Egyptian Journal of Botany http://ejbo.journals.ekb.eg/ 20 P LANTAGO major has been used to treat various diseases since ancient times. The present study aimed to assess the seasonal and habitat-related variations in the secondary metabolite content and antimicrobial activity of P. major leaf extracts. Eight habitats were selected for sampling plants in four seasons. The phytochemical screening of the ethanolic and chloroform extracts of P. major leaves from different habitats in different seasons showed the presence of cardiac glycosides, flavonoids, and phenolics. The highest cardiac glycoside and total flavonoid contents were observed in urban habitats and cultivated crops during winter, whereas the highest total phenolic content was observed in fallow lands during summer. Compounds separated and identified using high-performance liquid chromatography included phenolics such as ellagic acid, catechol, resorcinol, gallic acid, and phloroglucinol and flavonoids such as apigenin, luteolin, chrysoeriol, rutin, quercetin, kaempferol, and avicularin. The methanolic extracts of P. major leaves showed higher antimicrobial activity than aqueous and ethanolic extracts; the methanolic extract of P. major leaves from canal banks showed the highest activity against P. aeruginosa, followed by that from orchards against S. aureus. The results suggest that P. major contains phenolics and flavonoids that have potential medicinal applications. Moreover, the antimicrobial activity of the methanolic extract differed with habitat. Therefore, the present study confirms previously reported findings and indicates that the phytochemical contents and antimicrobial activity of the plant extracts differed with environmental factors (habitat and season). In future studies, the phytochemicals with antimicrobial activity need to be extracted, separated, purified, identified, and tested as pure or mixed compounds.
The symptomatological and histopathological studies on the terrestrial snail Eobania vermiculata Müller infected with the parasitic nematode Rhabditis sp. showed that there is a great evidence of a direct effect of the nematodes on its movement, behavior and tissues of the snail before death. These symptoms were summarized in slow slipping, turning of the headfoot direction while slipping and suppressive feeding. Histological investigation revealed that focal cellular reaction was formed around the developing larvae in the snail tissues particularly the headfoot region. Capsules of different sizes were also developed around the nematode larvae.
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