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1
INDIVIDUAL AND POPULATION RESPONSES TO ABIOTIC STRESSES IN ITALIAN RYEGRASS

Expected changes in environmental factors will alter productivity of agroecosystems and influence the distribution of agricultural pests. In addition to the natural factors that cause stress, humans introduce chemical pesticides into the agricultural environment. Weeds persist in...

EPA Science Inventory

2
Abiotic Granular Alteration Textures in 35 Myr old Impact Glass from 1.4 km Depth in the Chesapeake Bay Impact Structure
2010-04-01

Description of abiotic granular alteration textures in impact glass from 1.4 km depth in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure.

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

3
Histological Differentiation Among Abiotic Causes of Conifer Needle Necrosis.
1983-01-01

Symptoms induced by phytotoxic gases within conifer needles can be differentiated histological from those caused by other abiotic agents including winter drying, drought, and salt. However, it is not possible to differentiate among symptoms caused by hydr...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

4
Reactive oxygen species homeostasis and signalling during drought and salinity stresses.
2009-08-27

Water deficit and salinity, especially under high light intensity or in combination with other stresses, disrupt photosynthesis and increase photorespiration, altering the normal homeostasis of cells and cause an increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS play a dual role in the response of plants to abiotic stresses ...

PubMed

5
Community assembly of xeric-adapted anurans at multiple spatial scales
2005-12-01

The distribution and abundance of organisms is influenced by historical, abiotic, and biotic factors. The goal of my dissertation was to determine the distribution of anurans in the Big Bend region of the Chihuahuan Desert and to examine how abiotic and biotic factors shape the composition and structure of anuran communities at multiple spatial scales. My ...

E-print Network

6
Biodiversity in a complex world: consolidation and progress in functional biodiversity research.
2009-10-22

The global decline of biodiversity caused by human domination of ecosystems worldwide is supposed to alter important process rates and state variables in these ecosystems. However, there is considerable debate on the prevalence and importance of biodiversity effects on ecosystem function (BDEF). Here, we argue that much of the debate stems from two major ...

PubMed

7
Adhesion of Type 1-Fimbriated Escherichia coli to Abiotic Surfaces Leads to Altered Composition of Outer Membrane Proteins
2001-04-01

Phenotypic differences between planktonic bacteria and those attached to abiotic surfaces exist, but the mechanisms involved in the adhesion response of bacteria are not well understood. By the use of two-dimensional (2D) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, we have demonstrated that attachment of Escherichia coli to abiotic surfaces leads to ...

PubMed Central

8
Fundamentals of Acoustic Emission,
1994-01-01

... energy caused by a structural alteration in a ... Generally, these structural alterations are the results ... externally applied mechanical or thermal stresses. ...

DTIC Science & Technology

9
Tracing Alteration Textures in Young to Ancient Pillow Lavas: A Petrographic Signature of Early Life on Earth
2004-12-01

Alteration of basaltic glass in pillow lava rims and hyaloclastites in the upper oceanic crust may involve a combination of abiotic and biotic processes depending on thermal conditions. Abiotic alteration yields smooth fronts of banded dark yellow to brown material of approximately equal thickness on both sides of ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

10
Native species behaviour mitigates the impact of habitat-forming invasive seaweed.
2010-03-30

Habitat-forming invasive species cause large, novel changes to the abiotic environment. These changes may elicit important behavioural responses in native fauna, yet little is known about mechanisms driving this behaviour and how such trait-mediated responses influence the fitness of native species. Low dissolved oxygen is a key ...

PubMed

11
Herbivore-induced resource sequestration in plants: why bother?
2011-03-24

Herbivores can cause numerous changes in primary plant metabolism. Recent studies using radioisotopes, for example, have found that insect herbivores and related cues can induce faster export from leaves and roots and greater partitioning into tissues inaccessible to foraging herbivores. This process, termed induced resource sequestration, is being proposed as an important ...

PubMed

12
Factors affecting metal toxicity to (and accumulation by) aquatic organisms - overview
1987-01-01

This literature review encompasses aquatic environmental toxicities of metals and metalloids. The emphasis is on the influencing factors on metal toxicity to aquatic organisms. The effects of environmental factors on metal uptake are also discussed. The factors can be divided into biotic and abiotic. The biotic factors include tolerance, size and life stages, species, and ...

Energy Citations Database

13
Impact of ozone on vegetation
1984-12-01

Visible injury on vegetation is one of the earliest and most obvious manifestations of ozone injury. However, ozone effects are not limited to visible injury; impacts range from reduced plant growth, decreased yield, changes in crop quality and alterations in susceptibility to abiotic and biotic stresses. Several approaches were used to estimate the ozone ...

Energy Citations Database

14
Global change and species interactions in terrestrial ecosystems.
2008-12-01

The main drivers of global environmental change (CO2 enrichment, nitrogen deposition, climate, biotic invasions and land use) cause extinctions and alter species distributions, and recent evidence shows that they exert pervasive impacts on various antagonistic and mutualistic interactions among species. In this review, we synthesize data from 688 published ...

PubMed

15
Benthic communities of streams related to different land uses in a hydrographic basin in southern Brazil.
2008-10-09

Different land uses affect the characteristics of a hydrographic basin, reflected in the river water quality, and consequently affecting the aquatic biota. The benthic community closely reflects the alterations caused by different human activities. In this study, the effects of different land uses were evaluated by analysis of the benthic community ...

PubMed

16
Atypical epigenetic mark in an atypical location: cytosine methylation at asymmetric (CNN) sites within the body of a non-repetitive tomato gene
2011-05-20

BackgroundEukaryotic DNA methylation is one of the most studied epigenetic processes, as it results in a direct and heritable covalent modification triggered by external stimuli. In contrast to mammals, plant DNA methylation, which is stimulated by external cues exemplified by various abiotic types of stress, is often found not only at CG sites but also at CNG (N denoting A, C ...

PubMed Central

17
[Pharmaecology].
2011-06-01

Two of the main characteristics of western societies in the last fifty years have been the medicalization of the human life and the environmental degradation. The first one has forced human being to consider medicines use related to what would be rational, reasonable and well-reasoned. The second one brought us to a new ecologist conscience. In relation to the "human social system", the effects of ...

PubMed

18
Thiol-disulfide redox proteomics in plant research.
2010-01-01

Abiotic stresses often cause metabolic imbalances which affect cellular redox homeostasis and alter the rate of reduction state of functional and regulatory protein thiols and the rate of reactive oxygen species release. Excessive displacement from redox equilibrium causes oxidative damage to cell structures and ...

PubMed

19
Alteration of island food-web dynamics following major disturbance by hurricanes.
2007-01-01

Major abiotic disturbance can be an important factor influencing food-web dynamics, particularly in areas impacted by the recent increase in hurricane activity. We present a unique set of data on key food-web processes occurring on 10 small islands for three relatively calm years and then four subsequent years during which two hurricanes passed directly over the study site. ...

PubMed

20
The 2008 South China Freeze and its Impact on the Forests
2008-12-01

An unprecedented calamity caused by snow and freezing rain occurred in South China in 2008. This freeze was closely related to the La Nina phenomenon according to a report from the World Meteorological Organization. The freeze stroke 19 provinces in China, and damaged forests of 19.33 million ha with a standing volume loss of 371 million m3. It is estimated that the direct ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

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21
Two modeling approaches for quantifying hydrologic and biologic controls on large-scale nitrogen cycling, Upper Rio Grande, NM
2007-12-01

Variations in nutrient concentrations can be caused by both abiotic changes in hydrology and biotic processes. Most process-level studies of nutrient cycling are conducted in small catchment systems and at points on large river systems. Relatively less understanding has been developed on how biotic and abiotic processes influence ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

22
Bioleaching of Ilmenite and Basalt in the Presence of Iron-oxidizing and Iron-scavenging Bacteria
2010-12-01

Understanding the biogeochemical processes that control mineral weathering rates is not only important for Earth systems, but may be a useful for developing technologies for the in-situ utilization of resources from other planets, moons, and asteroids. Traditional techniques that may be used to extract metals like iron, titanium, and aluminum from planetary rocks have large energy and/or hardware ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

23
Changes in snowmelt date and summer precipitation affect the flowering phenology of Erythronium grandiflorum (glacier lily; Liliaceae).
2010-08-23

� Premise of the study: Climate change has affected species worldwide, including alterations in phenology, migration patterns, distribution, and survival. Because Erythronium grandiflorum is an early-season bloomer, alterations in its phenology may have serious implications for many North American Rocky Mountain communities, including changes in resource ...

PubMed

24
Nitrogen Concentrations and Isotopic Compositions of Altered Terrestrial Glassy Basaltic Rocks, and Implications for Astrobiology
2011-03-01

We report N contents and isotopic compositions of modern and ancient subaqueous basaltic rocks, discuss the biotic and abiotic processes generating these N signatures, and speculate on the implications for preservation in extraterrestrial materials.

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

25
Capsicum annuum tobacco mosaic virus-induced clone 1 expression perturbation alters the plant's response to ethylene and interferes with the redox homeostasis.
2004-04-23

Capsicum annuum tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-induced clone 1 (CaTin1) gene was expressed early during incompatible interaction of hot pepper (Caspsicum annuum) plants with TMV and Xanthomonas campestris. RNA-blot analysis showed that CaTin1 gene was expressed only in roots in untreated plants and induced mainly in leaf in response to ethylene, NaCl, and methyl viologen but not by salicylic acid and ...

PubMed

26
Capsicum annuum Tobacco Mosaic Virus-Induced Clone 1 Expression Perturbation Alters the Plant's Response to Ethylene and Interferes with the Redox Homeostasis1
2004-05-01

Capsicum annuum tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-induced clone 1 (CaTin1) gene was expressed early during incompatible interaction of hot pepper (Caspsicum annuum) plants with TMV and Xanthomonas campestris. RNA-blot analysis showed that CaTin1 gene was expressed only in roots in untreated plants and induced mainly in leaf in response to ethylene, NaCl, and methyl viologen but not by salicylic acid and ...

PubMed Central

27
Abiotic-stress induces demethylation and transcriptional activation of a gene encoding a glycerophosphodiesterase-like protein in tobacco plants.
2007-02-02

To examine the relationship between gene expression and DNA methylation, transcriptionally activated genes were screened in hypomethylated transgenic tobacco plants expressing an anti-DNA methyltransferase sequence. Among 16 genes initially identified, one clone was found to encode a glycerophosphodiesterase-like protein (NtGPDL), earlier reported to be responsive to aluminium stress. When ...

PubMed

28
Scavenger Receptors and Resistance to Inhaled Allergens
2009-02-01

... step, especially the ability to cause increased asthma ... to alter susceptibility to asthma in adoptive ... SRA) to inflammation caused by oxidant pollutants ...

DTIC Science & Technology

29
Characterization of Mediators of Cardiac And Renal ...
2008-08-01

... Exposure to excess prenatal androgens has been previously shown to cause growth restriction, alter sexual development and function, and cause ...

DTIC Science & Technology

30
Silencing of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase in plants alters abiotic stress signal transduction
2007-09-18

Transgenic plants with reduced poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) levels have broad-spectrum stress-resistant phenotypes. Both Arabidopsis thaliana and oilseed rape (Brassica napus) lines overexpressing RNA interference-PARP constructs were more resistant to various abiotic stress treatments in laboratory and greenhouse experiments without negative effects on growth, ...

PubMed Central

31
Thermally contingent plasticity: temperature alters expression of predator-induced colour and morphology in a Neotropical treefrog tadpole.
2010-10-22

1. Behavioural, morphological and coloration plasticity are common responses of prey to predation risk. Theory predicts that prey should respond to the relative magnitude of risk, rather than a single level of response to any risk level. In addition to conspecific and predator densities, prey growth and differentiation rates affect the duration of vulnerability to size- and stage-limited predators ...

PubMed

32
DEMONSTRATION BULLETIN: METAL-ENHANCED ABIOTIC DEGRADATION TECHNOLOGY - ENVIROMETAL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

EnviroMetal Technologies, Inc. (ETI), of Guelph, ON, Canada, has developed the metal-enhanced abiotic degradation technology to treat halogenated volatile organic compounds (VOC) in water. A reactive, zero-valent, granular iron medium causes reductive dehalogenation of VOCs yield...

EPA Science Inventory

33
What Makes Us Itch?

... with antihistamines and other drugs that alter the immune reaction. Neuropathic itch is caused by damage to the ...

MedlinePLUS

34
IMPACT DAMAGE DETECTION AND EVALUATION BY ...
1983-04-01

... BOTH CASES, ALTERATION OF LOCAL MATERIAL PROPERTIES BY REGIONS OF DAMAGE CAUSE THE PRODUCTION OF LOCAL THERMAL ...

DTIC Science & Technology

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