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Academic Journals
- 2,864
- 1From:Journal of Central European Agriculture (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedKish Island is located in the Persian Gulf on the mainland Iran. Salinity and the use of low quality water affect the ornamental aspects of species. Plants in Kish Island irrigated by low quality water face with salt...
- 2From:Pharmacognosy Research (Vol. 6, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedByline: Soodabeh. Saeidnia, Ahmad. Gohari, Azita. Haddadi, Gholamreza. Amin, Marjan. Nikan, Abbass. Hadjiakhoondi Background: The family Lamiaceae (Labiatae) has included some medicinal plants. some monoterpene...
- 3From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness WeekBy a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Investigators publish new report on Environmental Geosciences. According to news reporting originating from Maan, Jordan, by NewsRx...
- 4From:Advances in Environmental BiologyPeer-ReviewedBackground: The Holy Quran is a religious book of Muslims. In many verses of Quran, various plants are discussed. Objective: The present study aimed at identification of the English transliteration Quranic plants based...
- 5From:Chemistry of Natural Compounds (Vol. 47, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedA new bergenin derivative, 11-O-(3'-O-methylgalloyl)-bergenin, was isolated from the whole plants of Corylopsis willmottiae Rehd. et Wils, along with 11-O-galloylbergenin, 11-O-syringylbergenin, bergenin,...
- 6From:Plant Ecology (Vol. 212, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedThe impact of herbivores on herbaceous plant communities is usually attributed to direct consumption of plants. We hypothesized that goats affect herbaceous plants both directly (consumption by foraging) and indirectly,...
- 7From:Photosynthesis Research (Vol. 107, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe lower oxygen limit (LOL) in plants may be identified through the measure of respiratory gases [i.e. the anaerobic compensation point (ACP) or the respiratory quotient breakpoint (RQB)], but recent work shows it may...
- 8From:Chemistry of Natural Compounds (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedUDC 547.553.655:37 A total of 84 species of the plant genus Silene (Caryophyllaceae) are indigenous to Central Asia [1]. We studied previously ecdysteroids from the aerial part of three species of Silene [2-4]....
- 9From:Oecologia (Vol. 164, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEndophytic fungal symbionts of grasses are well known for their protective benefit of herbivory reduction. However, the majority of studies on endophytegrass symbioses have been conducted on economically important,...
- 10From:BMC Plant Biology (Vol. 9) Peer-ReviewedAuthors: Barbara Lazzari (corresponding author) (equal contributor) [1]; Andrea Caprera (equal contributor) [1]; Alessandro Cestaro [2]; Ivan Merelli [3]; Marcello Del Corvo [1]; Paolo Fontana [2]; Luciano Milanesi [3];...
- 11From:Expert Review of Vaccines (Vol. 9, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Linda Avesani 1 , Luisa Bortesi 1 , Luca Santi 2 , Alberto Falorni 3 , Mario Pezzotti [[dagger]] 4 Keywords : autoantigen; autoimmune disease; oral tolerance; plant-made pharmaceutical; recombinant...
- 12From:Stem Cell WeekA key item in the developmental agenda of a plant leaf is the establishment of an axis that makes a leaf's top half distinct from its bottom half. This asymmetry is crucial for the leaf's function: it ensures that the...
- 13From:The Scientist (Vol. 17, Issue 14) Peer-ReviewedWhat is chemical communication in plants? Plants rely on chemical signals to communicate with each other and themselves. Some of these chemicals are volatile (known as volatile organic compounds--VOCs) and can be...
- 14From:BioScience (Vol. 48, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedNew research by botanists Douglas and Pamela Soltis shows autopolyploids are more prevalent in nature than what is normally believed. They have arrived at this conclusion after studying two allopolyploid species of the...
- 15From:Antiquity (Vol. 72, Issue 278) Peer-ReviewedThe social and cultural aspects of plant care and cultivation were investigated to contribute to the understanding of the origin of agriculture. The domestication process was accompanied by increasing social...
- 16From:Crop Science (Vol. 38, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedThe most destructive fungal disease of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] is Phytophthora root rot. The most common method of protecting soybean from Phytophthora root rot utilizes specific resistance genes, but...
- 17From:Feminist Studies (Vol. 25, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe author expresses relationships between the female body, fertility, and plant growth. Topics addressed include gender identity, subjectivity, and language. Achillea filipendulina alchemilla mollis anemone...
- 18From:Journal of the American Dietetic Association (Vol. 91, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract (Omega)-3 Fatty acids (Omega)-3FAs) are found in seafoods, some plants, and some livestock rations. Fish oils are the only concentrated source of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA; 20:5 (Omega)-3) and docosahexaenoic...
- 19From:Science (Vol. 254, Issue 5035) Peer-ReviewedThe production of enzymes capable of degrading the cell walls of invading phytopathogenic fungi is an important component of the defense response of plants. The timing of this natural host defense mechanism was modified...
- 20From:Agricultural Research (Vol. 41, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedA 1988 conversation between entomologists Richard L. Wilson, of the Agricultural Research Service, and Gary L. Reed, of the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station, has resulted in Oregon tests of earthworm-resistant...