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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "Djamel Bensizerara"

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    Antimicrobial Activity of Xerophytic Plant (Cotula cinerea Delile) Extracts Against Some Pathogenic Bacteria and Fungi
    (Jordan Journal of Biological Sciences, 2013-05-30) Djamel Bensizerara
    Abstract In the present investigation, an Algerian commonly available plant namely Cotula cinerea, found throughout sandy desert grounds, was screening for antimicrobial activity against five different human pathogenic microbes namely, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli and Candida albicans. The antimicrobial activity was evaluated using the agar disc diffusion method. Aerial parts of C. cinerea were subjected to extraction using four solvents of different polarity (70% ethanol, n-butanol, ethyl acetate and petroleum ether). Petroleum ether and n-butanol extracts had the most effective antimicrobial activity with Gram-negative K. pneumoniae demonstrating the highest susceptibility. Linear regression analysis was performed to find correlations between extract concentrations and inhibition activity. Results showed a s ignificant increase in mean diameter of inhibition zone with increasing extract concentrations of all solvents except n-butanol. Two-way ANOVA test was used to compare the effect of C. cinerea extracts on the antimicrobial properties. All plant extracts have shown significant differences in their actions as antimicrobial agents. Indeed, the n-butanol extract at a low concentration of 0.25 mg mL-1 indicated a potent antimicrobial activity of C. cinerea extracts
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    Ecological status interactions for assessing bird diversity in relation to a heterogeneous landscape structure
    (Assessing bi AVIAN BIOLOGY RESEARCH, 2013) Djamel Bensizerara
    Avian diversity is used to assess the functionality of diverse types of habitats around Salt Lake Djendli, North- east Algeria. The landscape is stratified into five habitat types in a gradient from wetland to forested mountains. Bird species found in these habitats can be classified into four ecological groups with decreasing degrees of aquatic specialisation and increasing forest specialisation. For each surveyed species, five ecological status were assigned. Overall, there was lower species richness in urban areas compared to other “natural” habitats. Birds have a biogeographical affinity to the western Palaearctic according to the dominant faunal types. Interactions of ecological status with phenological traits reveal that water birds are different from non-aquatic species because most of them are migrants. Moreover, overall, there is no worrying conservation status for surveyed birds. Bird diet is dependent on the ecological status that differentiate bird groups from each other due to differences in the food resources of the habitats they frequent. Phenological categories tend to link together birds of urban and open-lands. These two groups are affected by seasonal human activities. Our findings emphasise the importance of using combinations within the birds’ ecological status, which would give information on the actual state of avifauna. This approach is relevant for future programmes and conservation actions.

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