「Organisms」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)
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This event usually occurs when a few | organisms end up in new, often distant areas or when e |
Mice, silkworms, and potatoes are just a few | organisms that have already been engineered to produce |
This article is about non-cellular | organisms. |
ssils were the remains of actual once-living | organisms. |
Offsetting these advantages, larger | organisms require more food and water, and shift from |
In anaerobic (and also aerobic) respiration, | organisms channel electrons from an electron donor to |
w plant responses to herbivores affect other | organisms that attack plants. |
intended to control a pest affect non-target | organisms such as humans, wildlife, or bees. |
Climate also affects which | organisms are present, affecting the soil chemically a |
as activity against beta-lactamase-producing | organisms such as Staphylococcus aureus as it is beta- |
As in MacConkey agar, coliform | organisms ferment the lactose, and the colonies become |
the body surface clear of algae, encrusting | organisms, and other debris in conjunction with the ci |
ing a paraphyletic group embrace algae, some | organisms regarded previously as primitive fungi, and |
1 proteins have been found in all eukaryotic | organisms examined, and contain seven cysteine residue |
The ABC transporters occur in all living | organisms. |
ossible while still being present in all the | organisms. |
ovide similar functions in all multicellular | organisms, until recently it was believed that vertebr |
the last common ancestor to all terrestrial | organisms was a non-flagellate negibacterium with two |
ieved to decrease with age in all senescence | organisms including humans. |
First, because all biological | organisms record the environment in which they exist, |
There is one ecosphere for all living | organisms and what affects one, affects all. |
to 161°F, which kills virtually all souring | organisms. |
PGK is found in all living | organisms and its sequence has been highly conserved t |
ry concepts, notably arguing that all extant | organisms are descended from one common ancestor. |
s are a class of enzymes vital to all living | organisms. |
not only of humans, but of almost all living | organisms. |
the biological language common to all living | organisms, is spelled out in three-letter words: each |
Iron-proteins are found in all living | organisms, ranging from the evolutionarily primitive a |
ide) that is metabolized by nearly all known | organisms. |
hannel and are found in virtually all living | organisms. |
iline is particularly harmful to all aquatic | organisms, and can cause long-term damage to the envir |
olynucleotides occur naturally in all living | organisms. |
of a lipid membrane that finally allows the | organisms to leave the microcavern system of the vent. |
ymes are of crucial importance in almost all | organisms, because ATP is the common "energy currency" |
ttle structural variability among eukaryotic | organisms despite some significant protein differences |
The distinction amongst the | organisms is that not all Vibrio are V. cholerae. |
Like other anaerobes, these | organisms do not require oxygen for growth. |
topics including whole proteome analysis of | organisms, protein expression profiling, disease, phar |
at a group contains the common ancestor, all | organisms descended from the common ancestor, and no o |
ermediate in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic | organisms. |
er biophoton rate than normal cells and that | organisms with illnesses will likewise emit a brighter |
liance with the Hazardous Substances and New | Organisms Act - HSNO Act 1996. |
orillas, dogs, dragons, dinosaurs, and other | organisms, all of them only millimeters long, leading |
in which biologists can learn and understand | organisms, the observation of evolution and how these |
ction of resistant insects, plants and other | organisms, necessitating increased use, or requiring n |
water to support the fish, plants and other | organisms that live within them. |
While both chemotrophic and phototrophic | organisms are plausible, almost all closed ecological |
against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive | organisms than third-generation agents. |
onthly, to clean algae, barnacles, and other | organisms off the light collectors; and to generate in |
ocytes, of ascidians (sea squirts) and other | organisms. |
the grounds of sexual orientation and having | organisms in the body which might cause disease. |
y during development in C. elegans and other | organisms. |
is acutely toxic to both humans and aquatic | organisms. |
d impressions from nearby objects and living | organisms. |
many other processes in developing and adult | organisms. |
where it preys on minute benthic and pelagic | organisms, including small fishes and crustaceans. |
mpede growth of barnacles, algae, and marine | organisms. |
Fishing, swimming, diving and collecting | organisms are strictly prohibited in the marine reserv |
oped her fascination with science and living | organisms. |
eaning that it feeds on both living and dead | organisms that come in contact with it. |
slowly or not at all; too wet and anaerobic | organisms thrive, creating undesirable odors (cf. |
a variety of diseases in humans and aquatic | organisms. |
o get funding for such research on any other | organisms than mice, rats, humans and fruit flies. |
lankton (singular plankter) are any drifting | organisms (animals, plants, archaea, or bacteria) that |
-like structure that anchors aquatic sessile | organisms, such as seaweed, other sessile algae, stalk |
The algae are photoautotroph | organisms which perform oxygenetic photosynthesis. |
The yeasts are living | organisms that flourish in Spring and Autumn, but go i |
f its relatives in Stylophora, are enigmatic | organisms whose relationship with other organisms, nam |
Xerophiles are extremophilic | organisms that can grow and reproduce in conditions wi |
As mosses are haploid | organisms, regenerating moss filaments (protonema) can |
These are extremophiles, | organisms that thrive in conditions that would kill th |
ly similar quagga mussels are filter-feeding | organisms. |
Trichomonads are flagellated | organisms but D. fragilis lacks flagella, having secon |
it flies (Drosophila melanogaster) are model | organisms used to study the effects of genetic changes |
nsensus among botanists is that they are the | organisms most closely related to embryophytes (land p |
how environmental regulation can arise from | organisms interacting with their environment. |
Silica is emplaced around the | organisms very rapidly, before their cells can even co |
nt and spend just a few hours as free-living | organisms before attaching themselves to the nearest s |
growth-stages of compound as well as simple | organisms, e.g., 'Brit Mus Catalogue Fossil Bryozoa' ( |
hic" problems on up the food chain as larger | organisms fail to get enough food to survive. |
Luminescent bacteria exist as symbiotic | organisms carried within a larger organism, such as ma |
Insect societies as divided | organisms: The complexities of purpose and cross-purpo |
ponent of their recognition as multicellular | organisms. |
bacteria and nanobes, whose status as living | organisms is controversial. |
in colonization, but cannot serve as pioneer | organisms. |
y of the subjective and objective aspects of | organisms in relationship to their intersubjective and |
aterrestrial lifeform that assimilates other | organisms and in turn imitates them. |
tionally limited, while biology assumes that | organisms do not limit fertility. |
to recognize and selectively attack foreign | organisms |
They may also attract other | organisms, such as the bright colors of flowers and fr |
s such as Hydra have become attractive model | organisms to study the evolution of immunity. |
ted with millions of beneficial bacteria and | organisms which aid in the dissolving of organic waste |
cies were previously thought to be different | organisms entirely, but are now united in this group. |
Such a functionality is needed because all | organisms actually produce alcohol in small amounts by |
This is because these | organisms show very slow growth rates with a minimum d |
e easy to manipulate they have been favorite | organisms in the study of the role of the nucleus vs t |
Its diet includes benthic (bottom-dwelling) | organisms like mollusks and worms. |
efoperazone against beta-lactamase producing | organisms. |
understand the relationships between living | organisms in freshwater and their physical and chemica |
ng from horizontal gene transfer between two | organisms are termed xenologs. |
assertion that the relationship between two | organisms is indeed parasitic. |
intake system kills nearly a billion aquatic | organisms a year, including the shortnose sturgeon, an |
es can be propagated to biologically related | organisms, and for different or poorly known genes bio |
chemistry and Functional Biology, Biology of | Organisms and Systems, Functional Biology, Medicine, M |
lutionary developmental biology), individual | organisms develop (ontogeny), while species evolve (ph |
In biology, photosynthetic | organisms require that light of the appropriate wavele |
y, supposedly the ventral side of body these | organisms was covered with cilia. |
In both areas, | organisms have had the opportunity over many generatio |
uscs, sea urchins, and other bottom dwelling | organisms washed ashore. |
sequence of ethene dehalogenation, but these | organisms often fail to continue the degradation seque |
But, individual | organisms are not masters of themselves. |
main part of his food is made up by plankton | organisms (85.3 - 91.1%). |
from D-glucose, but cannot be used by living | organisms as source of energy because it cannot be pho |
gaseous nitrogen into forms usable by living | organisms. |
ressed the dead materials produced by living | organisms as sheaths, such as shells. |
dges and grooves that were formed by benthic | organisms or infaunal burrows that have been exposed b |
and cannot be encoded in the genes by higher | organisms. |
f certain infections caused by Gram-positive | organisms. |
ites, are sedimentary rocks formed by living | organisms or their remains. |
s, or spoilage of the finished beer by other | organisms. |
nown as chemosynthesis, the process by which | organisms derive energy from a number of different ino |
Such traces must have been made by motile | organisms with heads, which would probably have been b |
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. |
biosynthesized from amino acids by different | organisms, including mammals, and are considered to be |
Fixichnia: traces left by sessile | organisms that anchored themselves to a hard substrate |
ct the timber planking from attack by marine | organisms and reduce drag. |
ogenic structures: features caused by living | organisms. |
water and is not easily broken down by soil | organisms. |
1834), and on the part played by microscopic | organisms in the formation of marine deposits (1845), |
The high pressures experienced by these | organisms can cause the normally fluid cell membrane t |
iomolecule and is produced naturally by many | organisms. |
nterpreted as having been produced by living | organisms, however, it is important that they not be c |
A coral island is formed by small | organisms called polyps (pa-lips). |
ronments and biomes are dominated by sessile | organisms such as oysters. |
ctadienoic acid, is a pheromone used by some | organisms. |
bacteria, called polyphosphate-accumulating | organisms (PAO) are selectively enriched in the bacter |
acy into macrophysical systems called living | organisms, and that living organisms somehow work thei |
ovide a source of new genes, which can allow | organisms to develop new phenotypes and adapt to their |
r, or it can be used to describe cases where | organisms are related by mutual stereotypic behaviors. |
fection is a type of helminthiasis caused by | organisms in the Nematode phylum. |
infestation is a parasitic disease caused by | organisms that live primarily on the surface of the ho |
ed for the treatment of infections caused by | organisms susceptible to the drug, but it has also bee |
pes are useful for observing living cells or | organisms at the bottom of a large container (e.g. a t |
allows certain characteristics of cells and | organisms to be studied in isolation. |
omics which studies the genomes of cells and | organisms. |
as well as in the breakdown of cellulose by | organisms that feed on plants. |
to alleviate ageing effects in certain model | organisms such as the yeast S. cerevisiae, the nematod |
Trans-splicing is used by certain microbial | organisms, notably protozoa of the Kinetoplastae class |
elves are the initiators of major changes in | organisms and ecosystems. . . . |
on whether some acquired characteristics in | organisms are actually inheritable. |
Chemoorganotrophs are | organisms which use organic compounds as their energy |
that are not well absorbed by chlorophyll a. | Organisms growing in shallow waters tend to contain ph |
c pathways, genetic regulatory circuits, and | organisms. |
In some circumstances, other | organisms can be considered "pioneer organisms". |
rly bacteria in the Actinobacteria class and | organisms belonging to Kingdom Fungi. |
ing from behaving mammals to classical model | organisms such as flies, worms, and zebrafish. |
systematics, as a way of classifying living | organisms relative to extinct ones. |
considerable utility for classifying living | organisms and establishing their evolutionary relation |
e is unique to each group of closely related | organisms; in E. coli and other enteric bacteria, such |
om sequence similarity, where closer related | organisms are matched up first, and then further organ |
Biota is the total collection of | organisms of a geographic region or a time period, fro |
ndcare Research holds several collections of | organisms that are of significant national importance |
size determined by genetics, or a colony of | organisms may release waste which is ultimately toxic |
ology, a self-limiting organism or colony of | organisms limits its own growth by its actions. |
Common pioneer | organisms include lichens and algae. |
gnizing differences or commonalities between | organisms (see lumpers and splitters). |
Communities of | organisms, for example, are somewhat arbitrarily defin |
Fouling communities are communities of | organisms found on the sides of docks, marinas, harbor |
Benthos is the community of | organisms which live on, in, or near the seabed, also |
oldest reef systems built by a community of | organisms rather than the deposit of a limited range o |
ly) annotations for all completely sequenced | organisms |
It is a fundamental biological concept that | organisms are most fit if they eat the same diet which |
From all these studies, he concluded that | organisms could not be generated spontaneously. |
Mutants should not be confused with | organisms born with developmental abnormalities, which |
the semantically correct one, considers any | organisms with a common ancestor to be a monophyletic |
extinct order of Onychophoran consisting of | organisms with simple lobobods that lack terminal feet |
cies, as opposed to adaptation consisting of | organisms actively selecting, defining, shaping and of |
arbon sources can be used by a consortium of | organisms to achieve further degradation and eventual |
produced in tropical forests is consumed by | organisms living there. |
mon pond snails that consumed wood-degrading | organisms but not the wood itself. |
elys was durophagous, consuming hard-shelled | organisms with crushing jaws. |
Most 'normal' contaminants (microbial | organisms and inorganic or organic pollutants) will be |
, growth media, and temperature control) for | organisms as they are exposed to the radiation and wei |
flat jaws suitable for crushing hard-shelled | organisms. |
by microbiologists when culturing anaerobic | organisms. |
especially useful in culturing thermophilic | organisms. |
ntermediate between any two currently living | organisms. |
ent to disrupt the soil crust and damage the | organisms. |
kton or zooplankton may contain densities of | organisms ranging up to 1000 times those found just ab |
Hermaphrodites are described as | organisms that have the ability to interchangeably shi |
t could be useful to detect light-harvesting | organisms on distant planets. |
Fs play critical roles in the development of | organisms. |
ey play critical roles in the development of | organisms. |
ential and commercial development, impacting | organisms living in the marshes. |
orphous silica arising from different marine | organisms after their death: siliceous spicules of spo |
eef squid eats a variety of different marine | organisms. |
With the discovery of | organisms that oxidized inorganic compounds such as hy |
ighly organized, spatially discrete colonial | organisms. |
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