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 ies of a random coil and acts as an entropic spring.
2 tiates under day-neutral conditions of early spring.
3 ectodomain can act as a stiff or soft gating spring.
4 pollen into the air every year during early spring.
5 igh [CO(2) ] for many generations in a CO(2) spring.
6 s occurs in people born in late winter/early spring.
7 transcriptions of the wheat landrace Chinese Spring.
8 rcuits, where MOR availability peaked during spring.
9 ers advances from low to high latitudes each spring.
10 Bacteroidetes dominated the PR expression in spring.
11 causing larger greenhouse gas losses during spring.
12 rmant through the winter before flowering in spring.
13 minated over oxyanions in many Icelandic hot springs.
14 cilia mexicana, Poeciliidae) from H(2)S-rich springs.
15 tributed among Yellowstone National Park hot springs.
16 laciers, but also snowfields and groundwater springs.
17 een almost no research on the effects of toe springs.
18 tributed up to a few tens of percent in some springs.
19 were also greater in early compared to late springs.
21 ginated from domestic anseriforms, either in spring 2016 in east China or in autumn 2016 in central E
25 the highly reducing sediment of Colour Peak springs, a sulfidic and saline spring system located wit
26 ges of advancing (~75%) trends, but farmers' spring activities were the only group with reinforced ad
37 erage and minimum) from late winter to early spring affected the timing of cambial reactivation and x
38 daytime and nighttime periods in autumn and spring, aiming to address the seasonal and day-night var
39 verse dynamics techniques, we found that toe springs alter the joint moments and work at the toes suc
41 f picoeukaryotic phytoplankton (PEUK) during spring and after spikes in river flow were also detected
43 T shifts forward and backward by one hour in spring and autumn by comparing the observed and expected
44 ong time series was recently produced of the spring and autumn migration phenology of Brazilian free-
45 uring spring migration and carnivores during spring and autumn migration that migrated across the ent
46 west and the centre of the continent during spring and autumn migration, and carnivores in the west
47 , herbivore-granivores and granivores during spring and autumn migration, except for omnivores in the
54 lance radars to estimate over 50% SPR during spring and autumn through the Gulf of Mexico and Atlanti
55 l communities in monthly incubations between spring and autumn under different environmental conditio
56 bimodal distribution of acoustic presence in spring and autumn, corresponding to their expected migra
58 ll genetic differentiation between the CO(2) spring and control site populations was found, with evid
59 and railroads affected movement during both spring and fall migrations, but eagles selected areas ne
61 birds concentrated close to the coast during spring and inland in forested landscapes during autumn,
63 iation in the timing of events is greater in spring and less in autumn than if all populations follow
67 le (AF) seasonal ranges more than doubled in spring and summer and were significantly larger in all m
68 rge increases in abundance, typically in the spring and summer followed, by rapid declines within wee
69 sequential extraction on cores collected in spring and summer from two small agricultural streams in
70 ecreased chilling the advancing phenology in spring and summer is still attributable to warming; even
71 .e., increase of temperature and humidity as spring and summer months arrive in the Northern Hemisphe
74 ated with winter and spring temperatures and spring and summer precipitation, and positively correlat
75 Water profiles during the 2018-2019 southern spring and summer stormy seasons show that high-altitude
77 centrations were similar to within 5% during spring and summer, but mobile P binding fractions nearly
78 can be captured across the United States in spring and summer, while capacity lowers to 0-5 L/m(2)/d
81 ANO, the current state-of-the-art compressor SPRING and the general compressor pigz on several public
82 ieved a success rate of 68.2%, outperforming SPRING and ZDOCK, with success rates of 52.1% and 35.9%
84 risk, complicating forecasts of future false springs, and potentially reshaping plant community dynam
86 chanisms, we forecast future trajectories of spring arrival and evaluate the consequences for forest
87 business-as-usual' climate scenario, earlier spring arrival will enhance NPP of temperate and boreal
93 amples of life's resilience, thriving in hot springs at boiling temperatures, in brine lakes saturate
94 trends were present, being stronger in early spring, at higher elevations, but smaller for nonwoody i
95 ques to trace foliar P uptake in P-deficient spring barley (Hordeum vulgare) and to monitor the effec
98 ious for summer-blooming species compared to spring-bloomers driven by their strongly differing offse
102 acquired in fall to fuel winter survival and spring breeding, increased winter energy requirements ha
103 rmyard manure (FYM) or pea vines, no burn or spring burn with application of N fertilizer (0, 45, and
107 namics method based on a coarse-grained bead-spring chain model has been proposed to compute the opti
108 action norms tend to accentuate responses in spring (cogradient variation) and attenuate them in autu
109 theless, leaf C:N was low for summer- versus spring-collected plants, consistent with a life history-
110 cted areas near roads to a greater degree in spring compared to fall and at higher latitudes compared
111 is from the Rhynie and Windyfield cherts hot spring complex in Scotland, reveals details of head stru
112 Canada during the anomalously warm winter to spring conditions of 2015 and 2016 (relative to 2010-201
113 e activity through an association with drier spring conditions resulting from weaker moisture transpo
114 om three different LC patients who underwent spring correction were reconstructed from the pre-operat
115 up-call detections in late winter and early spring corresponding to the season when right whales con
116 at the toes such that greater degrees of toe spring curvature resulted in lower work requirements dur
117 uito is well-characterized by a passive mass-spring-damper model which permits the calculation of for
119 . shade-grown coffee plantations) relates to spring departure date and migration pace in Swainson's T
120 For Neotropical migrant songbirds, early spring departure from wintering sites, early arrival to
124 hat appear to decrease immediately after the spring DST shift, enriched with infections and immune sy
125 ss all states (1996-2017), and observed that spring DST significantly increased fatal MVA risk by 6%,
129 se, given the low host cell densities of hot spring environments, that the TSPV1 filaments serve to i
130 ates marked shifts in the relative timing of spring events across trophic levels and mismatches in th
131 While it is generally recognized that toe springs facilitate the forefoot's ability to roll forwar
132 erance in 10 independent lineages of sulfide spring fishes across multiple genera of Poeciliidae is c
133 s exhibited the highest pathogen loads, with spring floral resources and nesting habitat availability
134 of wintersweet, such as floral transition in spring, floral organ specification, low temperature-medi
135 Subseafloor mixing of high-temperature hot-spring fluids with cold seawater creates intermediate-te
136 activity date was then compared with a daily spring forage availability date dataset, resulting in "w
137 d to simulate the skull expansion due to the spring forces and skull growth between surgery and post-
140 es, and thioantimonates, in sulfide-rich hot springs from Yellowstone National Park and Iceland is sh
143 whereas other species appear to be adding a spring generation, revealing a possible shift from vagra
145 show that drought shortened the duration of spring green-up by approximately twofold (2.5 weeks) and
146 ts this important seasonal process and shows spring greenhouse gas emissions are largely due to produ
147 The results showed that warm temperatures in spring had a positive effect on NEP in conifer forests b
150 ), two treatments were applied: (b) two late-spring heatwaves (June, July) followed by a summer heatw
153 The stiffness and tunability of the I-band spring implicate titin as a force contributor that, duri
156 is an important source of water during early spring in these water-limited ecosystems, and it can als
158 chemistry and U measured in periphyton from springs in Grand Canyon (United States) and were compare
160 gadi, a hypersaline alkaline lake fed by hot springs in the semi-arid southern Kenya Rift Valley.
161 onditions characteristic of the volcanic hot springs in which these archaeal extremophiles reside.
162 ion of temperature from late winter to early spring is a critical factor in determining the timing of
163 acteristics, a piezovoltage is applied and a spring is connected to the sliding end of the deformable
164 ean ecosystems (which show maximum uptake in spring), it is in phase with the seasonal cycle of urban
167 out-of-plane magnetic field, and an exchange spring-like magnetic depth profile when the system is ma
168 d AMP concentrations as temperatures warm in spring likely means greater secretion rates, the subsequ
170 ally, groundwater discharging at hundreds of spring locations in and near Grand Canyon supports impor
172 ty to roll forward at the end of stance, toe springs may also have some effect on natural foot functi
173 hoes for centuries but also suggest that toe springs may contribute to weakening of the foot muscles
174 icing events may cause die-offs, and earlier springs may generate a trophic mismatch in phenology, th
175 ures did contribute strongly to the observed spring migration advancements over the 55-y study period
176 on was also observed for insectivores during spring migration and carnivores during spring and autumn
177 l hypothesis of equal survival and timing of spring migration for High Arctic breeding sanderling Cal
182 for insectivores in the west and east during spring migration, and for nectarivores in the west durin
189 In response to a warming planet with earlier springs, migratory animals are adjusting the timing of e
190 end, we developed a coarse-grained bead-and-spring model and investigated its properties through Bro
191 sing a statistical mechanics-based torsional spring model, we extracted values of the chromatin twist
195 erent sample stresses were used to construct spring networks characterized by Hessian and damping mat
198 reduction in acidic hyperthermal terrestrial springs of the Kamchatka Peninsula and attributed DSR in
201 This study investigated the effects of toe springs on foot biomechanics in a controlled experiment
203 perature, winter chilling, and the timing of spring onset, we accurately predicted reductions in the
205 intained in the presence of H(2)S in sulfide spring P. mexicana but not ancestral lineages from nonsu
207 es of spring ENSO, summer NAO, and winter or spring PDO accounted for 40-54% of the variation in gras
211 ndings suggest that interannual variation in spring phenology could be much stronger in the future in
213 a indicate significant advancement in alpine spring phenology over decades of climate warming, but co
215 P and chlorophyll a, and these indicate that spring phosphorus loads are a weak algal biomass predict
217 ute to 'sustained quenching' of winter/early spring pine needles, time-resolved fluorescence analysis
219 formance and high thermal sensitivity into a spring-powered system with extreme performance and funct
222 d wheat (Triticum aestivum) cultivar Chinese Spring reference genome allows a detailed study of its N
223 domains preferentially from the distal titin spring region become oxidized in vivo through the mechan
224 ion profiles of populations derived from the spring relative to the control population, providing the
225 est that climate change-which will make most springs relatively "early"-could lead to a future with m
226 diffusion and ebullition and 2.6-3.3 Tg from spring release of CH(4) stored in bubbles in winter lake
227 ents that reach the atmosphere (ebullition); spring release of CH(4) trapped in bubbles in and under
228 ds, ENANO is 2.9x and 1.7x times faster than SPRING, respectively, with memory consumption up to 0.2
229 vered from samples collected during fall and spring, respectively; these are subtypes that can have s
230 potentially magnified the variation in false spring risk among species with an increase in risk for e
231 which were the strongest predictors of false spring risk and how these predictors shifted with climat
233 ate change has reshaped the drivers of false spring risk, complicating forecasts of future false spri
239 on rate-and-state friction in the manner of spring-sliders, and analyze conditions for the emergence
242 ing to the Arctic are expected to follow the spring snowmelt to optimise their arrival time and selec
245 e of budburst more in early compared to late springs, suggesting that to simulate interannual variabi
246 tion, and delta(13) C(ph) monthly throughout spring, summer, and autumn in Eucalyptus tereticornis gr
250 Both signals are generated using an elastic spring system (ESS), which includes a protractor muscle
251 f Colour Peak springs, a sulfidic and saline spring system located within the Canadian High Arctic.
254 ng was negatively correlated with winter and spring temperatures and spring and summer precipitation,
255 n cold snap occurrence and generally warming spring temperatures can affect reproductive success and
259 h is consistent with the greater increase in spring than summer temperatures recorded for this region
260 with the sarcomere end, working as an I-band spring that accounts for the rise of passive force with
261 measure the undamped stiffness of an I-band spring that at SL > 2.7 um attains a maximum constant va
263 nclude that the carotenoid does not act as a spring that, releasing its internal strain, induces the
265 9 days) is significantly longer than that of spring thaw (20.94 +/- 7.79 days), which predominates th
267 is study investigates CH(4) emissions during spring thaw and autumn freeze using eddy covariance CH(4
269 es and differences in CH(4) emissions during spring thaw versus autumn freeze to accurately estimate
271 d subsequently in terrestrial geothermal hot springs, the Nanoarchaeota species that have been descri
272 infusa) complete an astonishing journey: In Spring, they migrate over 1,000 km from their breeding g
275 /- 1.3 Tg N[Formula: see text] in the boreal spring to a high of 5.5 +/- 2.0 Tg N[Formula: see text]
276 .7-3.1 um, showing the ability of the I-band spring to adapt its length to the width of the I-band.
277 motypic interactions within the distal titin spring to stabilize this segment and regulate myocardial
279 prior to the final frost date of the winter/spring transition may damage flower buds or open flowers
281 allowing time to heal graft wounds prior to spring transplanting or double cropping is suitable for
282 However, photosynthetic enhancement from spring warming was partially offset by greater ecosystem
287 are soil deposited by an extinct iron-sulfur spring, we found that WPS-2 comprised up to 24% of the b
289 uctive condition per annum was influenced by spring weather conditions, (iii) in both species males t
290 tudy period, supporting the possibility that spring weather regime shifts contributed to the increasi
291 rong (Pembina) and a weak (Harvest) hard red spring wheat flour were examined at a 1 and 2% salt leve
292 explore the geomicrobiology of a 4438-m-high spring which emanates ~70 degrees C-water from a boratic
294 g summer and fall, and ease-of-travel during spring, while patterns of selection during winter aligne
295 nfluence on net CO(2) exchange in winter and spring, while soil moisture has a primary control on net
296 transcriptome time series for Brassica napus spring, winter, semi-winter, and Siberian kale crop type
297 mille) during summer and high values during spring/winter (0 to - 3 per mille), while 70% of the ann
298 s from frog skeletal muscle reveal an I-band spring with an undamped stiffness 100 times larger than
299 ly present in the archipelago from autumn to spring with marked seasonal differences in the use of di