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Red coloration in young tropical leaves associated with reduced fungal pathogen damage
The adaptive significance of red coloration in tropical forest leaves remains unclear. In vivo assays show that there is a significant negative correlation between anthocyanin pigments in young leaves and fungal pathogen damage. This supports a previous hypothesis that anthocyanins may protect young...
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Published in: | Biotropica 2016-03, Vol.48 (2), p.150-153 |
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container_title | Biotropica |
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creator | Tellez, Peter Rojas, Enith Van Bael, Sunshine |
description | The adaptive significance of red coloration in tropical forest leaves remains unclear. In vivo assays show that there is a significant negative correlation between anthocyanin pigments in young leaves and fungal pathogen damage. This supports a previous hypothesis that anthocyanins may protect young leaves from fungal damage during the vulnerable period of leaf expansion. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/btp.12303 |
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ispartof | Biotropica, 2016-03, Vol.48 (2), p.150-153 |
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language | eng |
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source | Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; JSTOR |
subjects | anthocyanins Calonectria sp canopy crane system color fungi INSIGHTS leaf development leaves Panama pathogens tropical forests tropical wet forest |
title | Red coloration in young tropical leaves associated with reduced fungal pathogen damage |
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