This article deals with the ex-Capuchin, chaplain and later parson at the Brno parish church of St James, P. Maurus Simonis (*1740-†1815) and his catalogue of the manuscript library which came into being in the Middle Ages, was permanently maintained at the church and only in 1931 did it become a part of the Brno City Archives. The manuscripts – 125 codices – serve as valuable evidence of book culture in medieval Brno. The definitive catalogue was compiled in 1805, while its first "critical" version, which does not include all manuscripts, dates from 1802. On the evidence of numerous specimens, our paper analyses the way of describing of external features – watermarks, writing, decoration and binding – as well as the content of individual codices, and it compares the work of P. Simonis with the previously unofficial conclusions of the modern catalogue which is currently at the printers.
With a flash-lamp chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence imaging system (FL-FIS) the photosynthetic activity of several thousand image points of intact shade and sun leaves of beech were screened in a non-destructive way within a few seconds. The photosynthetic activity was determined via imaging the Chl fluorescence at maximum Fp and steady state fluorescence Fs of the induction kinetics (Kautsky effect) and by a subsequent determination of the images of the fluorescence decrease ratio RFd and the ratio Fp/Fs. Both fluorescence ratios are linearly correlated to the photosynthetic CO2 fixation rates. This imaging method permitted to detect the gradients in photosynthetic capacity and the patchiness of photosynthetic quantum conversion across the leaf. Sun leaves of beech showed a higher photosynthetic capacity and differential pigment ratios (Chl a/b and Chls/carotenoids) than shade leaves. Profile analysis and histogram of the Chl fluorescence yield and the Chl fluorescence ratios allow to quantify the differences in photosynthetic activity between different leaf parts and between sun and shade leaves with a high statistical significance. and H. K. Lichtenthaler ... [et al.].
The CO2 exchange in relation to inadiance was measured in amphibious plant Polygonům amphibium growing over the environmental gradient. Large differences in apparent CO2 flux at low inadiances put under question the regularity of net photosynthetic rate measurements by means of CO2 detection in plants containing abundant gas spaces.
A modification of the double-modulation fluorometer is described that allows measuring very dilute phytoplankton samples. The high sensitivity is achieved by increasing the sample volume and by collecting the fluorescence from the large volume by an integrating sphere. The sensitivity of the instrument increased approximately proportionally to the volume of the sample. A further improvement of the sensitivity was achieved by replacing the PIN photodiode of the earlier versions by a photomultiplier. The instrument was used to measure fluorescence induction, F0 and Fm parameters, and QA- reoxidation kinetics at concentrations at and below 100 pM chlorophyll. and N. Dijkman ... [et al.].
In vivo reflectance and fluorescence spectra from berry skins of a white (Riesling) and red (Cabernet Sauvignon) grapevine variety were measured during a ripening season with a new CMOS radiometer instrument. Classical reference measurements were also carried out for a sugar content of the berry juice [°Brix] and pigment contents (chlorophyll a and b, carotenoids, anthocyanins) from methanol extracts of the berry skin. We showed that the colours and the spectra analysed from them could be taken as an unambiguous indicator of grapevine ripening. Reflectance spectra, which were affected by the content of pigments (chlorophylls and anthocyanins), effects of surface (wax layers), and tissue structure (cell size) of the berries well correlated (R2 = 0.89) with the °Brix measurements of the berries. The fast data acquisition of both reflectance and fluorescence spectra in one sample with our radiometer instrument made it superior over the time-consuming, traditional, and mostly destructive chemical analysis used in
vine-growing management., M. Navrátil, C. Buschmann., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Plants of Nicotiana benthamiana (Gray) (60 d old) were mechanically inoculated by a spreading of the fourth and fifth leaves with inoculum with or without plum pox potyvirus (PPV). Changes in growth parameters and selected photosynthetic characteristics were followed in control and inoculated plants in the locally affected leaves (LA) during 11 d after inoculation (DAI), in systemically affected leaves immature at time of inoculation (SAI) during 14-25 DAI, and in systemically affected leaves developed after the inoculation (SAD) during 28-39 DAI. The pure mechanical damage caused by inoculation induced a decrease in the net photosynthetic rate (PN) in LA and SAD leaves, and an increase in the steady-state value of the non-photochemical chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence quenching qN. The qN increase appeared in certain time intervals in all measured leaves on plants, so it could be regarded as indication of a systemic reaction of plant to the local mechanical injury. The viral infection developed in LA leaves and spread to SAI and SAD leaves was documented by the ELISA-DASI method. The plant height and area of SAI and SAD leaves were lower in infected plants. The combined effect of mechanical damage and viral infection caused a decrease in PN only in LA and SAD leaves. In SAD leaves, an increased relative height of the J step (VJ) in the O-J-I-P Chl fluorescence transient together with a lower B/A band ratio of thermoluminescence glow curves reflected a damage to the acceptor side of photosystem 2 (PS2) caused by the viral infection, and a faster kinetics of the induction of the photochemical quenching coefficient qP of Chl fluorescence indicated a faster QA- re-oxidation in the remaining undamaged centres of PS2. and V. Hlaváčková ... [et al.].
The herbicides diuron, fluridone, or sulcotrione differently reduced chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoid (Car) contents. Four days after herbicide treatment, application of sulcotrione resulted in a Chl/Car ratio of 5.88, similar as in untreated controls; diuron resulted in ratio of 5.24, while fluridone induced a greater diminution in Car contents and yielded a final ratio of 7.02. Sulcotrione induced a more rapid decrease than fluridone did in the quantum yield of photosystem 2 (PS2) as monitored by Chl fluorescence. Measurements of DPIP reduction with isolated thylakoids indicated that sulcotrione was a more effective inhibitor of the Hill reaction in cucumber, a herbicide sensitive species, than in maize, a herbicide-insensitive species. These results are consistent with the view that inhibition of electron transport via reduction in plastoquinone contents in plants leads to the major herbicidal effect of sulcotrione in mature green tissues. and J.-S. Kim ... [et al.].
Periodic drought fluctuation is a common phenomenon in Northwest China. We analyzed the response of Chinese dwarf cherry (Cerasus humilis) seedlings, a dwarf shrub species with considerably strong adaptabilities, exposed to water stress (WS) by withholding water for 21 d, and subsequent recovery of 7 d. Leaf relative water content (LRWC), net photosynthetic rate (PN), maximal quantum yield of PSII photochemistry (Fv/Fm), and effective quantum yield of PSII photochemistry (ΦPSII) decreased with increasing water deficit. In contrast, the nonphotochemical quenching of Chl fluorescence (NPQ) significantly increased, as well as the amounts of violaxanthin (V) + antheraxanthin (A) + zeaxanthin (Z). In the whole levels, the photosynthetic pigment composition did not display significant changes in WS seedlings. However, the de-epoxidation state of xanthophyll cycle pigments [(Z+0.5A)/VAZ ] generally exhibited higher values in WS seedlings. The significant inhibition of de-epoxidation by dithiothreitol (DTT) and negligible changes of epoxidation of Z by glucosamine (Gla) were both observed; the slight but stably upregulated transcript level of violaxanthin de-epoxidase (VDE) and downregulated zeaxanthin epoxidase (ZEP) expression profile were found during WS period, indicating that they were regulated on post-transcript levels. VDE activity, via the accumulation of Z and A, which confers a greater capacity of photoprotection, appears to contribute to the survival of severely stressed plants. and X. S. Song ... [et al.].