Faculty of Chemistry Repository - Cherry
University of Belgrade - Faculty of Chemistry
    • English
    • Српски
    • Српски (Serbia)
  • English 
    • English
    • Serbian (Cyrillic)
    • Serbian (Latin)
  • Login
View Item 
  •   Cherry
  • Hemijski fakultet
  • Publikacije
  • View Item
  •   Cherry
  • Hemijski fakultet
  • Publikacije
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan

Authorized Users Only
2011
Authors
Nikolić, Biljana
Ristic, Mihailo
Tešević, Vele
Marin, Petar D.
Bojović, Srđan R.
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
Terpenes are often used as ecological and chemotaxonomic markers of plant species, as well as for estimation of geographic variability. Essential oils of relic and Balkan endemic/subendemic conifers, Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and P. peuce, in central part of Balkan Peninsula (Serbia and Montenegro), on the level of terpene classes and common terpene compounds were investigated. In finding terpene combinations, which could show the best diversity between species and their natural populations, several statistical methods were applied. Apart from the content of different terpene classes (P. omorika has the most abundant O-containing monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes; P. heldreichii and P. peuce have the largest abundance of sesquiterpene and monoterpene hydrocarbons, resp.), the species are clearly separated according to terpene profile with 22 common compounds. But, divergences in their populations were established only in combination of several compounds (specific for each species...), and they were found to be the results of geomorphologic, climatic, and genetic factors. We found similarities between investigated species and some taxa from literature with respect to terpene composition, possibly due to hybridization and phylogenetic relations. Obtained results are also important regarding to chemotaxonomy, biogeography, phylogeny, and evolution of these taxa.

Keywords:
Bosnian pine / Macedonian pine / Principal-component analysis (PCA) / Serbian spruce / Terpenes / Picea omorika / Pinus heldreichii / Pinus peuce / Essential oils / Chemotaxonomy
Source:
Chemistry and Biodiversity, 2011, 8, 12, 2247-2260
Publisher:
  • Wiley-Blackwell, Malden
Funding / projects:
  • Micromorphological, phytochemical and molecular investigations of plants - systematic, ecological and applicative aspects (RS-173029)
  • Natural products of wild, cultivated and edible plants: structure and bioactivity determination (RS-172053)
  • Evaluation of ecophysiological and genetic plant diversity in forest ecosystems (RS-173011)

DOI: 10.1002/cbdv.201100018

ISSN: 1612-1872

PubMed: 22162162

WoS: 000297791000007

Scopus: 2-s2.0-83455223522
[ Google Scholar ]
15
13
URI
https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1227
Collections
  • Publikacije
Institution/Community
Hemijski fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Nikolić, Biljana
AU  - Ristic, Mihailo
AU  - Tešević, Vele
AU  - Marin, Petar D.
AU  - Bojović, Srđan R.
PY  - 2011
UR  - https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1227
AB  - Terpenes are often used as ecological and chemotaxonomic markers of plant species, as well as for estimation of geographic variability. Essential oils of relic and Balkan endemic/subendemic conifers, Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and P. peuce, in central part of Balkan Peninsula (Serbia and Montenegro), on the level of terpene classes and common terpene compounds were investigated. In finding terpene combinations, which could show the best diversity between species and their natural populations, several statistical methods were applied. Apart from the content of different terpene classes (P. omorika has the most abundant O-containing monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes; P. heldreichii and P. peuce have the largest abundance of sesquiterpene and monoterpene hydrocarbons, resp.), the species are clearly separated according to terpene profile with 22 common compounds. But, divergences in their populations were established only in combination of several compounds (specific for each species), and they were found to be the results of geomorphologic, climatic, and genetic factors. We found similarities between investigated species and some taxa from literature with respect to terpene composition, possibly due to hybridization and phylogenetic relations. Obtained results are also important regarding to chemotaxonomy, biogeography, phylogeny, and evolution of these taxa.
PB  - Wiley-Blackwell, Malden
T2  - Chemistry and Biodiversity
T1  - Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan
VL  - 8
IS  - 12
SP  - 2247
EP  - 2260
DO  - 10.1002/cbdv.201100018
UR  - Kon_2249
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Nikolić, Biljana and Ristic, Mihailo and Tešević, Vele and Marin, Petar D. and Bojović, Srđan R.",
year = "2011",
abstract = "Terpenes are often used as ecological and chemotaxonomic markers of plant species, as well as for estimation of geographic variability. Essential oils of relic and Balkan endemic/subendemic conifers, Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and P. peuce, in central part of Balkan Peninsula (Serbia and Montenegro), on the level of terpene classes and common terpene compounds were investigated. In finding terpene combinations, which could show the best diversity between species and their natural populations, several statistical methods were applied. Apart from the content of different terpene classes (P. omorika has the most abundant O-containing monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes; P. heldreichii and P. peuce have the largest abundance of sesquiterpene and monoterpene hydrocarbons, resp.), the species are clearly separated according to terpene profile with 22 common compounds. But, divergences in their populations were established only in combination of several compounds (specific for each species), and they were found to be the results of geomorphologic, climatic, and genetic factors. We found similarities between investigated species and some taxa from literature with respect to terpene composition, possibly due to hybridization and phylogenetic relations. Obtained results are also important regarding to chemotaxonomy, biogeography, phylogeny, and evolution of these taxa.",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell, Malden",
journal = "Chemistry and Biodiversity",
title = "Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan",
volume = "8",
number = "12",
pages = "2247-2260",
doi = "10.1002/cbdv.201100018",
url = "Kon_2249"
}
Nikolić, B., Ristic, M., Tešević, V., Marin, P. D.,& Bojović, S. R.. (2011). Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan. in Chemistry and Biodiversity
Wiley-Blackwell, Malden., 8(12), 2247-2260.
https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.201100018
Kon_2249
Nikolić B, Ristic M, Tešević V, Marin PD, Bojović SR. Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan. in Chemistry and Biodiversity. 2011;8(12):2247-2260.
doi:10.1002/cbdv.201100018
Kon_2249 .
Nikolić, Biljana, Ristic, Mihailo, Tešević, Vele, Marin, Petar D., Bojović, Srđan R., "Terpene Chemodiversity of Relict Conifers Picea omorika, Pinus heldreichii, and Pinus peuce, Endemic to Balkan" in Chemistry and Biodiversity, 8, no. 12 (2011):2247-2260,
https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.201100018 .,
Kon_2249 .

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
About CHERRY - CHEmistry RepositoRY | Send Feedback

re3dataOpenAIRERCUB
 

 

All of DSpaceInstitutions/communitiesAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis institutionAuthorsTitlesSubjects

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
About CHERRY - CHEmistry RepositoRY | Send Feedback

re3dataOpenAIRERCUB