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(Abstract)
(Abstract)

... 14. Determination of phenol coefficient. 15. Use of differential and selective media. 16. Oligodynamic action of heavy metals on microbes. 17. Categorizing bacteria from various sources (air, water, soil, food etc.) based on morphological , microscopic, cultural and biochemical and other characteris ...
NJ Ocean Acidification Charge Question
NJ Ocean Acidification Charge Question

... mollusks, including pteropods (a tiny planktonic snail) - are expected to be more severely affected than calcite calcifiers such as coralline algae and sea urchins, because of differences in solubility—aragonite is a more soluble form than calcite. It appears that larval mollusks and some other calc ...
European Strategy on Marine Research Infrastructure
European Strategy on Marine Research Infrastructure

... technology are given in Annex 2. The report emphasises that long-term baseline funding is particularly required for the development and operation of ocean observatories. These are European responsibilities of profound significance to the citizens, transcending the responsibilities and resources of m ...
Relationship of Structure to Function in Bacterial
Relationship of Structure to Function in Bacterial

... infections (Finland, 1970), there have been several studies on the activities of antibodies to endotoxins and to cross-reactive bacterial antigens (Chedid et al., 1968; McCabe, 1972; Ziegler et al., 1973; Mullan et al., 1974). Nowotny, Radvany & Neale (1965) first reported that certain activities ma ...
appendix 18 - Lyttelton Port of Christchurch
appendix 18 - Lyttelton Port of Christchurch

... Lyttelton Port of Christchurch (LPC) is proposing a series of projects to recover from damage to Port infrastructure caused by the Canterbury earthquakes and to enhance part of the Port’s operations. The objective of this report is to identify the potential adverse effects the proposed projects may ...
Specimen and Collection Transport - IP Col-lab
Specimen and Collection Transport - IP Col-lab

... Collect a sufficient volume of specimen to ensure that all tests requested may be performed. Inadequate amounts of specimen may yield false-negative results. • Label specimens properly with patient’s name and identification number, source, specific site, date, time of collection, and initials of co ...
Antimicrobial resistance
Antimicrobial resistance

... are not only communicated by the kind of media aiming at increasing their sales figures. Any use of antibiotics, may it be for human, animal, plant or food processing technology, has the potential to lead, at some point in time, to bacterial resistance. Although many publications are beginning to ap ...
Study of magnetic and gamma radiation influence on bacterial
Study of magnetic and gamma radiation influence on bacterial

... a brief information can be found concerning microorganisms investigated in the paper: Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive cocci) – the main causative agents of pyoinflammatory disorders in human beings. In particular, those cause 70–80% of septic arthritis of adolescent patients, more rarely in adu ...
Genetically Modified Insect Factories: A New
Genetically Modified Insect Factories: A New

... are able to propagate and spread more quickly where there is over-use or misuse of antibiotics.39 In environmental samples where antibiotics are present at high concentrations, resistance genes are both diverse and highly enriched in parallel with transposases (highly mobile gene capture systems kno ...
Single-stranded DNA phages - FEMS Microbiology Letters
Single-stranded DNA phages - FEMS Microbiology Letters

... Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) phages are profoundly different from tailed phages in many aspects including the nature and size of their genome, virion size and morphology, mutation rate, involvement in horizontal gene transfer, infection dynamics and cell lysis mechanisms. Despite the importance of ss ...
Bacterial interactions within the digestive tract
Bacterial interactions within the digestive tract

... animals are prepared by administering bacteria, usually by mouth, to axenic (germfree) animals. Axenic and gnotoxenic animals are kept in completely sterile units called isolators. They are given sterilised food and they breathe sterile air. Such equipment has now been developed for various species ...
Evolutionary ecology during the rise of dioxygen in the Earth`s
Evolutionary ecology during the rise of dioxygen in the Earth`s

... Earth (e.g. Sleep & Bird 2007). In the pre-photosynthetic biosphere, only 1 carbon atom in approximately 700 became organic matter during its sojourn in surface environments. This vast productivity difference between photosynthetic and pre-photosynthetic ecosystems implies that even the earliest pho ...
Microbial eukaryotic distribution in a dynamic Beaufort Sea and the
Microbial eukaryotic distribution in a dynamic Beaufort Sea and the

... global climate change, which influences water mass distribution, could be changed distributions of microbes as well as larger animals. The result may well be community changes and perhaps extinctions of local ecotypes and loss of their distinct genetic heritage. Small protists are key components of ...
Evolutionary ecology during the rise of dioxygen in the Earth`s
Evolutionary ecology during the rise of dioxygen in the Earth`s

... Earth (e.g. Sleep & Bird 2007). In the pre-photosynthetic biosphere, only 1 carbon atom in approximately 700 became organic matter during its sojourn in surface environments. This vast productivity difference between photosynthetic and pre-photosynthetic ecosystems implies that even the earliest pho ...
Conserving California`s Vibrant Deep-Sea Ecosystems
Conserving California`s Vibrant Deep-Sea Ecosystems

... features. These areas serve as oceanic oases, providing nutrient-rich waters, unusually high productivity and relatively large concentrations of sea life. Endangered sperm, fin and blue whales; unique angler fish; octopuses and sea jellies; and extremely long-lived deep-sea corals and sponges are ju ...
BMC Microbiology
BMC Microbiology

... environment. As(III) is much more toxic and mobile than As(V), hence microbial arsenic redox transformation has a major impact on arsenic toxicity and mobility which can greatly influence the human health. Our main purpose was to investigate the distribution and diversity of microbial arsenite-resis ...
Detecting rare gene transfer events in bacterial populations
Detecting rare gene transfer events in bacterial populations

... Given   the   generally   low   mechanistic   probability   of   horizontal   transfer   of   non-­‐ mobile   DNA   in   complex   environments   such   as   soil   or   the   gastrointestinal   tract,   HGT   events   will   initially   be   pre ...
Sampling feasibility study
Sampling feasibility study

... Since these regulations include inspections and other control measures, inspection has been organized at the regional level. More specifically in the Flemish Region, inspection is carried out by two public services: the Flemish Agency for Care and Health of the Public Health Surveillance, whose main ...
4.4. Phytoplankton and primary productivity off Northwest Africa The
4.4. Phytoplankton and primary productivity off Northwest Africa The

... CO2  concentrations  have  increased  by  40%  since  pre‐industrial  times  (year  1750)  (IPCC,  2013)  and  more       than  25%  from  any  time  in  the  past  420,000  years  (Petit  et  al.,  1999).  One  of  the  major  changes  in  the         global carbon cycle on earth is that the role o ...
Universal microbial diagnostics using random DNA probes
Universal microbial diagnostics using random DNA probes

... statistical inverse problem to detect the presence and estimate the concentrations of the various bacteria in the sample. Using signal recovery techniques from the recently developed theory of compressive sensing (16, 17), we show below that it is possible to stably solve this inverse problem even w ...
WOR 1 - World Ocean Review
WOR 1 - World Ocean Review

... together researchers from many different disciplines – marine scientists, earth scientists, bio­ logists and chemists, as well as mathematicians, economists, lawyers and medical scien­ tists  – to engage in joint interdisciplinary research on the marine environment. How can unresolved questions be i ...
The Microbiome: The Trillions of
The Microbiome: The Trillions of

... microbial community structure varied greatly between body habitats, the potential metabolic capabilities encoded in these communities’ metagenomes were much more constant. That is, although microbial taxonomic composition varied among healthy individuals, their collective metabolic functions remaine ...
Eds., K. Omori, X. Guo, N. Yoshie, N. Fujii, I.... © by TERRAPUB, 2011.
Eds., K. Omori, X. Guo, N. Yoshie, N. Fujii, I.... © by TERRAPUB, 2011.

... debris. As emphasized by Law et al. (2010) it is now widely evident that plastic debris is a major anthropogenic contaminant in the world oceans. The impacts of plastic marine debris include direct effects such as feeding interference and entanglement of marine animals (e.g., Gregory, 2009), consump ...
Harmful Algal Blooms and Climate Change
Harmful Algal Blooms and Climate Change

... The temperature-growth niche width for 150+ species and strains of dinoflagellates, raphidophytes and other diverse flagellates was evaluated to assess the potential effect of global warming on harmful algal blooms. The data collectively suggest the species in those phylogenies predominantly have su ...
1999 Ecology 80.1157.. - Iowa State University
1999 Ecology 80.1157.. - Iowa State University

... economy each year (FAO 1993). Marine ecosystems (including estuarine, coastal, and marine habitats) are also essential in the global carbon budget, storing 50 times more inorganic carbon than the earth’s atmosphere, suggesting that marine primary production may play a global climatological role (Rit ...
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Marine microorganism

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