1. First integrative characterisation of the root-knot nematode, Meloidogyne luci infecting chickpea (Cicer arietinum) in EthiopiaHabtamu Kefelegn, Marjolein Couvreur, Wim M.L. Wesemael, Beira H. Meressa, André Machado Bertran, Jop Wilten, Barbara Gerič Stare, Nik Susič, Nicole Viaene, Misghina G. Teklu, Wim Bert, 2026, original scientific article Keywords: DNA barcoding, genomics, host status, mitogenome, molecular, morphology, phylogeny, root-knot nematodes, SEM, taxonomy Published in DiRROS: 31.03.2026; Views: 135; Downloads: 88
Full text (4,26 MB) This document has many files! More... |
2. Bacteriophages of Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris: Current Knowledge and Potential for Biocontrol ApplicationsAljoša Beber, Janja Lamovšek, Irena Mavrič Pleško, 2026, review article Keywords: review, classification, morphology, physiological characteristics, stability, genomic features, practical applications Published in DiRROS: 09.03.2026; Views: 219; Downloads: 218
Full text (1,77 MB) This document has many files! More... |
3. Considerations on the morphological features and phylogeny of the hypogeous gasteroid genera Sclerogaster and Wakefieldia (Basidiomycota) in North MacedoniaSlavica Tofilovska Kamiševska, Hermann Voglmayr, Irmgard Krisai-Greilhuber, Tine Grebenc, Mitko Karadelev, Katerina Rusevska, 2026, original scientific article Abstract: The genera Sclerogaster and Wakefieldia are infrequently reported, especially from poorly studied regions of the Balkan Peninsula. Research on hypogeous fungi in North Macedonia has been advancing steadily in recent years, leading to a growing number of collections in the Macedonian Collection of Fungi. Molecular phylogenetic and morphological observations of deposited specimens of Sclerogaster and Wakefieldia were performed, and compared with collections from other areas and sequences in nucleotide databases. Molecular genetic diversity based on rDNA ITS and LSU markers and morphological characteristics of the specimens from two genera are presented, and information on their ecology is provided. Two species of Sclerogaster: S. hysterangioides, reported for the first time for the Balkan Peninsula, and S. compactus, a second record for the Balkan Peninsula, were distinguished. Sclerogaster hysterangioides was found in different habitat types at four sites, while S. compactus was present at only one site in a riparian community of Populus alba and Ulmus laevis. The genus Wakefieldia is represented with a single species, W. macrospora, in Europe. Our collections, which constitute the second records for the Balkan Peninsula, originate from mixed deciduous forest of Quercus pubescens and Carpinus orientalis. The phylogenetic analyses confirm the morphological identification of the voucher specimens as S. hysterangioides and W. macrospora. The investigation of hypogeous fungi in North Macedonia demonstrates the rich diversity of this ecological group of fungi, and calls for future studies including comprehensive morphological observations and additional molecular markers. Keywords: Balkan Peninsula, DNA-barcoding, fungi, morphology, mycodiversity, phylogenetics Published in DiRROS: 06.03.2026; Views: 293; Downloads: 160
Full text (2,40 MB) This document has many files! More... |
4. Deciphering crystal growth in a sector-zoned interpenetration twin of loparite from Mt Khibiny (Kola Peninsula, Russia) through atomic-scale characterisation of growth sectors and twin boundariesNina Daneu, José Alberto Padrón-Navarta, Martin Šala, Kristina Mervič, Gerlinde Habler, Goran Dražić, Petruša Borštnar, Aleksander Rečnik, Rainer Abart, 2026, original scientific article Abstract: Loparite is a natural perovskite (ABO3) with a complex composition, essentially a solid solution between loparite(-Ce) (Na0.5Ce0.5TiO3), lueshite (NaNbO3), and perovskite (CaTiO3), with small amounts of many other elements. The majority of reported loparite crystals are spinel-type interpenetration twins with compositional zoning. Associated with the high variability of compositions, different crystal structures of loparite were described, and the origin of twinning has not been addressed so far. In this work, we studied a loparite twin composed of two symmetrically intergrown cuboctahedra. Microprobe analyses revealed that the cubic and octahedral growth sectors have slightly different compositions. According to atomic-scale analyses, the cubic sectors with a lower Na:LREE ratio have a disordered orthorhombic structure, while the octahedral sectors with a higher Na:LREE ratio show partial ordering of Na and light rare-earth elements along A-type lattice planes in the [001] direction. The degree of ordering was evaluated by quantitative high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM). Atomic-scale analyses of (111) and {112} twin boundary (TB) contacts have shown that all TBs contain a 1–2 nm thin layer of an Si-rich amorphous phase. Our observations suggest that the loparite twin was established in the nucleation stage of crystallisation, followed by independent crystallisation of both twin domains from the melt. The initial crystal form was cubic; octahedral sectors evolved when the crystal size was still in the nanometre range, as a result of slow crystal growth. Differences in structural ordering between adjacent growth sectors developed during slow cooling due to the compositional variations. Our results imply that compositionally zoned crystals might show different structural ordering within single domains, which should be considered when interpreting bulk diffraction data of compositionally zoned perovskites. Keywords: loparite, loparite twin, growth sectors, morphology Published in DiRROS: 02.03.2026; Views: 215; Downloads: 170
Full text (12,71 MB) This document has many files! More... |
5. History and biology of the "black proteus" (Proteus anguinus parkelj Sket & Arntzen 1994; Amphibia: Proteidae): a reviewLilijana Bizjak-Mali, Boris Sket, 2019, review article Abstract: Proteus anguinus parkelj Sket & Arntzen 1994 is a black pigmented with developed eyes, non-troglomorphic, but yet troglobiotic subspecies of P. anguinus Laurenti 1786. It is endemic to the karst of Bela krajina in southeast Slovenia. As a probable mimic of the epigean ancestor it is very informative regarding adaptation to subterranean environment. Since it was discovered only in 1986, relatively little is known about its biology. The purpose of this review paper is to summarize the published data about the circumstances of its discovery, its distribution, phylogeny, taxonomy and its biology, including environmental threats, conservation status, and actions that are being taken to ensure its survival. The exceedingly limited distribution of the black proteus makes it particularly vulnerable. It is endangered by environmental pollution as well as by various potential pathogens that are of global concern to amphibians. Populations of the black proteus are in dire need of protection if they are to survive in their own natural habitat. Keywords: Proteus anguinus parkelj, discovery, distribution, phylogeny, morphology, threats Published in DiRROS: 27.01.2026; Views: 376; Downloads: 224
Full text (1,87 MB) This document has many files! More... |
6. Anisotropic microstructural evolution of (001), (110) and (111) planes in SRR99 single-crystal superalloyXiaoli Zhang, Kuan Lei, Tingzhen Xin, Yishan Wu, Guiqun Liu, 2025, original scientific article Keywords: single-crystal superalloy, γ phase, γ' phase, dendrite morphology, eutectic, carbide Published in DiRROS: 08.01.2026; Views: 542; Downloads: 218
Full text (1,63 MB) This document has many files! More... |
7. Comparative and population genomics of buckwheat species reveal key determinants of flavor and fertilityKaixuan Zhang, Yugi He, Xiang Lu, Yaliang Shi, Hui Zhao, Xiaobo Li, Jinlong Li, Yang Liu, Yinan Ouyang, Yu Tang, Zlata Luthar, Mateja Germ, Ivan Kreft, Vladimir Meglič, Barbara Pipan, 2023, original scientific article Keywords: genomics, genomic resources, genome sequencing, common buckwheat, genomics-assisted breeding, flavonoid content, flower morphology, buckwheat species, genetic gain, agronomic traits, nutritional quality traits Published in DiRROS: 10.11.2025; Views: 451; Downloads: 257
Full text (10,28 MB) This document has many files! More... |
8. Impact of post-deposition curing of graphite thick-film working electrode on the performances of electrochemical sensorsDanjela Kuščer, Barbara Repič, Janez Kovač, Nejc Suban, Hana Uršič Nemevšek, 2025, original scientific article Keywords: electrochemical sensors, electrodes, polymers, graphite thick films, surface morphology Published in DiRROS: 27.10.2025; Views: 564; Downloads: 267
Full text (4,59 MB) This document has many files! More... |
9. Potential metabolic activity, catalase activity, performance traits and morphological variables of 94 individuals belonging to Podarcis muralis species used in the analysis : version v1Anamarija Žagar, Veronica Gomes, Guillem Pérez i de Lanuza, Tatjana Simčič, Miguel A. Carretero, 2022, complete scientific database of research data Abstract: Potential Metabolic Activity (ETS26_P, ETS31_P, ETS36_P), Catalase Activity (CAT_P), Performance traits (BITE, SPRINT,CLIMB, MANO) and Morphological variables (snout-vent length (SVL), trunk length (TRL), pileus length (PL), head length (HL), head width (HW), head height (HH), fore limb length (FLL) and hind limb length (HLL) of 94 individuals belonging to Podarcis muralis species. The data was used in the analysis of the paper entitled: Is It Function or Fashion? An Integrative Analysis of Morphology, Performance, and Metabolism in a Colour Polymorphic Lizard, by authors Verónica Gomes, Anamarija Žagar, Guillem Pérez i de Lanuza, Tatjana Simčič and Miguel A. Carretero, published in the journal Diversity 2022, 14, 116. https://doi.org/10.3390/d14020116 Keywords: lizards, morphology, viviparity, sexual dimorphism, climate change, data Published in DiRROS: 27.10.2025; Views: 551; Downloads: 372
Full text (14,40 KB) This document has many files! More... |
10. Viviparity is associated with larger female size and higher sexual size dimorphism in a reproductively bimodal lizardEvgeny S. Roitberg, Hans Recknagel, K. R. Elmer, Florentino Braña, Tania Rodríguez Díaz, Anamarija Žagar, Valentina Nikolaevna Kuranova, Lidiya Alekseevna Epova, Dirk Bauwens, Giovani Giovine, V. F. Orlova, N. A. Bulakhova, Galina Eplanova, Oscar Arribas, 2025, complete scientific database of research data Abstract: Squamate reptiles are central for studying phenotypic correlates of evolutionary transitions from oviparity to viviparity because these transitions are numerous, with many of them being recent. Several models of life-history theory predict that viviparity is associated with increased female size, and thus more female-biased sexual size dimorphism (SSD). Yet the corresponding empirical evidence is overall weak and inconsistent. The lizard Zootoca vivipara, which occupies a major part of Northern Eurasia and includes four viviparous and two non-sister oviparous lineages, represents an excellent model for testing these predictions. We analysed how sex-specific body size and SSD is associated with parity mode, using body length data for nearly 14,000 adult individuals from 97 geographically distinct populations, which cover almost the entire species’ range and represent all six lineages. Our analyses controlled for lineage identity, climatic seasonality (the strongest predictor of geographic body size variation in previous studies of this species), and several aspects of data heterogeneity. Parity mode, lineage, and seasonality are significantly associated with female size and SSD; the first two predictors accounted for 14–26% of the total variation each, while seasonality explained 5–7%. Viviparous populations exhibited a larger female size than oviparous populations, with no concomitant differences in male size. Variation of male size was overall low and poorly explained by our predictors. Albeit fully expected from theory, the strong female bias of the body size differences between oviparous and viviparous populations found in Z. vivipara is not evident from available data on three other lizard systems of closely related lineages differing in parity mode. We confront this pattern with the data on female reproductive traits in the considered systems and the frequencies of evolutionary changes of parity mode in the corresponding lizard families and speculate why the life-history correlates of live-bearing in Z. vivipara are distinct. Comparing conspecific populations, our study provides the most direct evidence for the predicted effect of parity mode on adult body size but also demonstrates that the revealed pattern may not be general. This might explain why across squamates, viviparity is only weakly associated with larger size. Keywords: lizards, morphology, viviparity, sexual dimorphism, climate change, data Published in DiRROS: 27.10.2025; Views: 497; Downloads: 364
Full text (5,14 MB) This document has many files! More... |