed. Parastitic Weeds in Agriculture. Vol I. Srtiga. Boca
    Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1987, pp 91–106.

  4. MC Press, N Shah, GR Stewart. The parasitic habit: trends in metabolic reductionism. In: SJ ter Borg, ed. Bi-
    ology and Control of Orobanche. Wageningen, The Netherlands: LH/VPO, 1986, pp 96–106.

  5. MC Press, N Shah, JM Tuohy, GR Stewart. Carbon isotope ratios demonstrate carbon flux from C 4 host to C 3
    parasite. Plant Physiol 85:1143–1145, 1987.

  6. MC Press, JD Graves. Carbon relations of angiosperm parasites and their hosts. In: SJ ter Borg, ed. Proceed-
    ings of a Workshop on the Biology and Control of Orobanche. Wageningen, The Netherlands: LH/VPO, 1989,
    pp 55–65.

  7. MC Press, S Smith, GR Stewart. Carbon acquisition and assimilation in parasitic plants. Funct Ecol 5:278–283,
    1991.

  8. I Cechin, MC Press. Nitrogen relations of the sorghum–Striga hermonticahost-parasite association: growth
    and photosynthesis. Plant Cell Environ 16:237–247, 1993.

  9. PR Atsatt. Parasitic flowering plants: how did they evolve? Natur 107:502–510, 1973.

  10. KW Cummings, TM Szaro, TD Burns. Evolution of extreme specialization within a lineage of ectomycorrhizal
    epiparasites. Nature 379, 63–66, 1996.

  11. TE Dawson, JR Ehleringer. Ecological correlates of seed mass variation in Phoradendron juniperum, a xylem-
    tapping mistletoe. Oecologia 85:322–342, 1991.

  12. AC de la Harpe, JH Visser, N Grobbelaar. Photosyntethic characteristics of some South African parasitic flow-
    ering plants. Z Pflazenphysiol 103:226–275, 1981.

  13. P Delavault, V Sakanyan, P Thalouarn. Divergent evolution of two plastid genes, rbcL and atpB, in a non-pho-
    tosynthetic parasitic plant. Plant Mol Biol 29:1071–1079, 1995.

  14. CW de Pamphilis, JD Palmer. Loss of photosynthetic and chlororespiratory genes from the plastid genome of
    a parasitic flowering plant. Nature 348:337–339, 1990.

  15. CW de Pamphilis, ND Young, AD Wolfe. Evolution of plastid gene rps2 in a lineage of hemiparasitic and
    holoparasitic plants: many losses of photosynthesis and complex patterns of rate variation. Proc Natl Acad Sci
    U S A 94:7367–7372, 1977.

  16. GR Stewart, MC Press. The physiology and biochemistry of parasitic angio-sperms. Annu Rev Plant Physiol
    Plant Mol Biol 41:127–151, 1990.

  17. J Sauerborn. Parasitic flowering plants: ecology and management. PhD dissertation, Verlag Josef Margraf FR
    Germany, 1991.

  18. C Parker, CR Riches. Parasitic Weeds of the World: Biology and Control. Wallingford, UK: CAB Interna-
    tional, 1993.

  19. MC Press. Carbon and nitrogen relations. In: MC Press, JD Graves, eds. Parasitic Plants. London: Chapman &
    Hall, 1995, pp 103–124.

  20. JS Pate. Mineral relationship of parasites and their hosts. In: MC Press, JD Graves, eds. Parasitic Plants. Lon-
    don: Chapman & Hall, 1995, pp 80–102.

  21. MC Press, JM Tuohy, GR Stewart. Gas exchange characteristics of the sorghum-Strigahost-parasite associa-
    tion. Plant Physiol 84:814–819, 1987.

  22. MC Press, JD Graves, GR Stewart. Transpiration and carbon acquisition in root hemiparasitic angiosperms.
    39:1009–1014, 1988.

  23. ED Schulze, OL Lange, H Ziegler, G Gebauer. Carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios of mistletoes growing on ni-
    trogen and non-nitrogen fixing hosts and opn CAM species in the Namib desert confirm partial heterotrophy.
    Oecologia 88:457–462, 1991.

  24. LJ Musselman. The biology of Striga,Orobanche, and other root-parasitic weeds. Annu Rev Phytopathol
    18:463–489, 1980.

  25. LJ Musselman. Taxonomy and spread of Orobanche. In: AH Pieterse, JAC Verkleij, SJ ter Borg, eds. Biology
    and Management of Orobanche. Amsterdam: Royal Tropical Institute, 1994, pp 27–35.

  26. OA Charter, DA Webb. Flora Europaea. 10:286–293, 1972.

  27. AH Pieterse. The broomrapes (Orobanchaceae)—a review. Abstr Trop Agric 5(3):9–35, 1979.

  28. C Parker. The present state of the Orobancheproblem. In: AH Pieterse, JAC Verkleij, SJ ter Borg, eds. Biol-
    ogy and Management of Orobanche. Amsterdam: Royal Tropical Institute, 1994, pp 17–26.

  29. JI Cubero, MT Moreno. Parasitic weed science: a quarter century. In: MT Moreno, JL Cubero, eds. Advances
    in Parasitic Plants Research. Proceedings 6th International Symposium Parasitic Plants, Cordoba, Spain, 1996,
    pp 16–21.

  30. M Zeid, M Madkour, Y Koraiem, A Nawar, M Soliman, F Zaitoun. Molecular studies on Orobanche. Phy-
    topathol 141:351–355, 1997.

  31. I Paran, D Gidoni, R Jacobsohn. Variation between and within broomrape (Orobanche) species revealed by
    RAPD markers. Heredity 78:68–74, 1997.


798 MINKOV AND LJUBENOVA

Free download pdf