「Organisms」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 827件
complicated by the introduction of two other | organisms, a fungal parasite Escovopsis and Pseudonoca |
intake system kills nearly a billion aquatic | organisms a year, including the shortnose sturgeon, an |
has no useful activity against Gram positive | organisms, Acinetobacter species, or Pseudomonas aerug |
ght-emitting molecule, found in many aquatic | organisms across seven phyla. |
liance with the Hazardous Substances and New | Organisms Act - HSNO Act 1996. |
Nocturnal, which describes | organisms active in the night |
cies, as opposed to adaptation consisting of | organisms actively selecting, defining, shaping and of |
Such a functionality is needed because all | organisms actually produce alcohol in small amounts by |
Organisms affect geomorphic processes in a variety of | |
While these | organisms affect many types of plants, the destructive |
worm, is a cyclophyllid cestode that infects | organisms afflicted with fleas, including canids, feli |
orphous silica arising from different marine | organisms after their death: siliceous spicules of spo |
to protect a large variety of hematophagous | organisms against the toxic effects of free heme. |
orillas, dogs, dragons, dinosaurs, and other | organisms, all of them only millimeters long, leading |
any environment stands a chance of mutating | organisms already present and affecting the biome. |
protein, forms the fibrous skeleton of most | organisms among the phylum Porifera, the sponges. |
g the influence on the distribution of shore | organisms; an updated Annotated Systematic Index and G |
He studied marine | organisms and the embryonic development of sex organs. |
re found in the polar capsule of myxosporean | organisms, and is analogous to the "penetrant" structu |
evidence from fossils to reconstruct extinct | organisms and the environments they lived in; this dis |
cybernetics and information theory to living | organisms, and went to the Weizmann Institute in Jerus |
ecause these two species are important model | organisms and because their preputial glands are very |
Most 'normal' contaminants (microbial | organisms and inorganic or organic pollutants) will be |
Organisms and Artifacts: Design in Nature and Elsewher | |
plicated the determination of phylogenies of | organisms, and inconsistencies in phylogeny have been |
chemistry and Functional Biology, Biology of | Organisms and Systems, Functional Biology, Medicine, M |
tostanols and phytosterols in photosynthetic | organisms and plants. |
of the standard definition of ecology, where | organisms and their environments are recognized as hav |
) and the more metaphorical struggle between | organisms and the environment (tending to be cooperati |
the escarpment, trapping and quickly burying | organisms, and preventing their decay, permitting the |
cal system, from chemical reactors to living | organisms, and generally takes the following form |
of the metabolic capacities of the targeted | organisms and understand how it adapts to its environm |
ain a description of typical features of the | organisms, and how it differs from other similar organ |
spermidine, it is found in a wide variety of | organisms and tissues and is an essential growth facto |
Non-cellular | organisms and cellular life would be the only two subd |
cellular and cellular structures, organs and | organisms, and directly enable cognition, memory and b |
ics, particularly its applications to living | organisms and the relationship between structure and o |
mes were suggested as separate entities from | organisms and talked about in chemical terms. |
Members of the AAA family are found in all | organisms and they are essential for many cellular fun |
hology are the study of interactions between | organisms and the development of landforms, and are th |
approaches in the study of molecules, cells, | organisms, and ecosystems. |
ng methods are established for several model | organisms and may vary depending on the species used. |
metal ions (e.g., Cu1+/2+, Zn2+, Fe2+/3+) in | organisms and thus, these biomolecules can balance pro |
the body surface clear of algae, encrusting | organisms, and other debris in conjunction with the ci |
more, CPs are classified as toxic to aquatic | organisms, and carcinogenic to rats and mice. |
ch as Sudan, undeclared genetically modified | organisms, and foreign objects, with an emergency resp |
er, metronidazole is selective for anaerobic | organisms, and so it is effective against many (though |
There is one ecosphere for all living | organisms and what affects one, affects all. |
weat is reduced to nitrite by skin commensal | organisms and then to NO on the slightly acidic skin s |
ostulates a universe, complete with resident | organisms and intelligent beings, embodied as Wang til |
have a deleterious impact on populations of | organisms and is due to mating of closely related indi |
PGK is found in all living | organisms and its sequence has been highly conserved t |
hoxychlor is ingested and absorbed by living | organisms, and it accumulates in the food chain. |
medicine in mastitis caused by gram-negative | organisms and in dermatologic disorders. |
and their interaction with plant life, other | organisms and the environment. |
InsP3R is very diverse among | organisms, and is necessary for the control of cellula |
rch on the molecular structure of biological | organisms and the interaction of interaction of biolog |
ct the timber planking from attack by marine | organisms and reduce drag. |
olve several stages each involving different | organisms and metabolic pathways. |
aterrestrial lifeform that assimilates other | organisms and in turn imitates them. |
elves are the initiators of major changes in | organisms and ecosystems. . . . |
cell destruction is uncommon in living adult | organisms and usually occurs in injured cells or dying |
erminant of the form and structure of living | organisms, and underemphasized the roles of physical l |
In Hull's view, science evolves like | organisms and populations do, with a demic population |
annels) are found in a number of tissues and | organisms and are thought to be the sensors for a numb |
iline is particularly harmful to all aquatic | organisms, and can cause long-term damage to the envir |
discoveries that the diversity of microbial | organisms and viral agents in the environment is far g |
es can be propagated to biologically related | organisms, and for different or poorly known genes bio |
es into account sexually inactive individual | organisms, and sexually non-competitive individuals. |
Granulomas try to wall off these | organisms and prevent their further growth and spread. |
re different than the free-living planktonic | organisms, and what effect these communities might hav |
considerable utility for classifying living | organisms and establishing their evolutionary relation |
acy into macrophysical systems called living | organisms, and that living organisms somehow work thei |
rogen chemistry, causing difficulty for both | organisms and industry in breaking the bond to convert |
Marine biologists study salt water | organisms, and limnologists study fresh water organism |
However, some | organisms are euryhaline because their life cycle invo |
All of these | organisms are part of the normal oropharyngeal flora, |
Bulk tissues of living | organisms are composed almost entirely of nonmetals. |
nother less commonly used group of indicator | organisms are hydrogen sulfide producing bacteria, whi |
The | organisms are ubiquitous in fresh and brackish water. |
Relatedness coefficients in haplodiploid | organisms are as follows. |
Diploblastic | organisms are organisms which develop from such a blas |
1: Pollution intolerant: These | organisms are highly sensitive to pollution. |
But, individual | organisms are not masters of themselves. |
Multigenomic | organisms are plants or animals that have symbiotic re |
Also known simply as knockdowns, these | organisms are most commonly used for reverse genetics, |
It states that | organisms are in constant conflict with one another an |
The | organisms are acid-fast, Gram-positive, pleomorphic ba |
om sequence similarity, where closer related | organisms are matched up first, and then further organ |
"How is it that some | organisms are subjects of experience?" |
Biologists who study the physiology of | organisms are under time pressure: They must dissect t |
not pre-formed, empty receptacles into which | organisms are inserted, but are defined and created by |
nberg's (1795-1876) concept that microscopic | organisms are "complete organisms" similar to higher a |
In the USA genetically modified | organisms are assessed by the US Department of Agricul |
Anthropic | organisms are organisms that show anthropophily, where |
Pesudoplanktonic | organisms are those that attach themselves to plankton |
Most freshwater | organisms are stenohaline, and will die in seawater, a |
The opposite of euryhaline | organisms are stenohaline ones, which can only survive |
Euryhaline | organisms are commonly found in habitats such as estua |
These single-celled | organisms are sessile at maturity and usually live on |
r, or it can be used to describe cases where | organisms are related by mutual stereotypic behaviors. |
at Atg1 homologues from other, multicellular | organisms are required for autophagy as well but Recen |
While both chemotrophic and phototrophic | organisms are plausible, almost all closed ecological |
When the | organisms are swallowed, they move into the intestine, |
specific) is an experiment where one or more | organisms are moved from one environment to another en |
It is a fundamental biological concept that | organisms are most fit if they eat the same diet which |
The | organisms are relatively simple to cultivate and do no |
Nidifugous | organisms are those that leave the nest shortly after |
ng from horizontal gene transfer between two | organisms are termed xenologs. |
These | organisms are very persistent in the environment and c |
These | organisms are also referred to as acetogenic bacteria, |
population, and variation in the fitness of | organisms are all characteristics that HIV possesses. |
ry concepts, notably arguing that all extant | organisms are descended from one common ancestor. |
Many of these | organisms are usually recovered from the soil but occa |
The tissue of | organisms are made of compounds that contain carbon. |
Few | organisms are known to feed on tube-borne polychaetes |
Fishing, swimming, diving and collecting | organisms are strictly prohibited in the marine reserv |
on whether some acquired characteristics in | organisms are actually inheritable. |
These single-celled | organisms are often more genetically tractable than ma |
mpound, or the phylogenetic relationships of | organisms, are not indicated. |
Climate also affects which | organisms are present, affecting the soil chemically a |
nt to know this because many disease-causing | organisms are transferred from human and animal feces |
Most organic compounds in living | organisms are built in biosynthetic pathways. |
Marvelously, in nature | organisms are often able to slow down the rate of popu |
nces containing this entry in photosynthetic | organisms are possible false positives. |
Aerotolerant | organisms are strictly fermentative. |
Such | organisms are usually closely related (e.g. |
g blocks from which the structures of living | organisms are constructed (this includes almost all en |
Many | organisms are restricted to base-rich or base-poor env |
influence what materials, whether solutes or | organisms, are transported to aquatic systems; aquatic |
le traditional family life, which the living | organisms around her do not even consider. |
This reaction is very common in most | organisms as a link to the citric acid cycle. |
from D-glucose, but cannot be used by living | organisms as source of energy because it cannot be pho |
ntists to identify and record as many living | organisms as possible within 24 hours. |
bone and other mineralized systems in living | organisms, as well as reviews and special reports. |
split-beam systems are capable of detecting | organisms as small as krill, with no limit on upper si |
d in a reverse definition: making biological | organisms as manipulatable and functional as robots, o |
ressed the dead materials produced by living | organisms as sheaths, such as shells. |
ation test (DAT) is any test that uses whole | organisms as a means of looking for serum antibody. |
Veronesi supports genetically modified | organisms as a mean to produce food with higher nutrit |
the fireflies, although the enzyme exists in | organisms as different as the Jack-O-Lantern mushroom |
nd animal waste or pathogens which use other | organisms as an intermediate host. |
-dependent transporters found in a number of | organisms as diverse as bacteria and humans. |
, growth media, and temperature control) for | organisms as they are exposed to the radiation and wei |
ichael had a fascination with cryopreserving | organisms as a young child. |
natural materials and activities on aquatic | organisms at various levels of organization, from subc |
pes are useful for observing living cells or | organisms at the bottom of a large container (e.g. a t |
Endopolygeny is the division into several | organisms at once by internal budding. |
Benach continues to work with borrelia | organisms at the Center for Infectious Diseases, Depar |
teel or titanium, this material dissolves in | organisms at a rate of roughly 1 millimeter per month |
It is one of the smallest living | organisms at 0.2 micrometers in diameter. |
e micromorphology and behavior of some small | organisms available online. |
eated DNA sequences in genomes of eukaryotic | organisms, based on the work of Bill H. Hoyer, Brian J |
o the necessity of making identifications of | organisms based upon appearances and not upon DNA. |
eral model for the persistence of co-evolved | organisms, based on the presence of a Nash equilibrium |
The technique aligns phenotypes across | organisms based on orthology (a type of homology) of g |
microaerophilic, and facultatively anaerobic | organisms based upon growth at various levels in the m |
1834 proposed that a new group of one-celled | organisms be called Rhizopoda; meaning "root-foot". |
sclerithophorans are a polyphyletic group of | organisms bearing hollow sclerites made of aragonite. |
ymes are of crucial importance in almost all | organisms, because ATP is the common "energy currency" |
etabolism is particularly important in these | organisms because they lack catalase. |
nt and spend just a few hours as free-living | organisms before attaching themselves to the nearest s |
Around the start of the Cambrian, | organisms began to burrow vertically, forming a great |
Living | organisms begin living around the shores of the new is |
at a certain temperature to kill 90% of the | organisms being studied. |
rly bacteria in the Actinobacteria class and | organisms belonging to Kingdom Fungi. |
tion with the roots of plants such that both | organisms benefit from the exchange of nutrients. |
metimes it is used only for cases where both | organisms benefit, sometimes it is used more generally |
Mutants should not be confused with | organisms born with developmental abnormalities, which |
In particular, many of these | organisms breath dissolved oxygen that is in the water |
into the way that living cells, tissues, and | organisms build, control, manufacture, recycle, and ad |
Aedificichnia: evidence of | organisms building structures outside of the infaunal |
se does not occur naturally in higher living | organisms, but can be synthesized in the laboratory. |
Trichomonads are flagellated | organisms but D. fragilis lacks flagella, having secon |
hibits protein biosynthesis of gram-positive | organisms, but is completely ineffective against gram- |
mon pond snails that consumed wood-degrading | organisms but not the wood itself. |
eneris") were not the remains of once-living | organisms, but were stones made to look like organisms |
Antitoxins are made within | organisms, but can be injected into other organisms, i |
scussion, so for instance, unknown risks for | organisms by electromagnetic radiation or possible per |
enzyme-catalyzed process in cells of living | organisms by which substrates are converted to more co |
ng heat, the atmosphere also protects living | organisms by shielding the Earth's surface from cosmic |
The metal micronutrients are taken up into | organisms by specific transporters and bound to storag |
A coral island is formed by small | organisms called polyps (pa-lips). |
also lead to plasticity, in which individual | organisms can shift along the spectrum of r-selected v |
extremophiles because some enzymes of these | organisms can remain stable under extraordinary circum |
Crustose | organisms can be detrimental to engineered structures |
Consequently, | organisms can evolve to become simpler and thus multip |
These | organisms can be considered to loosely be associated w |
Organisms can have more than one FEN homologue, this r | |
se dealing with whether genetically modified | organisms can be patented. |
t is relatively great compared with what the | organisms can achieve in their typical form; the forme |
this sense, the relationship between the two | organisms can be considered neutralistic or commensali |
Weathering processes initiated by | organisms can also free oxygen from the lithosphere. |
The high pressures experienced by these | organisms can cause the normally fluid cell membrane t |
In some circumstances, other | organisms can be considered "pioneer organisms". |
However, because | organisms can be carriers of genes for albinism withou |
this | organisms can be used for pest control and are referre |
Organisms capable of aerobic respiration metabolize gl | |
Luminescent bacteria exist as symbiotic | organisms carried within a larger organism, such as ma |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |