Seeds of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) germinated and grown in closed petri dishes consistently produced leaves with more pubescence than those grown under natural conditions. Weight gain and percent survival of freshly emerged cereal leaf beetle larvae were measured on seedling plants with increased amounts of pubescence and control plants with normal pubescence.Larval weight gain on plants of cultivars susceptible and resistant to the cereal leaf beetle with increased densities of pubescence were significantly lower than the weight gain of larvae grown on control plants. These results make it possible to examine the contribution of pubescence to resistance within a single genotype in a manner similar to those comparisons in which pairs of isogenic lines are used.
Eight taxa in the genus Notholaena were examined for their chromosome numbers; one of the eight had two cytotypes (2 N, 4 N). The other seven consisted of five triploids and two diploids. Observations were also included on spore number and prothallial glandularity whenever possible.
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