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  • 2015-2019  (158)
  • 2010-2014  (151)
  • 1995-1999  (53)
  • 1935-1939  (15)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-05-25
    Description: A synthetic biochemistry platform for cell free production of monoterpenes from glucose Nature Communications, Published online: 24 May 2017; doi:10.1038/ncomms15526 Terpenes are bioactive natural products derived from plants with several commercial applications. Here, the authors engineer a cell-free system composed of 27 enzymes that convert glucose into terpenes, highlighting the potential of synthetic biochemistry approaches for biocompounds production.
    Electronic ISSN: 2041-1723
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Published by Springer Nature
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Croot, Peter L; Bowie, Andrew R; Frew, Russell; Maldonado, Maria T; Hall, Julie A; Safi, Karl A; La Roche, Julie; Boyd, Philip W; Law, Cliff S (2001): Retention of dissolved iron and Fe II in an iron induced Southern Ocean phytoplankton bloom. Geophysical Research Letters, 28(18), 3425-3428, https://doi.org/10.1029/2001GL013023
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: During the 13 day Southern Ocean Iron RE-lease Experiment (SOIREE), dissolved iron concentrations decreased rapidly following each of three iron-enrichments, but remained high (〉1 nM, up to 80% as FeII) after the fourth and final enrichment on day 8. The former trend was mainly due to dilution (spreading of iron-fertilized waters) and particle scavenging. The latter may only be explained by a joint production-maintenance mechanism; photoreduction is the only candidate process able to produce sufficiently high FeII, but as such levels persisted overnight (8 hr dark period) -ten times the half-life for this species- a maintenance mechanism (complexation of FeII) is required, and is supported by evidence of increased ligand concentrations on day 12. The source of these ligands and their affinity for FeII is not known. This retention of iron probably permitted the longevity of this bloom raising fundamental questions about iron cycling in HNLC (High Nitrate Low Chlorophyll) Polar waters.
    Keywords: Comment; Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Error; Event label; GOFLO; Go-Flo bottles; Iron, dissolved; Iron, dissolved, conditional complex stability; Iron-binding ligand, dissolved; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; SOIREE; Southern Ocean - Australasian-Pacific Sector; T1136-1; T1139-1; T1140-6; T1141-6; T1144-6; T1151-5; T1152-5; T1158-5; T1159-6; T1160-3; T1162-4; T1171-5; Tangaroa; Voltammetry
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 64 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-07-08
    Keywords: AMT1/1995-09-25; AMT1/1995-09-26; AMT1/1995-09-27; AMT1/1995-09-28; AMT1/1995-09-29; AMT1/1995-09-30; AMT1/1995-10-02; AMT1/1995-10-03; AMT1/1995-10-04; AMT1/1995-10-05; AMT1/1995-10-06; AMT1/1995-10-07; AMT1/1995-10-08; AMT1/1995-10-09; AMT1/1995-10-10; AMT1/1995-10-11; AMT1/1995-10-12; AMT1/1995-10-13; AMT1/1995-10-14; AMT1/1995-10-15; AMT1/1995-10-16; AMT1/1995-10-17; AMT1/1995-10-18; AMT1/1995-10-19; AMT1/1995-10-20; AMT10/2000-04-15; AMT10/2000-04-17; AMT10/2000-04-19; AMT10/2000-04-20; AMT10/2000-04-22; AMT10/2000-04-23; AMT10/2000-04-24; AMT10/2000-04-25; AMT10/2000-04-26; AMT10/2000-04-28; AMT10/2000-04-29; AMT10/2000-05-01; AMT10/2000-05-02; AMT2/1996-04-23; AMT2/1996-04-24; AMT2/1996-04-25; AMT2/1996-04-29; AMT2/1996-04-30; AMT2/1996-05-01; AMT2/1996-05-02; AMT2/1996-05-03; AMT2/1996-05-04; AMT2/1996-05-05; AMT2/1996-05-06; AMT2/1996-05-07; AMT2/1996-05-08; AMT2/1996-05-09; AMT2/1996-05-10; AMT2/1996-05-11; AMT2/1996-05-12; AMT2/1996-05-14; AMT2/1996-05-15; AMT2/1996-05-16; AMT2/1996-05-17; AMT2/1996-05-18; AMT2/1996-05-19; AMT2/1996-05-20; AMT2/1996-05-21; AMT3/1996-09-24; AMT3/1996-09-25; AMT3/1996-09-26; AMT3/1996-09-27; AMT3/1996-09-28; AMT3/1996-09-29; AMT3/1996-09-30; AMT3/1996-10-02; AMT3/1996-10-03; AMT3/1996-10-04; AMT3/1996-10-05; AMT3/1996-10-06; AMT3/1996-10-07; AMT3/1996-10-08; AMT3/1996-10-09; AMT3/1996-10-10; AMT3/1996-10-11; AMT3/1996-10-12; AMT3/1996-10-13; AMT3/1996-10-14; AMT3/1996-10-15; AMT3/1996-10-16; AMT3/1996-10-23; AMT3/1996-10-24; AMT3/1996-10-25; AMT4/1997-04-21; AMT4/1997-04-22; AMT4/1997-04-23; AMT4/1997-04-30; AMT4/1997-05-01; AMT4/1997-05-02; AMT4/1997-05-03; AMT4/1997-05-04; AMT4/1997-05-05; AMT4/1997-05-06; AMT4/1997-05-07; AMT4/1997-05-08; AMT4/1997-05-09; AMT4/1997-05-10; AMT4/1997-05-11; AMT4/1997-05-12; AMT4/1997-05-13; AMT4/1997-05-14; AMT4/1997-05-15; AMT4/1997-05-16; AMT4/1997-05-17; AMT4/1997-05-18; AMT4/1997-05-19; AMT4/1997-05-20; AMT4/1997-05-21; AMT4/1997-05-22; AMT4/1997-05-23; AMT5/1997-09-17; AMT5/1997-09-18; AMT5/1997-09-19; AMT5/1997-09-20; AMT5/1997-09-21; AMT5/1997-09-22; AMT5/1997-09-25; AMT5/1997-09-26; AMT5/1997-09-27; AMT5/1997-09-28; AMT5/1997-09-29; AMT5/1997-09-30; AMT5/1997-10-01; AMT5/1997-10-02; AMT5/1997-10-03; AMT5/1997-10-04; AMT5/1997-10-05; AMT5/1997-10-06; AMT5/1997-10-07; AMT5/1997-10-08; AMT5/1997-10-09; AMT5/1997-10-10; AMT5/1997-10-11; AMT5/1997-10-12; AMT5/1997-10-13; AMT5/1997-10-14; AMT5/1997-10-15; AMT5/1997-10-16; AMT6/1998-05-16; AMT6/1998-05-17; AMT6/1998-05-21; AMT6/1998-05-22; AMT6/1998-05-23; AMT6/1998-05-24; AMT6/1998-05-25; AMT6/1998-05-27; AMT6/1998-05-28; AMT6/1998-05-29; AMT6/1998-05-30; AMT6/1998-05-31; AMT6/1998-06-01; AMT6/1998-06-02; AMT6/1998-06-03; AMT6/1998-06-04; AMT6/1998-06-05; AMT6/1998-06-06; AMT6/1998-06-07; AMT6/1998-06-08; AMT6/1998-06-09; AMT7/1998-09-15; AMT7/1998-09-16; AMT7/1998-09-17; AMT7/1998-09-22; AMT7/1998-09-23; AMT7/1998-09-25; AMT7/1998-09-26; AMT7/1998-09-27; AMT7/1998-09-28; AMT7/1998-09-29; AMT7/1998-10-01; AMT7/1998-10-02; AMT7/1998-10-03; AMT7/1998-10-04; AMT7/1998-10-05; AMT7/1998-10-06; AMT7/1998-10-07; AMT7/1998-10-08; AMT7/1998-10-09; AMT7/1998-10-10; AMT7/1998-10-11; AMT7/1998-10-12; AMT7/1998-10-13; AMT7/1998-10-14; AMT7/1998-10-15; AMT7/1998-10-16; AMT8/1999-05-05; AMT8/1999-05-06; AMT8/1999-05-07; AMT8/1999-05-08; AMT8/1999-05-09; AMT8/1999-05-10; AMT8/1999-05-12; AMT8/1999-05-13; AMT8/1999-05-18; AMT8/1999-05-19; AMT8/1999-05-20; AMT8/1999-05-21; AMT8/1999-05-22; AMT8/1999-05-23; AMT8/1999-05-24; AMT8/1999-05-25; AMT8/1999-05-26; AMT8/1999-05-27; AMT8/1999-05-28; AMT8/1999-05-29; AMT8/1999-05-30; AMT8/1999-05-31; AMT8/1999-06-01a; AMT8/1999-06-01b; AMT8/1999-06-02; AMT8/1999-06-03; AMT8/1999-06-04; Atlantic; Calculated after Luo et al. (2012); Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Diazotrophs, total biomass as carbon; Event label; Latitude of event; Light microscope; Longitude of event; MAREDAT_Diazotrophs_Collection; MULT; Multiple investigations; Sample comment; Trichodesmium, biomass as carbon; Trichodesmium, carbon per trichome; Trichodesmium abundance, colonies; Trichodesmium abundance, total
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1342 data points
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Tanner, Richelle L; Bowie, Rauri C K; Stillman, Jonathon H (2020): Thermal exposure and transgenerational plasticity influence embryonic success in a bivoltine estuarine sea hare. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 634, 199-211, https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13207
    Publication Date: 2023-11-02
    Description: Phenotypic plasticity has the potential to influence environmental adaptation on extremely short evolutionary timescales. Transgenerational plasticity allows parents to provision their offspring for rapid environmental shifts in as little as one generation. We hypothesized that transgenerational plasticity is used by multivoltine organisms to maximize fitness under predictable seasonal fluctuations in environmental conditions. This study examined how seasonal thermal variation (i.e., average temperature and acute heat stress), impacts physiological tolerance, maternal provisioning, and developmental plasticity across multiple generations of the direct-developing bivoltine eelgrass sea hare, Phyllaplysia taylori. Seasonally-acclimatized adults from successive generations were acclimated at 13, 17 and 21°C to assess thermal tolerance limits and plasticity, and the effects of thermal acclimation and heat stress on reproductive output in one generation were assessed to characterize transgenerational plasticity. There was an interactive effect of seasonal generation and acclimation temperature on heat tolerance limits. Total maternal investment in egg laying decreased by 39% under at warmer average temperatures and declined by 78% with the addition of acute heat stress. Acute heat stress reduced hatching success by an average of 8%. Transgenerational plasticity maintained total viable offspring under two seasonal conditions regularly experienced in the wild, despite different offspring density in egg masses within these conditions and large individual differences in offspring output. We find that existing transgenerational plasticity on average cannot maintain current offspring numbers (as reflected in the 13°C and 17°C acclimation conditions) under warmer conditions (21°C), and is thus inadequate to compensate for the effects of climate change.
    Keywords: Climate change; Development; invertebrate; physiological plasticity; physiology; transgenerational
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 1.7 MBytes
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Cossa, Daniel; Heimbürger, Lars-Eric; Lannuzel, Delphine; Rintoul, Stephen R; Butler, Edward C V; Bowie, Andrew R; Averty, Bernard; Watson, Roslyn J; Remenyi, Tomas (2011): Mercury in the Southern Ocean. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 75(14), 4037-4052, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2011.05.001
    Publication Date: 2023-12-13
    Description: We present here the first mercury speciation study in the water column of the Southern Ocean, using a high-resolution south-to-north section (27 stations from 65.50°S to 44.00°S) with up to 15 depths (0-4440 m) between Antarctica and Tasmania (Australia) along the 140°E meridian. In addition, in order to explore the role of sea ice in Hg cycling, a study of mercury speciation in the 'snow-sea ice-seawater' continuum was conducted at a coastal site, near the Australian Casey station (66.40°S; 101.14°E). In the open ocean waters, total Hg (Hg(T)) concentrations varied from 0.63 to 2.76 pmol/L with 'transient-type' vertical profiles and a latitudinal distribution suggesting an atmospheric mercury source south of the Southern Polar Front (SPF) and a surface removal north of the Subantartic Front (SAF). Slightly higher mean Hg(T) concentrations (1.35 ± 0.39 pmol/L) were measured in Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) compared to Antarctic Intermediate water (AAIW) (1.15 ± 0.22 pmol/L). Labile Hg (Hg(R)) concentrations varied from 0.01 to 2.28 pmol/L, with a distribution showing that the Hg(T) enrichment south of the SPF consisted mainly of Hg(R) (67 ± 23%), whereas, in contrast, the percentage was half that in surface waters north of PFZ (33 ± 23%). Methylated mercury species (MeHg(T)) concentrations ranged from 0.02 to 0.86 pmol/L. All vertical MeHg(T) profiles exhibited roughly the same pattern, with low concentrations observed in the surface layer and increasing concentrations with depth up to an intermediate depth maximum. As for Hg(T), low mean MeHg(T) concentrations were associated with AAIW, and higher ones with AABW. The maximum of MeHg(T) concentration at each station was systematically observed within the oxygen minimum zone, with a statistically significant MeHg(T) vs Apparent Oxygen Utilization (AOU) relationship (p 〈0.001). The proportion of Hg(T) as methylated species was lower than 5% in the surface waters, around 50% in deep waters below 1000 m, reaching a maximum of 78% south of the SPF. At Casey coastal station Hg(T) and Hg(R) concentrations found in the 'snow-sea ice-seawater' continuum were one order of magnitude higher than those measured in open ocean waters. The distribution of Hg(T) there suggests an atmospheric Hg deposition with snow and a fractionation process during sea ice formation, which excludes Hg from the ice with a parallel Hg enrichment of brine, probably concurring with the Hg enrichment of AABW observed in the open ocean waters. Contrastingly, MeHg(T) concentrations in the sea ice environment were in the same range as in the open ocean waters, remaining below 0.45 pmol/L. The MeHg(T) vertical profile through the continuum suggests different sources, including atmosphere, seawater and methylation in basal ice. Whereas Hg(T) concentrations in the water samples collected between the Antarctic continent and Tasmania are comparable to recent measurements made in the other parts of the World Ocean (e.g., Soerensen et al., 2010; doi:10.1021/es903839n), the Hg species distribution suggests distinct features in the Southern Ocean Hg cycle: (i) a net atmospheric Hg deposition on surface water near the ice edge, (ii) the Hg enrichment in brine during sea ice formation, and (iii) a net methylation of Hg south of the SPF.
    Keywords: GEOTRACES; Global marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-04-16
    Keywords: Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Event label; GOFLO; Go-Flo bottles; Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometer (GF-AAS); Iron; Iron, dissolved; Iron, standard deviation; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; SOIREE; Southern Ocean - Australasian-Pacific Sector; T1136-1; T1139-1; T1140-6; T1143; T1144-6; T1147-2; T1151-13; T1151-5; T1152-5; T1154-2; T1158-5; T1159-6; T1160-3; T1162-4; T1171-10; T1171-5; Tangaroa
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 174 data points
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of the American Water Resources Association 31 (1995), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1752-1688
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geography
    Notes: : Combinations of vegetation and structure were applied to control streambank erosion along incised stream channels in northwest Mississippi. Eleven sites along seven channels with contributing drainage areas ranging from 12–300 km2 were used for testing. Tested configurations included eroding banks protected by vegetation alone, vegetation with structural toe protection, vegetation planted on re-graded banks, and vegetation planted on regraded banks with toe protection. Monitoring continued for up to 10 years, and casual observation for up to 18 years. Sixteen woody and 13 nonwoody species were tested. Native woody species, particularly willow, appear to be best adapted to stream-bank environments. Sericea lespedeza and Alamo switchgrass were the best nonwoody species tested. Vegetation succeeded in reaches where the bed was not degrading, competition from kudzu was absent, and bank slopes were stabilized by grading or toe protection. Natural vegetation invaded planted and unplanted stable banks composed of fertile soils. Designs involving riprap toe protection in the form of a longitudinal dike and woody vegetation appeared to be most cost-effective. The exotic vine kudzu presents perhaps the greatest long-term obstacle to restoring stable, functional riparian zones along incised channels in our region. (KEY TERMS: vegetation; streambank protection; bioengineering; stream restoration; channel incision; riparian zone.)
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Cambridge : Emerald
    Info 1 (1999), S. 127-131 
    ISSN: 1465-9840
    Source: Emerald Fulltext Archive Database 1994-2005
    Topics: Media Resources and Communication Sciences, Journalism , Economics
    Notes: Recounts how, in 1977, President Clinton appointed an advisory committee (the Gore Commission) to chart a reasonable course for digital television, which at its simplest is much "snazzier" than analogue. Looks at public broadcast networks, such as cable and Mitsubishi's underwriting of 10-15 hours of weekly prime-time entertainment programming on CBS for one year, at a reported cost of $20,000 to $30,000 per hour.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
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    Unknown
    Dordrecht : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Journal of Business Ethics. 14:9 (1995:Sept.) 703-714 
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  • 10
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    Ann Arbor, Mich., etc., : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Journal of Asian Studies. 54:2 (1995:May) 641 
    ISSN: 0021-9118
    Topics: Political Science , Economics
    Description / Table of Contents: Southeast Asia
    Notes: Book Reviews
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