Results 261 to 270 of about 35,277 (299)

Apple Scald Induction by Anaerobiosis [PDF]

open access: possibleNature, 1963
SCALD is a physiological disorder which seriously affects the appearance and utility of the apple fruit. It initially appears during, or following, cold storage as a brown discoloration of the epidermis of the green-coloured portion of the fruit. With advancement, it affects the anthocyanin-bearing epidermis, the hypodermis and the adjacent cortex ...
D. H. Dewey   +3 more
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Anaerobiosis in a frog, Rana pipiens

Journal of Experimental Zoology, 1967
AbstractRana pipiens shows an obvious reduction in hepatic, ventricular, and gastrocnemius muscle glycogen concentrations with increasing time in anoxia. Pulmonary repiratory movements drop sharply during the first three minutes of anoxia and virtually cease after 30 minutes.
Francis L. Rose, Robert Benjamin Drotman
openaire   +3 more sources

Invertebrate Facultative Anaerobiosis

Science, 1972
The unique pattern of anaerobic carbohydrate metabolism in invertebrate facultative anaerobes serves to couple other substrate-level phosphorylations to the glycolytic reactions, thus increasing the potential yield of high-energy phosphate compounds. Currently, two important coupling sites can be identified:
Peter W. Hochachka, T. Mustafa
openaire   +3 more sources

Impact of microbial self-induced anaerobiosis fermentation (SIAF) on coffee quality

Food Bioscience, 2022
Marcela Caroline Batista da Mota   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Physiology of Obligate Anaerobiosis

1975
Publisher Summary The chapter discusses the physiology of obligate anaerobiosis. An obligate anaerobe emerges as an organism that: (i) generates energy and synthesizes its substance without recourse to molecular oxygen; and (ii) demonstrates a singular degree of adverse oxygen-sensitivity, which renders it unable to grow under an atmosphere of air ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Anaerobiosis in Marine Sandy Beaches

Science, 1960
Organisms living at depths greater than 5 to 10 cm in marine beaches composed of fine sand are completely anaerobic whenever their particular section of beach is covered by water. Anaerobic conditions are continuous if the slope of the beach is slight enough so that capillary forces keep the sand saturated with water even at low tide.
openaire   +3 more sources

Myocardial anaerobiosis in anemia in ur?mic man

The American Journal of Cardiology, 1972
Myocardial anaerobic metabolism (lactate production) has been previously observed in man primarily in ischemic heart disease. Myocardial lactate balance was studied in severe anemia in 6 stable uremic patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis before and after transfusion.
Eli A. Friedman   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Circadian rhythm of anaerobiosis in a polychaete annelid

Nature, 1976
ALTHOUGH intertidal organisms which cannot breathe air must be regularly subjected to tidal conditions in which they must respire anaerobically, there are no known cases in which these or other animals reduce environmental conditions to the point at which they must respire anaerobically.
openaire   +3 more sources

THE ROLE OF ANAEROBIOSIS IN ASYMBIOTIC NITROGEN FIXATION

Canadian Journal of Microbiology, 1967
Microbial fixation of atmospheric nitrogen was measured in soil amended with ground wheat straw and incubated at two moisture levels (field capacity and waterlogged). Fixation equivalent to 42–52 kg/ha in the soil at field capacity and 13–150 kg/ha in the waterlogged soil was observed using 15N techniques when the soil was amended with 1% straw or ...
Eldor A. Paul, L. R. Wetter, W. A. Rice
openaire   +3 more sources

Ethidium bromide mutagenesis in yeast: Protection by anaerobiosis

Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1975
The mutagenesis by ethidium bromide, an intercalating dye, which induces the mutation from wild type (rho+) to the cytoplasmic respiratory deficient petite (rho-) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was studied under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. During growth of anaerobic cells at pH 6.5, ethidium bromide at a concentration of 2 mug/ml is unable to ...
Michel Guerineau   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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