Today's Hours: 8:00am - 10:00pm

Search

Filter Applied Clear All

Did You Mean:

Search Results

  • Book
    Kishan Gopal Ramawat, editor.
    Summary: Plant classifications are based on morphological characters and it is difficult, particularly in small plants and grasses, to identify these below generic level on the basis of these characters using a dissecting microscope. Plant species have intra- and inter-specific variation in secondary metabolites which can be utilized as marker compounds for identification and classification of plants. Secondary metabolites are produced as a result of primary metabolism and the production of these compounds not only involves several genes but also it is an energy dependent process. Hence these products cannot be considered as insignificant for the plant and the environment. Modern tools of molecular biology and secondary metabolites present in them can definitively decide about classification of plants. Absence of correct identification of plant is associated to many problems of resource utilization. Due to wide availability of these tools, interest has revived in systematics and correct classification of plants based on these parameters for their sustainable utilization and resource management. The purpose of this book is to assess the potential of phytochemical and molecular tools in the systematic and classification of plants. The topics covered include species concept, barcoding and phylogenetic analysis, chemotaxonomy use of polyketides, carotenes, cuticular wax, volatile oils, biodiversity of corals, metazoans, Ruta and Echinocereus. It provides comprehensive and broad subject-based reviews, useful for students, teachers, researchers, and all others interested in the field. The field has been kept wide and general to accommodate the wide-ranging topics. This book will be useful to agriculturists, chemists, botanists, industrialists, and those involved in planning of crop plants.

    Contents:
    1. Introduction
    Part I: Biodiversity
    2. Generation of Data on Reproductive Ecology is Important for Effective Conservation of Our Plant Diversity
    3. Molecular Approaches to Explore Coastal Benthic Metazoan Diversity
    Success and Constraints
    4. Soft Corals Biodiversity in the Egyptian Red Sea
    5. Assessment of Grasslands in Indian Desert
    a Holistic Approach
    Part II: Chemotaxonomic Markers
    6. Chemotaxonomy Significance of Alkaloids in Plants
    7. Iridoids as Chemotaxonomic Marker
    8. Chemosystematic Significance of Flavonoids
    9. Isoquinoline Alkaloids as Chemotaxonomic Markers
    10. Saponin Diversity in Plants
    11. Chemotaxonomy and Chemodiversity of Fungal Polyketides
    12. Chemotaxonomic Profiling for High-Value Caretonoids in Microalgae
    13. Fungi
    Part III: Diversity and Phylogeny
    14. Plant Barcoding and Phylogenetic Analysis: Advances, Challenges and Future Trends
    15. Molecular Techniques to Assess Plant Diversity
    16. Diversity of the Genus Ocimum
    17. Phylogeny in Echinocereus (Cactaceae): Taxonomic Implications
    18. Genetic Variation in Brassica and Allied Genera
    Part IV: Case Studies in Chemotaxonomy
    19. Chemotaxonomic Survey on the Genus Sedum L. (Crassulaceae) Based on Distribution and Variability of the Epicuticular Wax Constituents
    20. Chemotaxonomic Study of Volatile Oils from Rhizomes of Zingiber species (Zingigeraceae)
    21. Chemical Variability in Essential Oils from Ruta Species and its Taxonomic and Ecological Significance
    22. Conclusions.
    Digital Access Springer 2019