Biosilica in Evolution, Morphogenesis, and Nanobiotechnology: Case Study Lake Baikal

Product Description

Lake Baikal is the oldest, deepest and most voluminous lake on Earth, comprising one fifth of the World’s unfrozen fresh water. It hosts the highest number of endemic animals recorded in any freshwater lake. Until recently it remained enigmatic why such a high diversity evolved in the isolated Lake Baikal. Focusing on the sponges (phylum Porifera) as an example, some answers are provided to fundamental questions on evolutionary forces. The characteristic feature of these animals is that they form their polymeric silicic acid skeleton enzymatically. This process is explored using modern molecular biological and cellular biological techniques to outline strategies to fabricate novel materials applicable in biomedicine and nanooptics.

Order from Amazon –> Biosilica in Evolution, Morphogenesis, and Nanobiotechnology: Case Study Lake Baikal

Poor Porphyria – USMLE Study Songs


Because all music should be free, I’m giving mine away: music.studywithsubstancep.com Visit www.studywithsubstancep.com to download this song and for a better way to navigate these videos. USMLE Study Songs and USMLEntertainment are my Step 1 series. In this series, Substance P presents a brief video review of a pertinent medical topic and writes an accompanying song. The song appears as a “response” to this video (or vice versa). See my YouTube home page for my disclaimer, and please visit my website. If you are offended by this video, please read my YouTube profile before commenting. I am not making fun of your disease or anyone’s disease! These songs are designed to consolidate scientific information and make that information more memorable. ——————— In the style of the Stones’ darker years… enjoy!

(Biochemical Diseases) – USMLE Study Songs


Visit www.studywithsubstancep.com to download this song and for a better way to navigate these videos. Because all music should be free, I’m giving mine away: music.studywithsubstancep.com USMLE Study Songs and USMLEntertainment are my Step 1 series. In this series, Substance P presents a brief video review of a pertinent medical topic and writes an accompanying song. The song appears as a “response” to this video (or vice versa). See my YouTube home page for my disclaimer, and please visit my website. If you are offended by this video, please read my YouTube profile before commenting. I am not making fun of your disease or anyone’s disease! These songs are designed to consolidate scientific information and make that information more memorable. ——————— In the style of the late and great Sinatra… enjoy!

Losses of glomalin-related soil protein under prolonged arable cropping: A chronosequence study in sandy soils of the South African Highveld

Product Description
This digital document is a journal article from Soil Biology and Biochemistry, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Residues of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) may be important for agroecosystem functioning due to their ability to promote soil aggregation, especially in coarse textured soils with little biomass input and low capacity to conserve soil organic matter (SOM). Our aim was to assess the fate of AMF residues with prolonged arable cropping in coarse textured soils in a subtropical savannah assuming that glomalin-related soil protein (GRSP), especially the MAb32B11-immunoreactive fraction, mainly constitutes material of AMF origin. In three agroecosystems on the South African Highveld, surface soils were sampled. The former grassland soils had a history of up to 98yr of cropping. We measured four GRSP fractions: Bradford-reactive soil protein (BRSP) and immunoreactive soil protein (IRSP), and easily extractable fractions of both. The primary grassland sites exhibited generally low contents of SOM and low GRSP contents. Prolonged arable land use of former grassland soils reduced the content of GRSP further. The decline could be described with a mono-exponential function with rate constants ranging from 0.04 to 0.41yr^-^1. Depending on the GRSP fraction, steady-state conditions were reached after 11-92yr on a level of 39-69% of the initial contents. We conclude that even though GRSP fractions had the same hypothesized origin, they comprised pools with different stability or replacement rate. Easily extractable IRSP was lost most rapidly. In contrast to carbon, nitrogen and microbial residue dynamics, GRSP contents were not reduced below a certain steady-state level, despite potentially negative management effects on AMF, such as tillage, inclusion of fallows into crop rotation and fertilization with inorganic phosphorus. The steady-state GRSP contents coincided with low, but steady agroecosystem yields under the given cropping management.

Order from Amazon –> Losses of glomalin-related soil protein under prolonged arable cropping: A chronosequence study in sandy soils of the South African Highveld

Spatial patterns of variation in the composition and structure of nematode communities in relation to different microhabitats: a case study of Quercus … article from: Soil Biology and Biochemistry]

Product Description
This digital document is a journal article from Soil Biology and Biochemistry, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Variability in the spatial distribution of nematode communities in relation to the structural heterogeneity of the environment was studied in nine different microhabitats within a relatively small area of a natural oak forest in Bulgaria. Maturity and diversity indices, trophic structure and the distribution of colonizer-persister groups were applied to analyze the quality of substrate and ecological processes involved from a functional point of view. Two main groups of nematode communities, below- and above-ground, were distinguished in terms of the location of the microhabitats. Our results indicated a higher percentage similarity between nematode communities inhabiting microhabitats with a higher resemblance in substrate structure, and abiotic and biotic conditions than between microhabitats with more dissimilar microenvironmental conditions. The application of Detrended Correspondence Analysis helped to reveal two ecological gradients. The first one was from microhabitats characterized by smaller fluctuations in microclimatic conditions and nutrient supply to microhabitats with more adverse abiotic conditions and dynamics of food resources. Along this gradient from below- to above-ground microhabitats, the proportion of general opportunists (cp 2 taxa) increased, whereas the diversity, MI and the proportions of persisters (cp (3-5) taxa), decreased. Along the second gradient a gradual decrease in the decomposition rate within above-ground microhabitats was revealed, which was indicated by the proportion of enrichment opportunists (cp 1 taxa). The nematode communities of decaying wood had the most specific cp groups’ distribution characterized by a high proportion of enrichment opportunists (colonizers). Each microhabitat has developed nematode communities with a characteristic trophic structure that was related to the relative importance of primary production and decomposition processes occurring within the microhabitat. The nematode communities of mosses growing on soil, stones and tree trunks had similar trophic structure dominated by bacterial-feeding nematode taxa. Our results supported the role of nematode communities as potential indicators of environmental conditions.

Order from Amazon –> Spatial patterns of variation in the composition and structure of nematode communities in relation to different microhabitats: a case study of Quercus … article from: Soil Biology and Biochemistry]