戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 in serpentinizing fluids derived from modern seawater.
2 n edible mussels bred in polluted artificial seawater.
3  to grow in salt concentrations near that of seawater.
4 FA as hydrolysis products to the surrounding seawater.
5 he PAO fiber, in bacteria-containing natural seawater.
6 uct in the organic-rich interfacial layer of seawater.
7 s focardii, endemic of the Antarctic coastal seawater.
8 ontaminants in sea ice grown from artificial seawater.
9 serpentine alteration to authigenic clays by seawater.
10 es nonlinearly with the amount of biomass in seawater.
11  and fast detection of toxic contaminants in seawater.
12 r distinct layers of snow, sea ice brine and seawater.
13 factants in mPMA and those in the associated seawater.
14 of healthy coral reefs and their surrounding seawater.
15  mg g(-1) in 32 ppm uranium-spiked simulated seawater.
16 arine Vibrio species depend on for growth in seawater.
17 he atmosphere than to underlying sea ice and seawater.
18 e (e.g., Cu(2+)) ions naturally occurring in seawater.
19 by field observations of anthropogenic Fe in seawater.
20 ce and control mineralization separated from seawater.
21  regions relative to those in the associated seawater.
22 ltifunctional GBT uptake systems observed in seawater.
23 tion of their calcifying fluid above that of seawater.
24 n snowmelt due to snowpack releasing POPs to seawater.
25 ting oxygen deficiency and ammonification of seawater.
26  for the study of micro- and nanoplastics in seawater.
27 are the most abundant biological entities in seawater.
28 ies and the deep ocean than in the overlying seawater.
29 bent for uranium extraction from the natural seawater.
30 wide salinity range from fresh water to > 3x seawater.
31  for calcite or aragonite precipitating from seawater.
32 bundance, which differs from the surrounding seawater.
33 take and release of copper ions from natural seawater.
34 ugh the circulation of subseafloor fluids or seawater.
35 e samples, and model solutions of artificial seawater.
36 sociated with the analysis of Pb isotopes in seawater.
37 m (FTS) featuring partially filtered natural seawater.
38        Methylglyoxal slowly photodegraded in seawater (~0.001-0.03 nmol L(-1) h(-1)), whereas acetald
39 ase seawater (7)Li/(6)Li and retain constant seawater (10)Be/(9)Be over the past 16 million years.
40 or human feces, as the most abundant sterol (seawater: 45.1-20.3 ng L(-1); surface sediment: 90.2-70.
41 ecrease atmospheric carbon dioxide, increase seawater (7)Li/(6)Li and retain constant seawater (10)Be
42                     Hormones associated with seawater acclimation (adrenocorticotropic hormone, corti
43 omatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) dispersed in LSMD seawater accommodated fractions (WAFs) and assesses the
44                                     However, seawater acidity alone provides an incomplete constraint
45 For the practical extraction of uranium from seawater, adsorbents with high adsorption capacity, fast
46                                              Seawater-air fugacity ratios were highly correlated with
47  a Y-maze chamber to test whether reduced-pH seawater altered the orientation of spiny lobster puerul
48 s of komatiites, these results indicate that seawater-altered lithosphere recycling into the deep man
49 ritea japonica) were incubated in autoclaved seawater amended with tetrapeptide alanine-valine-phenyl
50 ilm-forming 'species' that are undetected in seawater analyses, increasing the known microbial divers
51 nac as a potentially emerging contaminant in seawater and also than that of a conventional colorimetr
52 ntribute to the black carbon and nitrogen in seawater and are worthy of future investigation.
53 fully applied to quantify A. minutum AL9T in seawater and brackish water samples proving that it can
54 k to produce freshwater from brackish water, seawater and brine solutions, addressing the key environ
55  and seasons, being found at trace levels in seawater and gonads, with low risk for consumers.
56                         Pu concentrations in seawater and groundwater samples, synthetic urine, and d
57                      Isotope ratios of Pb in seawater and in the soluble fraction of Pb in atmospheri
58 palm seedlings were exposed to flooding with seawater and its major constituents under controlled con
59        Diel variability in concentrations of seawater and mPMA surfactants in some regions is consist
60 , we report new data for 21 targeted PFAS in seawater and plankton from the coast, shelf, and slope o
61   Air, snow, the fugacity in soils and snow, seawater and plankton were sampled concurrently from lat
62 e recoveries of 1 ng/g Se were obtained from seawater and river water, and 1 ng/g Se could be quantif
63                     Marine microalgae within seawater and sea ice fuel high-latitude ecosystems and d
64 that bacteria are key DMSP producers in deep seawater and sediment.
65         These include exposure from polluted seawater and sediments and/or additional trophic transfe
66 s lower at etching sites compared to ambient seawater and the sponge's tissue.
67 d Zn) in subglacial meltwaters compared with seawater and typical riverine systems, together with the
68                       Up to 42 out of 48 (in seawater) and 27 out of 37 (in biota) target analytes we
69  result in the entrainment of chemicals from seawater, and concentration profiles in bulk ice general
70  total suspended particulate (TSP) aerosols, seawater, and suspended and sinking particles in the Gul
71 sions were consistently lower for artificial seawater (AS) than buffered potassium iodide (KI) soluti
72 ; open-air, buried in soil, and submersed in seawater, as well as in controlled laboratory conditions
73 icantly higher than the oxygen saturation in seawater at the contemporary atmospheric pO(2) levels.
74 propriate for determination of diclofenac in seawater at the levels endorsed by the EU regulation.
75 large volume pumps by filtering 218-561 L of seawater at two to four depth strata (near-surface, ~300
76 of marine phytoplankton were inoculated with seawater bacterial assemblages, and communities were tra
77 s are distinct among sponge species and from seawater bacterial communities, indicating a key role of
78                                      A novel seawater-based pretreatment process was developed to imp
79 er 2016, model PMA (mPMA) were produced from seawater by bursting bubbles at two biologically product
80 pp. chemical cues than pueruli in ambient-pH seawater by comparing the proportion of individuals that
81 ural motifs are photo-oxidized on artificial seawater by the use of a solar simulator.
82               N (SSA) correlates weakly with seawater c(p,660) (R = 0.36, P << 0.01), but the correla
83                                 We find that seawater calcium concentration, by strongly influencing
84                    We show that interstitial seawater can reduce fracture-driving stress by orders of
85 efore, reduced iodine emissions from natural seawater cannot be explained by chemical losses of I(2)
86  change drivers, such as temperature, pH and seawater carbonate chemistry, and dissolved oxygen, can
87 O(2)) emitted by human activities alters the seawater carbonate system.
88  to six locations across a natural mosaic in seawater chemistry throughout Hawai'i and fragmented int
89                         Projected changes in seawater chemistry will have catastrophic biotic effects
90 nic carbon (DIC) allows them to modify local seawater chemistry, creating gradients in carbon, pH, an
91  patches retained the ability to alter local seawater chemistry.
92 his study, we combine a recent observational seawater CO(2) data product, i.e., the 6(th) version of
93 ynthesis are likely to benefit from elevated seawater CO(2) levels due to ocean acidification.
94 yi lysates, and were conducted using surface-seawater collected from the South Pacific Subtropical Gy
95 o atmospheric communities than to sea ice or seawater communities.
96 69.19 +/- 0.11% and 63.03 +/- 0.04% sugar in seawater compared with 52.82 +/- 0.16%, 45.93 +/- 0.37%
97 in these systems, and how secular changes in seawater composition may have modified serpentinization-
98                                      Surface seawater concentrations did not exhibit day-night differ
99  solutions between pH ~6.5 and >12 at modern seawater concentrations of NaCl, Mg(2+) and Ca(2+).
100 t uranium uptake may depend greatly upon the seawater concentrations of other elements such as vanadi
101  The results suggest that the variability in seawater concentrations of PFAAs has little influence on
102 ariability but remain relatively constant as seawater conditions change.
103 The assessment of antibiotics mobility under seawater conditions has been rarely studied, as an accur
104 mportance of physiological regulation versus seawater conditions in controlling coral calcifying flui
105 20 per mille) in the sample characterized by seawater conditions, whereas higher values (~25-27 per m
106 urface complexation constants obtained under seawater conditions.
107 an has been documented on reefs under normal seawater conditions.
108  by these phytoplankton to extract iron from seawater constrain carbon flux into higher trophic level
109            mPMA from biologically productive seawater contained higher concentrations of surfactants
110          Preadult copepods were incubated in seawater containing a mixed assemblage of cultured micro
111 ment is predominantly controlled by enhanced seawater content in suture zones, rather than by enhance
112  ice-penetrating radar data can quantify the seawater content of suture zones and their modification
113 e exchange of calcifying fluid with external seawater, contributes to some variability but remain rel
114 high-temperature hot-spring fluids with cold seawater creates intermediate-temperature diffuse fluids
115 pe fractionation, suggesting that increasing seawater delta(18)O over time was the primary cause of t
116 ns of paleo-oceanographic reconstructions of seawater delta(26)Mg and Mg/Ca ratios.
117      These new data, along with the constant seawater delta(26)Mg over the past ~20 Myr, require a si
118 water samples (groundwater, river water, and seawater) demonstrated the applicability of the method.
119    This study provides evidence that ambient seawater density influences calcification and may accoun
120 ody extends up to 60 km from the coast and a seawater depth of 110 m.
121 h's accretion and by subsequent recycling of seawater-derived neon in plate tectonic processes.
122                            The rising use of seawater desalination for fresh water production is driv
123 2) s(-1)), good cycling stability, and rapid seawater desalination performance under typical OLC-FCDI
124 great potential for wastewater treatment and seawater desalination with high energy conversion and ut
125 en energy, but also of great significance to seawater desalination.
126 ormula: see text]C-decoupling between global seawater DIC and shallow carbonate, without burying orga
127                                  We designed seawater dilution experiments to assess the effect of pC
128                       The naturally elevated seawater dissolved inorganic carbon concentration at thi
129 nd use them to calculate relative changes in seawater-dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentration,
130  reflects the [Formula: see text]C of global seawater-dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC).
131 , our Mariana Trench study reveals a typical seawater DMSP/dimethylsulfide (DMS) profile, with highes
132 etabolisms are likely supported by shallower seawater-dominated circulation.
133 ached chemicals from plastic into artificial seawater during simulated UV-induced weathering.
134 ry significantly advances the development of seawater electrolysis for large-scale hydrogen productio
135                        The implementation of seawater electrolysis requires robust and efficient elec
136 gen evolution reaction catalyst for alkaline seawater electrolysis.
137 terrenal axis, and that relaxed selection on seawater entry traits has decreased this stimulation in
138 migration and pre-adapts juvenile salmon for seawater entry.
139                                              Seawater exposure increased Na and Cl contents in leaves
140                   Reduced transpiration upon seawater exposure may contribute to controlling the move
141 hat date palm seedlings are tolerant towards seawater exposure to some extent, and highly tolerant to
142 intain plasma homeostasis in fresh water and seawater fish are well known, the corresponding molecula
143                                              Seawater flooding significantly reduced CO(2) assimilati
144 ltured in (13)C-labelled enriched artificial seawater for 0-12 h, and the algae were collected every
145 octanoic acid (PFOA), was detected in Arctic seawater for the first time.
146 mperature and oxygen isotopic composition of seawater from 1982 to 2016, based on paired oxygen isoto
147  reduce the boron concentration in synthetic seawater from 2.91 to <0.5 ppm in less than 3 min at an
148 ons were observed in biologically productive seawater from Georges Bank and coastal Rhode Island comp
149                                              Seawater from the highly protected 'crown jewel' offshor
150                                              Seawater from the less protected system of Los Canarreos
151 ts (WBCs) redistribute heat and oligotrophic seawater from the tropics to temperate latitudes, with s
152 hytoplankton-derived sulfur metabolites into seawater, from which they are rapidly assimilated by mar
153 n reducing hydrothermal fluids and oxidizing seawater, harnessing this energy to fix inorganic carbon
154                The Nd isotope composition of seawater has been used to reconstruct past changes in th
155                             By contrast, the seawater-Hephaestus brine interface has been shown to ac
156 rifying abundant alternative sources such as seawater, high-salinity processed water, or underground
157 sses of methyl halides (CH(3)X) in fresh and seawater: hydrolysis and halide exchange.
158 (-2) h(-1) are achieved in purifying natural seawater in a closed system.
159                               Overall, using seawater in hydrolysis of seaweed increased sugar hydrol
160 c acid inhibits aragonite precipitation from seawater in vitro, at the pH, saturation state and appro
161                                  Culture and seawater incubations, however, indicate oxygen isotopic
162 rvations of reservoir souring following cold seawater injection.
163 ng in subsurface oil reservoirs subjected to seawater injection.
164 iction of the fate of quinolones in sediment-seawater interface systems.
165 selective transfer of organic compounds from seawater into the atmosphere.
166 n-based assessment of the scope of potential seawater intrusion exists.
167                                              Seawater intrusion into coastal aquifers can increase gr
168                                              Seawater intrusion is particularly likely where water ta
169  water demands will exacerbate the threat of seawater intrusion.
170 along coast lines, date palms are exposed to seawater inundation and, hence, combined stress by salin
171 luid-buffered diagenesis that occurred where seawater invaded the sediment in response to geothermal
172                                   Increasing seawater iron brought about more robust bonding.
173 s were conducted using live mussels in which seawater iron levels were deficient, normal, or in exces
174 f HNTs, the cost for uranium extraction from seawater is close to the uranium price in the spot urani
175                              Electrolysis of seawater is not only a promising approach to produce cle
176                                              Seawater is one of the most abundant natural resources o
177 y several hundreds of microliters of surface seawater is similar to that found in molecular surveys w
178                             Abundance of the seawater isoform of gill Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase increased in
179 ng organic ligands that support more iron in seawater, leading to further macronutrient consumption u
180 thermal pretreatment of macroalgae, although seawater led to relatively higher yields.
181  system conditions, serpentine alteration by seawater led to the formation of authigenic phyllosilica
182 r concentrations at environmentally relevant seawater levels.
183 ar ionic strengths and, upon exocytosis into seawater, lysin and sp18 are dispersed to drive fertiliz
184                         Pb concentrations in seawater measured in this study (max 76.8 pmol kg(-1)) w
185 d that P2 excision greatly hinders growth in seawater medium and inhibits biofilm formation.
186 in completely restores the growth defects in seawater medium and partially restores biofilm formation
187 ate 1990s and 2000s as a result of decreased seawater MeHg concentrations.
188  membranes, including 4 brackish water and 2 seawater membranes.
189  on organic carbon burial may lead to higher seawater methane concentrations over the coming centurie
190                                     Overall, seawater microbial composition and biogeochemistry were
191                        Here, we examined the seawater microbial ecology of 25 Northern Caribbean reef
192                           Therefore, coastal seawater mirrored the PCB congener profile and increased
193 t in Cuban coral reefs quantified background seawater-normalized extracellular superoxide concentrati
194                   Uranyl capture from either seawater or nuclear waste has been well studied and typi
195  and synergetic effects of different ions in seawater over a large range of environmentally relevant
196 strial P input and biological utilization of seawater P in Phanerozoic.
197 tive Fe redox cycle favors the scavenging of seawater P through FeOOH absorption and authigenic phosp
198 d accordingly reduces the bioavailability of seawater P.
199 f wind speed, sea surface temperature (SST), seawater particle attenuation at 660 nm (c (p,660), a me
200 he phasing out of leaded gasoline on TSP and seawater Pb chemistry in the Northern GOA; the rate of c
201 ass spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS) measurements of seawater Pb isotope compositions following Pb separation
202 MS) double-spike method and produce unbiased seawater Pb isotope compositions with similar or improve
203  of similar quality when measuring 1-7 ng of seawater Pb, with reproducibilities (two standard deviat
204 e and alanine are positively correlated with seawater pCO(2) and inversely correlated with seawater p
205  Porites spp. corals cultured over different seawater pCO(2).
206 l conditions and examined for differences in seawater performance and its underlying physiological an
207  this altered lifecycle on traits underlying seawater performance have not been established.
208 cies Carybdea xaymacana, compared to ambient seawater pH conditions (i.e. pH of 8.1).
209                                Reductions in seawater pH constitute a conspicuous global change stres
210                                         Mean seawater pH decreased significantly at -0.009 +/- 0.0005
211  associated with rapid adaptation to reduced seawater pH in the Mediterranean mussel, Mytilus gallopr
212 cochemical and biological factors other than seawater pH must be considered.
213 dings support the development of coral-based seawater pH proxies, but suggest the influences of physi
214 t crustaceans are often resilient to reduced seawater pH, earlier ontogenetic stages can be physiolog
215 ion can facilitate adaptation to declines in seawater pH.
216 eawater pCO(2) and inversely correlated with seawater pH.
217 uent environmental fluctuations and reducing seawater pH.
218 ory conditions, and the PAE migration to the seawater phase was studied with varying light and bacter
219 ng utilising in situ measurements of optical seawater properties, we quantified artificial light expo
220  14.2-3.6 (delta(18)O(Halimeda )- delta(18)O(seawater)); r(2) = 0.92), comparing the temperatures mea
221    Carbonyl photoproduction rates in surface seawater ranged from 0.35-0.79, 0.06-0.2, and 0.02-0.07
222 5)N and delta(13)C values coupled with local seawater redox data for Mesoarchean shales of the Mozaan
223 for the analysis of (99)Tc in samples of the seawater reference material IAEA-443, a peat bog lake, a
224 aldehyde is likely supersaturated in surface seawater relative to its typical atmospheric concentrati
225 yper- (fresh water) and hypo-osmoregulation (seawater) remain mostly elusive.
226 e diversity of coliphages that is present in seawater remains largely unknown, with previous studies
227 etween net volatilization fluxes of PCBs and seawater salinity.
228 n oligotroph, isolated from the same surface seawater sample and utilizing the same proteinaceous sub
229 ranscripts were present in all of the tested seawater samples and Tara Oceans bacterioplankton datase
230                  Here, by incubating natural seawater samples at three different temperatures, we ana
231 an eighteen-month (2015-2016) time-series of seawater samples from Monterey Bay, California.
232                                      Natural seawater samples showed the strongest reduction of I(2)
233 ughput and suitability for analyses of large seawater samples with high Si(OH)(4) contents.
234 ess, Ce-NPs were eventually detected in some seawater samples with low levels of lanthanum-NPs, sugge
235 lied to the detection of genomic DNA in real seawater samples.
236 sensor to detect E. fecalis from aqueous and seawater samples.
237                                     Reducing seawater saturation state and increasing [aspartic acid]
238 thought to have been abundant in early-Earth seawater, sediments, and hydrothermal systems.
239 onmental water samples including lake water, seawater, simulated water reference materials, and tap w
240 t sampling of freshwater (lakes and rivers), seawater, snow, air, and zooplankton for a range of lega
241  1.709 V, respectively, for overall alkaline seawater splitting at 60 degrees C.
242  efficient electrocatalysts that can sustain seawater splitting without chloride corrosion, especiall
243 ing artificial solutions, natural subsurface seawater (SSW), and, for the first time, samples of the
244 er were lower than those in the oligotrophic seawater suggesting that surfactant mixtures in the two
245 ave formed globally through the reduction of seawater sulfate or locally from hydrothermally supplied
246 indicating that neither flooding itself, nor seawater sulfate, contributed greatly to stomatal closur
247 ctants than those produced from oligotrophic seawater, supporting the hypothesis that seawater surfac
248  and compared with that of abiotic matrices (seawater, surface sediment, and suspended particulate ma
249 hic seawater, supporting the hypothesis that seawater surfactant properties modulate mPMA surfactant
250 A surfactants were weaker than corresponding seawater surfactants.
251 nchial expression of GHR increased following seawater (SW) exposure of juveniles, but expression of P
252 increase osmoregulatory capacity and acquire seawater (SW) tolerance.
253         Similarly, no enrichment of dominant seawater taxa such as Prochlorococcus, SAR11 or Synechoc
254                         I show that external seawater temperature and buffering capacity exert the fi
255 actors, two equations model the influence of seawater temperature and mechanical forces.
256 n tuna (Thunnus thynnus) due to increases in seawater temperature between a low point in 1969 and rec
257                        Temporal variation in seawater temperature plays a crucial role in coral reef
258                                              Seawater temperature rise in French Polynesia has repeat
259 ion of the production efficiency of SSA with seawater temperature with a minimum around 6-10 degrees
260 one at a time: (1) air entrainment rate, (2) seawater temperature, and (3) biomass of phytoplankton.
261 er decreases almost linearly with increasing seawater temperature, and the production efficiency is s
262 -2011, exposing marine communities to summer seawater temperatures 2-5 degrees C warmer than average.
263                                           As seawater temperatures continue to rise and the incidence
264  normal or environmentally relevant elevated seawater temperatures.
265 nic cycles, the major-element composition of seawater, the marine phosphorus cycle, and atmospheric p
266                                           In seawater, the SSUP fiber achieved a breakthrough uranium
267 puts that typically dilute the alkalinity of seawater thereby resulting in reduced buffering, nutrien
268  well despite being constantly splashed with seawater, they represent a valuable genetic resource for
269 he flow of various tracers from the external seawater to within the cells of all tissues in living an
270  examine the effects of relaxed selection on seawater traits, anadromous and landlocked Atlantic salm
271 thylene, PE-bags), were incubated in natural seawater under laboratory conditions, and the PAE migrat
272 y and alkalinity (pH 2-14) and high-salinity seawater (up to 330 g kg(-1) ).
273  adsorbents have become highly promising for seawater uranium extraction.
274 dy will be used to inform future work on the seawater uranium production cost from a full-scale SMORE
275 ested whether a single PCR survey of eDNA in seawater using a broad metazoan primer could identify di
276  generated by detraining air into artificial seawater using a diffuser demonstrating that the product
277 contaminant that is difficult to remove from seawater using conventional reverse osmosis membranes.
278 f environmental DNA (eDNA) from sediment and seawater using metabarcoding offers a powerful molecular
279        Laboratory calibrations with filtered seawater verified instrument stability and precision.
280  environments, available copper from natural seawater was absorbed and electrochemically released bac
281                            The lava-impacted seawater was characterized by high concentrations of met
282      NP behavior in synthetic wastewater and seawater was characterized during aging and exposure.
283 r- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in seawater was investigated along a sampling transect from
284 ygenic phototrophs, and light filtered under seawater, we derived optimal absorption characteristics
285 ion (given as normalized signal readouts) in seawater were <4% and <14%, respectively, as compared to
286                         Free PAEs diluted in seawater were also studied for bacterial degradation.
287 ty tolerance, survival and initial growth in seawater were greater in anadromous than in landlocked s
288            Pueruli conditioned in reduced-pH seawater were less responsive and failed to select the L
289   Surfactant CMCs in biologically productive seawater were lower than those in the oligotrophic seawa
290 tions of surfactants extracted from mPMA and seawater were quantified and characterized via measureme
291 gy to produce H(2) and to extract CO(2) from seawater, where it is in equilibrium with the atmosphere
292 he high concentration of inorganic sulfur in seawater, which can readily be reduced by phytoplankton,
293  concentrated green seaweed hydrolysates and seawater with marine yeast Wickerhamomyces anomalus M15
294 g abiotic and biotic degradation behavior in seawater with physical properties and molecular structur
295 n, heavy and light oils were irradiated over seawater with simulated sunlight.
296 ter samples (i.e., tap water, rainwater, and seawater) with no sample preparation.
297 veal in situ evidence of anthropogenic Fe in seawater, with low delta(56)Fe (-0.23 per mille > delta(
298 dly attach to and release from substrates in seawater within a minute.
299  of diclofenac in high matrix samples, e.g., seawater, without any prior sample treatment was selecte
300 hesis that pueruli conditioned in reduced-pH seawater would be less responsive to Laurencia spp. chem
301 ted SiO(2)(aq) concentrations in Precambrian seawater would have generated serpentinites that produce

 
Page Top