• Look no further than the Pistacia chinensis, also known as the Chinese Pistach or Chinese Pistache. (sheffields.com)
  • Prized for its medium size, attractive form, and brilliant fall color, Pistacia chinensis 'Keith Davey' is a wonderful specimen for parks and gardens. (boethingtreeland.com)
  • Chinese pistache ( Pistacia chinensis ) provides a blockbuster drama of vibrant orange and red autumn leaves. (ucanr.edu)
  • Because of its many attributes, Pistacia chinensis can be found in residential gardens and public lands throughout Sonoma County, in town plazas, and on city streets in many neighborhoods. (ucanr.edu)
  • citation needed] Pistacia lentiscus is a very common plant related to P. terebinthus with which it hybridizes. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pistacia lentiscus (Mastic) An attractive large evergreen mounding shrub to 8+ feet tall by 10 to 15 feet wide or trained up as small tree to 15 feet tall or more. (smgrowers.com)
  • The information about Pistacia lentiscus displayed on this page is based on research conducted in our library and from reliable online resources. (smgrowers.com)
  • The photographer's identification Pistacia lentiscus has not been reviewed. (berkeley.edu)
  • Pistacia lentiscus is native throughout the Mediterranean region. (kaizenbonsai.com)
  • Pistacia lentiscus is a bush or little tree of the pistacio family which is developed for its sweet-smelling pitch, for the most part on the Greek island of Chios. (tsijournals.com)
  • Pistacia lentiscus L. (florapal.org)
  • branches of 'el-ghar' (Laurus) + 'el-butum' (Pistacia atlantica) + 'saris' (Pistacia lentiscus) + 'sarw' (Cupressus sp. (florapal.org)
  • Pistacia Lentiscus or Mastic Tree is a large evergreen shrub with aromatic foliage and small flowers followed by tiny red fruits on female specimens. (paramountplants.co.uk)
  • Pistacia Lentiscus is native to the Mediterranean and commonly seen in Spain, Portugal, Greece, France and Turkey where it grows in hedgerows and scrublands. (paramountplants.co.uk)
  • Pistacia Lentiscus is a large shrub but can also be grown as a small tree that can reach 4-8 metres in height and spread. (paramountplants.co.uk)
  • If you can plant Pistacia Lentiscus in a well-drained spot with full sun it will need barely any attention. (paramountplants.co.uk)
  • Chapter 37 of the book of Genesis mentions ladanum (mastic), a resin derived from the Pistacia lentiscus tree, which has been used in Mediterranean countries for breath freshening for thousands of years. (medscape.com)
  • All species are dioecious, but monoecious individuals of Pistacia atlantica have been noted. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pistacia aethiopica, Pistacia atlantica) can exist as small bushes and shrubs due to the extremes of their habitat, adverse conditions, or the excessive consumption by wildlife or livestock that hinders growth. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pistacia atlantica cabulica - (Stocks. (pfaf.org)
  • Pistacia atlantica cabulica is a deciduous Tree. (pfaf.org)
  • I have followed K.H. Rechinger (l.c., p. 4) in the recognition of the infraspecific taxa of Pistacia atlantica . (efloras.org)
  • The genus divided into two monophyletic groups: One group (Section Pistacia ) contains P. atlantica Desf . (scialert.net)
  • فاکتور اول دما (4 ،0 و 4- درجه سانتی‌گراد) و فاکتور دوم پایه (پایه‌های اهلی جنس پسته (قزوینی، بادامی و سرخس)، دو رگ‌های ‌بین‌گونه‌ای جنس پسته (قزوینی×کسور، قزوینی×بنه‌باغی، قزوینی×بنه، قزوینی×آتلانتیکا، قزوینی×اینتگریما)، گونه‌های غیراهلی (آتلانتیکا ( Pistacia atlantica )، اینتگریما ( P. integerrima )، کسور ( P. khinjuk )، بنه ( P. atlantica sp. (ac.ir)
  • Pistacia atlantica and Prunus persica are the useful plants used in traditional medicines for the treatment of various diseases. (researchbib.com)
  • The aqueous and ethanolic extracts of Pistacia atlantica showed the common presence of tannins, phlobatanins, flavonoids, terpenoids and cardiac glycosides metabolites, however, the aqueous and ethanolic extracts of Prunus persica exhibited the common presence of tannins, saponins, phlobatanins, and flavonoids metabolites. (researchbib.com)
  • Effect of morphological variables of Pistacia atlantica on gum and seed production, Iranian Journal of Biology , 25(2), 303-315. (ac.ir)
  • Pistacia is a genus of flowering plants in the cashew family, Anacardiaceae. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pistacia vera L. (cultivated pistachio) is by far the most economically important species in the genus. (scialert.net)
  • In conclusion, Pistacia is a monophyletic genus and it contains two sections ( Lentiscella and Pistacia ) and it is originated in the Paleocene epoch. (scialert.net)
  • This perspective provides additional insight into understanding the evolutionary history of the genus Pistacia to make the species more useful for plant improvement or genetic studies. (scialert.net)
  • citation needed] Scientists from Iran and China assembled a draft genome of pistachio and resequenced 107 whole genomes, including 93 domestic and 14 wild individuals of P. vera and 35 other genomes from different wild Pistacia species. (wikipedia.org)
  • was formerly classified as P. simaruba L. The Pistacia species are vicarious Anacardiaceae with few species outside the Old World, and are mostly more adapted to water shortage and alkaline soil. (wikipedia.org)
  • Though very hardy and drought resistant, Pistacia species grow slowly and only begin to bear fruit after about 7-10 years from planting, obtaining full development only after 15-20 years. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pistacia is otherwise a very simple and undemanding tree to grow as bonsai and is perfect for those with limited experience of Mediterranean species. (kaizenbonsai.com)
  • It is also the most frost-tolerant species of Pistacia, withstanding temperatures down to about -25°C. Chinese Pistach is also disease-free, making it a low-maintenance choice for street trees or shade trees. (sheffields.com)
  • Pistachio ( Pistacia vera ) is a species of eudicot in the family Anacardiaceae (sumac family). (nih.gov)
  • Pistacia terebinthus is a Pistacia species, native around the Mediterranean. (jurassicplants.co.uk)
  • Raw and roasted pistachio nuts (Pistacia vera L.) are 'good' sources of protein based on their digestible indispensable amino acid score as determined in pigs. (nuthealth.org)
  • The alteration of heavy ("ON/bearing") and light ("OFF/non-bearing") yield in pistachio (Pistacia vera L.) has been reported to result from the abscission of inflorescence buds on high yielding trees during the summer, but the regulatory mechanisms involved in this bud abscission remain unclear. (unipa.it)
  • Dr. Hall then compared the spectrum for the shabti box sample to spectra for mastic ( Pistacia lenticus ) and terebinth ( Pistacia terebinthus ), both pistacia resins. (penn.museum)
  • Pistacia L. belongs to the family Anacardiaceae (cashew family), order Sapindales. (scialert.net)
  • Pistacia plants are shrubs and small trees growing to 5-15 m (16-49 ft) tall. (wikipedia.org)
  • This is based on Anacardiaceae being pantropical in distribution with North and South America representing major diversification centers of the family including the geographical distribution of Pistacia. (scialert.net)
  • Anyway, I've briefly mentioned that we believe that the varnish on our shabti box is a pistacia resin, but how did we come to this conclusion? (penn.museum)
  • As I mentioned in a previous post , we know that some painted wooden objects were varnished with pistacia resin during this time period, and these varnishes often look like the coating we see on our shabti box. (penn.museum)
  • All roads were leading toward the conclusion that the coating is pistacia resin, but since we had so many available samples (i.e. detached pieces of the varnish) I wanted to investigate further. (penn.museum)
  • The structures are consistent with pistacia resin, either mastic or terebinth. (penn.museum)
  • They did identify a peak for 28-norolean-17-en-3-one (#3 above), characteristic of heated pistacia resin, which could indicate that the resin was heated before application (which would have turned it from clear to a yellowed varnish). (penn.museum)
  • We cannot be certain what color the varnish was when it was first applied, but the analysis does confirm the fact that the shabti box and the shabtis all have aged pistacia resin coatings. (penn.museum)
  • Individual Pistacia trees exhibiting chemopolymorphism in terpene compositions displayed differential upregulation of selected terpene synthase genes, and the metabolites generated by their gene products in vitro corresponded to the monoterpenes accumulated by each tree. (agri.gov.il)
  • We previously found that, despite a marked natural chemopolymorphism in natural populations of Pistacia palaestina, the monoterpene levels in Baizongia pistaciae induced galls is substantially higher than in leaves of their hosts. (agri.gov.il)
  • Present findings suggest that Pistacia and Prunus leaves extracts possess antibacterial effect against both gram positive and gram negative bacteria. (researchbib.com)
  • Kafkas and Perl-Treves (2002) addressed the interspecific relationships in Pistacia based on RAPD fingerprinting. (scialert.net)
  • In this study, Total phenol, flavonoid content, and antioxidant activity of three extracts of Pistacia trebinthus fruit growing in Algeria was measured using radical scavenging activity tests and metal-related tests including, ferric-reducing antioxidant power (FRAP). (najfnr.com)
  • Kafkas and Perl-Treves (2001) addressed the taxonomic relationships and genetic variation of wild Pistacia germplasm in Turkey using morphological data and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD). (scialert.net)
  • However, I found that Tingshuang Yi and Jun Wen from the Department of Botany of the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago (2005, Personnel Communication) have performed a 5-gene analysis of Pistacia to study its phylogeny and biogeography using both nuclear and chloroplast genes (NIA-i3 region, ITS4 and ITS5, trnC-trnD region, ndhF gene and trnL-F regions), which was exactly what I had planned to do. (scialert.net)