Results 241 to 250 of about 196,095 (349)
Abstract Premise We examined the African arid corridor (AAC) disjunction pattern of vascular plants between northeastern and southwestern Africa in the context of geological and climatic events since the late Miocene. We developed a phylogenetic and biogeographical framework for the arid‐adapted genus Sesamothamnus (Pedaliaceae), a classic example of ...
John G. Zaborsky +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Recent Trends in Metabolomics by NMR Spectroscopy
AI tools were applied to analyze more than 5 000 publications indexed in Scopus (2018–2025), identifying key trends and research directions in NMR‐based metabolomics. The artificial intelligence‐assisted workflow classified papers into six main fields of application, human health, food and nutrition, veterinary science, plants, environment, and ...
Giorgio Di Paco +6 more
wiley +2 more sources
Depth of nutrient uptake by deep-rooted plants is regulated by water availability. [PDF]
Li L +15 more
europepmc +1 more source
Use of Chilled Mirror /Dew-Point Method (WP4C) to Develop Soil Water Characteristic Curve for Coastal Silty Sand with a Comparison of the Existing Analytical Models [PDF]
A. A. S. Kaushalya +3 more
openalex +1 more source
Abstract Premise Understanding the habitat requirements of imperiled flora is critical for informing ex situ conservation practices, designing effective reintroduction strategies, and understanding how climate change will impact such species, especially in montane regions with high levels of environmental heterogeneity. In southern Appalachia, USA, the
Nicholas J. Chang +6 more
wiley +1 more source
The prediction of the progressive deformation mode based on active waveguide-generated acoustic emission. [PDF]
Wu Z +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Relative density effects on the bearing capacity of unsaturated sand [PDF]
Imam, Reza +2 more
core
Evaluation of Soil Water Characteristic Curves of Sand-Clay Mixtures
Tamer Y. Elkady
openalex +2 more sources
High‐elevation endemic plants predicted to lose habitat from changing climate in Washington State
Abstract Premise High‐elevation plants face unique challenges from potential climate change impacts that will likely require upslope migration into increasingly smaller suitable habitat. This situation is particularly acute for endemic species that by definition occupy small geographic ranges.
Nicholas L. Gjording +4 more
wiley +1 more source

