Results 301 to 310 of about 88,438 (351)

Effects of Dietary Indian Sphagnum junghuhnianum Peat Moss Pectin on Growth, Digestive Enzymes, Antioxidant Capacity, Immune Responses, and Disease Resistance in Catla catla Fingerlings

open access: gold
Govindharajan Sattanathan   +7 more
openalex   +1 more source

Mosses

Current Biology, 2023
Often overlooked, these small but otherwise brilliant plants began covering Earth's land masses more than 450 million years ago. They saw the dinosaurs come and go, and they saw us humans coming. Mosses, liverworts and hornworts comprise the bryophytes, the second largest monophyletic clade of land plants (embryophytes), after the vascular plants ...
Lüth, Volker, Reski, Ralf
openaire   +3 more sources

Mosses

The Sarawak Museum Journal, 2004
The Bau Limestone Area supportsa total of 98 species and one variety of mosses in 51 genera and 19 families. This represents 86.4% of the 22 families, 67.1% of the 76 genera and 45% of 220 species and varieties of mosses reported for Sarawak (Touw, 1978).
Benito C. Tan   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Mosse's Syndrome

Gastroenterology, 1952
Summary 1.The clinical features of a case of Mosse's syndrome, i.e. polycythemia vera with cirrhosis of the liver, are described. 2.The differential diagnosis is briefly discussed.
openaire   +2 more sources

Mosse after Mosse

2014
George Mosse died on January 22, 1999. News of his death quickly spread in Italy, where, with the exception of the historian Ernst Nolte, all the articles in the daily newspapers highlighted his innovative approaches to analyzing irrationalism and “new politics.” The same leftist group of historians that had distanced itself from Mosse’s methodology ...
openaire   +1 more source

Timothy Hugh Moss

BMJ, 2017
Although Timothy Hugh Moss (“Tim”) was inclined towards music, he was persuaded to study medicine at Bristol University. He was a model student, passed all exams, and gained many prizes. He played cello in the university’s orchestras and …
Stasia, Moss, David, Mumford
openaire   +2 more sources

The moss bioreactor

Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 2004
The production of recombinant proteins in moss bioreactors provides all of the benefits of molecular farming in plants but avoids many plant-specific disadvantages, such as the genetic instability of de-differentiated cells in suspension culture or the lack of containment during field production.
Decker, Eva L., Reski, Ralf
openaire   +3 more sources

Mosse after Mosse: An Ambivalent Legacy

2014
The article underlines George L. Mosse's legacy in Italian historiographical debate. Starting from the reactions to Mosse's death it highilights the new lines of research influenced by Mosse's work on nationalism, fascism, national socialism, racism, anti-semitism and gender studies, showing the ambivalence of the reception of his researches.
openaire   +2 more sources

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