Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer
Abstract
This study is the first report on the composition and variability of essential oil in the relic, endemic, and vulnerable free species Serbian spruce, Picea omorika, in its natural populations. In the needles of 108 trees of four natural populations, 49 components of essential oils were identified. The main compounds were bornyl acetate (29.2%), camphene (18.7%), and alpha-pinene (12.9%). Fourteen additional components had the contents of up to 0.5%: alpha-cadinol (6.1%), limonene (5.8%), santene (3.5%), (E)-hex-2-enal (2.9%), T-cadinol (2.9%), delta-cadinene (2.3%), tricyclene (2.1%), myrcenc (1.6%), beta-pinene (1.2%), borneol (0.9%), germacrene D (0.9%), alpha-murolene (0.6%), and two unidentified compounds. Population IV from Milesevka Canyon had a much higher content of bornyl acetate (42.9%). Populations I-III from Mt. Tara were more abundant in sesquiterpenes (up to 18.2%)). The content of bornyl acetate, the multi-variation analyses according to seven selected components, especi...ally the cluster analysis and genetic analysis of alpha-cadinol, which suggested the monogenic type of heredity, showed a clear differentiation of the two geographic areas, the similarity of populations I-III from the area of Mt. Tara, and the separation of the population IV from Milesevka Canyon.
Source:
Chemistry & Biodiversity, 2009, 6, 2, 193-203Publisher:
- Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim
Funding / projects:
- Sekundarni metaboliti samoniklih, lekovitih biljaka: izolovanje, karakterizacija i biloška aktivnost (RS-MESTD-MPN2006-2010-142053)
- Strukturne, hemijske i molekularne karakteristike nekih biljnih vrsta – fundamentalni značaj i primenljivost (RS-MESTD-MPN2006-2010-143049)
DOI: 10.1002/cbdv.200800085
ISSN: 1612-1872
PubMed: 19235161
WoS: 000263851200008
Scopus: 2-s2.0-64549138563
Collections
Institution/Community
Fakultet veterinarske medicineTY - JOUR AU - Nikolić, Biljana AU - Tešević, Vele AU - Đorđević, Iris AU - Marin, Petar D. AU - Bojović, Srđan PY - 2009 UR - https://vet-erinar.vet.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/618 AB - This study is the first report on the composition and variability of essential oil in the relic, endemic, and vulnerable free species Serbian spruce, Picea omorika, in its natural populations. In the needles of 108 trees of four natural populations, 49 components of essential oils were identified. The main compounds were bornyl acetate (29.2%), camphene (18.7%), and alpha-pinene (12.9%). Fourteen additional components had the contents of up to 0.5%: alpha-cadinol (6.1%), limonene (5.8%), santene (3.5%), (E)-hex-2-enal (2.9%), T-cadinol (2.9%), delta-cadinene (2.3%), tricyclene (2.1%), myrcenc (1.6%), beta-pinene (1.2%), borneol (0.9%), germacrene D (0.9%), alpha-murolene (0.6%), and two unidentified compounds. Population IV from Milesevka Canyon had a much higher content of bornyl acetate (42.9%). Populations I-III from Mt. Tara were more abundant in sesquiterpenes (up to 18.2%)). The content of bornyl acetate, the multi-variation analyses according to seven selected components, especially the cluster analysis and genetic analysis of alpha-cadinol, which suggested the monogenic type of heredity, showed a clear differentiation of the two geographic areas, the similarity of populations I-III from the area of Mt. Tara, and the separation of the population IV from Milesevka Canyon. PB - Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim T2 - Chemistry & Biodiversity T1 - Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer VL - 6 IS - 2 SP - 193 EP - 203 DO - 10.1002/cbdv.200800085 ER -
@article{ author = "Nikolić, Biljana and Tešević, Vele and Đorđević, Iris and Marin, Petar D. and Bojović, Srđan", year = "2009", abstract = "This study is the first report on the composition and variability of essential oil in the relic, endemic, and vulnerable free species Serbian spruce, Picea omorika, in its natural populations. In the needles of 108 trees of four natural populations, 49 components of essential oils were identified. The main compounds were bornyl acetate (29.2%), camphene (18.7%), and alpha-pinene (12.9%). Fourteen additional components had the contents of up to 0.5%: alpha-cadinol (6.1%), limonene (5.8%), santene (3.5%), (E)-hex-2-enal (2.9%), T-cadinol (2.9%), delta-cadinene (2.3%), tricyclene (2.1%), myrcenc (1.6%), beta-pinene (1.2%), borneol (0.9%), germacrene D (0.9%), alpha-murolene (0.6%), and two unidentified compounds. Population IV from Milesevka Canyon had a much higher content of bornyl acetate (42.9%). Populations I-III from Mt. Tara were more abundant in sesquiterpenes (up to 18.2%)). The content of bornyl acetate, the multi-variation analyses according to seven selected components, especially the cluster analysis and genetic analysis of alpha-cadinol, which suggested the monogenic type of heredity, showed a clear differentiation of the two geographic areas, the similarity of populations I-III from the area of Mt. Tara, and the separation of the population IV from Milesevka Canyon.", publisher = "Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim", journal = "Chemistry & Biodiversity", title = "Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer", volume = "6", number = "2", pages = "193-203", doi = "10.1002/cbdv.200800085" }
Nikolić, B., Tešević, V., Đorđević, I., Marin, P. D.,& Bojović, S.. (2009). Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer. in Chemistry & Biodiversity Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh, Weinheim., 6(2), 193-203. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200800085
Nikolić B, Tešević V, Đorđević I, Marin PD, Bojović S. Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer. in Chemistry & Biodiversity. 2009;6(2):193-203. doi:10.1002/cbdv.200800085 .
Nikolić, Biljana, Tešević, Vele, Đorđević, Iris, Marin, Petar D., Bojović, Srđan, "Essential Oil Variability in Natural Populations of Picea omorika, a Rare European Conifer" in Chemistry & Biodiversity, 6, no. 2 (2009):193-203, https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.200800085 . .