Search results for " Heterogeneity"

showing 10 items of 358 documents

Determinants of the distribution of nitrogen-cycling microbial communities at the landscape-scale

2010

Little information is available regarding the landscape-scale distribution of microbial communities and its environmental determinants. However, a landscape perspective is needed to understand the relative importance of local and regional factors and land management for the microbial communities. In this manuscript, we investigated the distribution of functional microbial communities involved in N-cycling and of the total bacterial and crenarchaeal communities over 107 sites using a grid with a 16 km lag distance within Burgundy, a 31 500 km2 region in France. After quantifying the abundances of the total bacterial, crenarchaeal, nitrate-reducing, denitrifying and ammonia-oxidizing communit…

[SDE] Environmental SciencesBIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLING[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]DENITRIFIERSNITRATE REDUCERSSoilAbundance (ecology)RNA Ribosomal 16SNITROGEN CYCLEAMMONIA OXIDIZERSMICROBIAL COMMUNITIESSoil MicrobiologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0303 health sciencesEcologyGEOMORPHOLOGIE04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesnitrate reducerSpatial heterogeneity[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology[SDE]Environmental SciencesOriginal ArticleFrancelandscape;nitrogen cycle;denitrifier;ammonia oxidizer;nitrate reducer;biogeographyNitrogenBiologyQUANTITATIVE PCRSpatial distributionBacterial Physiological PhenomenaMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesMicrobial ecologyEcosystemSpatial analysisEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]LANDSCAPEBacteriaCrenarchaeotaLANDSCAPE-SCALE15. Life on landammonia oxidizerdenitrifier13. Climate action040103 agronomy & agricultureSpatial ecology0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesECOSYSTEMSpatial variabilityNITROGEN-CYCLINGBIOGEOGRAPHY
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The multiple facets of Cajal-Retzius neurons.

2021

ABSTRACTCajal-Retzius neurons (CRs) are among the first-born neurons in the developing cortex of reptiles, birds and mammals, including humans. The peculiarity of CRs lies in the fact they are initially embedded into the immature neuronal network before being almost completely eliminated by cell death at the end of cortical development. CRs are best known for controlling the migration of glutamatergic neurons and the formation of cortical layers through the secretion of the glycoprotein reelin. However, they have been shown to play numerous additional key roles at many steps of cortical development, spanning from patterning and sizing functional areas to synaptogenesis. The use of genetic l…

[SDV.NEU.NB]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/NeurobiologyCell Adhesion Molecules NeuronalNeurogenesisSynaptogenesisHippocampusNerve Tissue Proteins[SDV.BC.IC] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cellular Biology/Cell Behavior [q-bio.CB]BiologyDevelopmentMolecular heterogeneityHippocampusCajal-Retzius neurons03 medical and health sciencesGlutamatergicMolecular profiling0302 clinical medicineCortex (anatomy)[SDV.BC.IC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cellular Biology/Cell Behavior [q-bio.CB]Biological neural networkmedicineotorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsHumansReelinMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyCerebral CortexNeurons0303 health sciencesExtracellular Matrix ProteinsCell DeathSerine Endopeptidases[SDV.NEU.NB] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Neurobiology[SDV.BDD.EO] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development Biology/Embryology and OrganogenesisReelin Proteinmedicine.anatomical_structure[SDV.BDD.EO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development Biology/Embryology and Organogenesisbiology.proteinCortexIdentification (biology)TranscriptomeNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgerySingle-cell transcriptomicsDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
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Spatial processes driving soil microbial community assembly on a wide scale

2012

International audience; Soil houses a huge biodiversity involved in ecological services through microbial community assembly. However, processes driving soil microbial community assembly are still scarcely understood, particularly the relative importance of environmental heterogeneity regarding to dispersal limitations. This can be achieved through studying the determinism of taxa-area relationship (TAR, how community composition change with geographic distance), a fundamental relationship in ecology. Here, a biogeographical approach was applied on a wide scale to evaluate TAR for soil bacterial and fungal communities and to partition their spatial variations into environmental heterogeneit…

[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental Sciences[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE]Environmental Sciences[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologytaxa-area relationship[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biologyfungal communityenvironmental heterogeneitybacterial communitybiogeographydispersal limitation
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Geochemistry, Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes and geochronology of amphibole- and mica-bearing lamprophyres in northwestern Iran: Implications for mantle wedge het…

2015

Highlights • Northwestern Iranian lamprophyres have alkaline and calc-alkaline nature. • Studied lamprophyres are emplaced during Late Cretaceous to Late Miocene time. • Lamprophyres originated from different metasomatised lithospheric mantle. Abstract Lamprophyres of different age showing distinctive mineralogy, geochemistry and isotopic ratios are exposed in northwestern Iran. They can be divided into Late Cretaceous sannaite, Late Oligocene-Early Miocene camptonite (amphibole-bearing) and Late Miocene minette (mica-bearing) and spessartite (amphibole-bearing) lamprophyres. Sannaites have high-Ti amphibole along with high-Ti and Al clinopyroxene, and they are characterised by homogeneous …

alkaline and calc-alkaline lamprophyres; geochemistry Sr-Nd-Pb isotopes; geochronology; mantle heterogeneity; IranContinental collisionMantle wedgeGeochronologyPartial meltingGeochemistryTrace elementGeologySr-Nd-Pb isotopesIranLate Mioceneengineering.materialMantle (geology)GeochemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyengineeringAlkaline and calc-alkaline lamprophyresMantle heterogeneityGeologyAmphiboleHornblendeLithos
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Intratumoral Heterogeneity, Its Contribution to Therapy Resistance and Methodological Caveats to Assessment

2014

Cancer is one of the most urgent health issues of today. According to WHO, the number of cancer cases is expected to increase by 75% in the next two decades (1). Despite some remarkable achievements in the fields of cancer prevention and early detection, the goal of developing effective anti-cancer therapies still remains unmet. Tumor recurrence due to treatment resistance is the most common cause of death from cancer. Delineating cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying tumor recurrence is of prime importance for the ability to improve the efficacy of existing therapies and develop new strategies to cancer treatment.

cancer stem cellsCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtytumor clones selectionEarly detectionintratumor heterogeneityBioinformaticslcsh:RC254-282Intratumor heterogeneityCancer stem cellmedicinecancerTreatment resistanceIntensive care medicineCancer preventionbusiness.industryintratumor spatiotemporal patternsCancerOpinion Articlelcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseasetumor recurrenceCancer treatmentTumor recurrenceOncologybusinessanti-cancer therapyFrontiers in Oncology
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Heterogeneity at the glass transition: a review

1999

Theoretical concepts and experimental evidence of heterogeneity in glass-forming liquids and polymers are reviewed. The main purpose is to provide an introduction to theoretical developments and recent experiments which have led to rapidly increasing knowledge. Realizing that there is no consensus in regard to the various scenarios of the glass transition starting from rather different assumptions we try to give a balanced overview although we also compare and interrelate some of the approaches. The experimental part describes recent nuclear magnetic resonance, dielectric, and optical experiments from which dynamically distinguishable subensembles can be selected thus proving the existence …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCondensed matter physicsChemistryLiquid phaseDielectricPolymerCondensed Matter PhysicsRadial distribution functionElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesDynamical heterogeneityStatistical physicsGlass transitionJournal of Non-Crystalline Solids
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Studies of structural composition distribution heterogeneity in ethylene/1-hexene copolymers using thermal fractionation technique (SSA): Effect of c…

2005

Investigations into the compositional heterogeneity of ethylene/1-hexene copolymers obtained with various zirconocene/MAO catalysts, either homogeneous or supported on inorganic carriers such as a complex of magnesium chloride with tetrahydrofuran or methyl alcohol, were conducted. The dependence between metallocene structure, as well as catalyst immobilization, and the compositional heterogeneity of the related products was investigated. It was found that the heterogeneity of copolymers is determined by the metallocene catalyst structure. The amount of peaks on the DSC thermograms of copolymers and their division increase with the increase of bulkiness of the ligand in the catalytic system…

compositional heterogeneitysupportcopolymersstructuremetallocene catalystThermochimica Acta
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Plankton Ecology and Diversity

2010

In this chapter we describe plankton responses induced by fluctuating hydrology and eutrophication process in the semi-arid TDNP wetland. We have followed the planktonic community since 1992, at seasonal and interannual scales, covering as well the spatial heterogeneity of the wetland. The studied planktonic components were bacterioplankton, autotrophic picoplankton, nano and microphytoplankton and zooplankton, including ciliates. Plankton has been studied in terms of species composition (diversity), functional groups, spatial heterogeneity, population dynamics. The present data from this wetland allow us to determine which factors (resources and conditions) are relevant for each group and …

education.field_of_studyEcologyfungiPopulationEnvironmental scienceBacterioplanktonPlanktonPicoplanktoneducationZooplanktonFood webSpatial heterogeneityTrophic level
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Competition for breeding sites and site-dependent population regulation in a highly colonial seabird, the common guillemot Uria aalge

2004

Summary 1. The hypothesis of site-dependent population regulation predicts that birds utilize available nesting sites in a pre-emptive (ideal despotic) manner, leading to density dependence in heterogeneous habitats as poorer sites are used at higher population densities. At small population sizes adaptive site choice protects populations against fluctuations (the buffer effect). 2. Common guillemots Uria aalge (Pontoppidan) breed at high density on sea-cliffs. The population breeding on the Isle of May, Scotland increased by 60% between 1981 and 2000. A good nest-site is a prerequisite for successful breeding and there is much competition for the best sites. Throughout this period, site us…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityBreedIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Spatial heterogeneitybiology.animalUria aalgeAnimal Science and ZoologySeabirdeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonJournal of Animal Ecology
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Population-level consequences of risky dispersal

2014

Achieving sufficient connectivity between populations is essential for persistence, but costs of dispersal may select against individual traits or behaviours that, if present, would improve connectivity. Existing dispersal models tend to ignore the multitude of risks to individuals: while many assess the effect of mortality costs, there is also a risk of failing to find new habitat, especially when the entire inhabitable area remains both small and fragmented. There are few known rules governing whether individuals evolve to disperse more, or less, than what is ideal for population connectivity and persistence. Here we aim to fill this gap, while also noting that evolution might not only pr…

education.field_of_studyPopulation levelHabitatIndividual heterogeneityEcologyEcology (disciplines)Populationta1181Biological dispersalBiologyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBirth rateOikos
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