Search results for " Temperature"

showing 10 items of 2370 documents

Antimykotische Wirkstoffe, Mitt. Chlor-(1-piperazinyl)-1,3,5-triazine

1988

Aus der Umsetzung von Cyanurchlorid (1) mit den Piperazinderivaten 2a–c bei –20 bis 10° gehen die Dichlor-(1-piperazinyl)-1,3,5-triazine 3a–c hervor. Bei der erhohten Reaktionstemperatur von 40° erfolgt aus 1 und den Piperazinderivaten 4a–b Bildung der 2-Chlor-4,6-bis(piperazinyl)-1,3,5-triazine 5a–b. Zu gemischt substituierten Chlor-1,3,5-triazinen 9 fuhrt die nacheinander erfolgende Umsetzung von 1 mit 2 verschiedenen cyclischen sekundaren Aminen (6 und 8). Die Strukturtypen 3, 5 und 9 zeigen in den 1H-NMR-Spektren zwei fur Piperazinringe charakteristische Signalgruppen im Bereich 2.4–4.0 ppm. Unter den neu entwickelten Verbindungen finden sich Vertreter mit sehr starker antimykotischer W…

biologyBicyclic moleculeStereochemistryCyanuric chloridePharmaceutical ScienceTrichophyton rubrumbiology.organism_classificationPiperazinechemistry.chemical_compoundReaction temperaturechemistryDrug DiscoveryMicrosporum canisMicrosporumArchiv der Pharmazie
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Microstructures in shells of the freshwater gastropod Viviparus viviparus: a potential sensor for temperature change?

2013

Abstract Mollusk shells contain a plethora of information on past climate variability. However, only a limited toolkit is currently available to reconstruct such data from the shells. The environmental data of some proxies (e.g. Sr/Ca ratios) is obscured by physiological effects, whereas other proxies, such as δ 18 O, simultaneously provide information on two or more different environmental variables. The present study investigates whether microstructures of the freshwater gastropod Viviparus viviparus provide an alternative means to reconstruct past water temperature. Cold and highly variable temperature regimes resulted in the precipitation of highly unordered first-order lamellae of simp…

biologyBiological clockEcologyPrecipitation (chemistry)GastropodaBiomedical EngineeringTemperatureMineralogyFresh WaterGeneral MedicineOrgan Sizebiology.organism_classificationMicrostructureBiochemistryGastropod shellExtreme temperatureBiomaterialsHomogeneousViviparus viviparusAnimal ShellsSclerochronologyAnimalsMolecular BiologyBiotechnologyActa biomaterialia
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The coralline red alga Lithophyllum kotschyanum f. affine as proxy of climate variability in the Yemen coast, Gulf of Aden (NW Indian Ocean)

2014

Abstract Recent investigations have shown the potential of red coralline algae as paleoclimatic archive. A previously unexplored subfamily of coralline algae, the Lithophylloideae, was investigated from the Gulf of Aden (Balhaf, Yemen). Seasonal changes in Mg/Ca, Li/Ca and Ba/Ca composition of Lithophyllum kotschyanum f. affine were investigated by Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). For the first time in coralline algae, the Li/Ca composition was analyzed and showed a highly significant and positive correlation with Mg/Ca and SST. Monthly algal Mg/Ca and Li/Ca variations indicate a positive correlation with sea surface temperature (SST), and sea surface…

biologyChemistrygeochemical proxies crustose coralline algae climate record Indian OceanCoralline algaeGEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIAbiology.organism_classificationLithophyllum kotschyanumThallusIndian oceanSea surface temperatureOceanographyGeochemistry and PetrologyUpwellingLithophyllumSea surface salinityGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
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Palaeoclimatic applications of large databases: developing and testing methods of palaeotemperature reconstruction using nonmarine ostracods

2008

Non-analogue methods for Quaternary palaeoclimatic reconstruction, such as the coleopteran Mutual Climate Range method and the Mutual Ostracod Temperature Range (MOTR) method, use large geographical databases combined with modern climate datasets to establish the modern climate/temperature ranges of species, which can then be applied to the interpretation of fossil assemblages. Such approaches have been criticized for their lack of attention to variation in the distributions of species within their climate ranges. The MOTR method, for example, assumes that a species has an equal probability of occurring anywhere within its temperature range (e.g. mean July air temperature range), but tests …

biologyDatabaseCalibration (statistics)Range (biology)BiodiversityPaleontologybiology.organism_classificationcomputer.software_genreOstracodAir temperatureAssemblage (archaeology)Table (landform)QuaternarycomputerSenckenbergiana lethaea
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Sclerochronology and geochemical variation in limpet shells (Patella vulgata): A new archive to reconstruct coastal sea surface temperature

2007

[1] Climate archives contained in shells of the European limpet, Patella vulgata, accumulated in archaeological deposits can potentially provide much needed information about Holocene environmental change in midlatitude coastal areas. Before reconstructing climate information preserved in these zooarchaeological records, we studied the controls on oxygen and carbon isotope ratios (δ18O and δ13C, respectively) in modern specimens. We tested the hypothesis that P. vulgata precipitates its shell in isotopic equilibrium with the ambient water by comparing δ18OSHELL with predicted values. Predicted δ18OSHELL was constructed using observed sea surface temperature (SST) records and the equilibrium…

biologyEnvironmental changeδ18OLimpetbiology.organism_classificationEquilibrium fractionationSea surface temperatureGeophysicsOceanographyGeochemistry and PetrologyIsotopes of carbonSclerochronologyPatella vulgataGeologyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
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Low temperature optical spectroscopy of cobalt-substituted hemocyanin from Carcinus maenas

1993

In this work we report the optical absorption spectra of three cobalt-substituted derivatives of hemocyanin (He) from Carcinus maenas, in the temperature range 300–20 K. The derivatives studied are the mononuclear (Co2+)-He with a single cobalt ion in the “CuA” site, the binuclear (Co2+)2-He and the binuclear mixed metal (Co2+-Cu1+)-He. At low temperature three main bands are clearly resolved; the temperature dependence of their zeroth, first and second moments sheds light on the stereodynamic properties in the surroundings of the chromophore. Within the limits of the reported analysis, in the binuclear derivatives the motions coupled to the chromophore appear to be “essentially harmonic” i…

biologyLigandMetal ions in aqueous solutionBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryActive sitechemistry.chemical_elementGeneral MedicineChromophoreAtmospheric temperature rangeCrystallographychemistrybiology.proteinSpectroscopyRotational–vibrational couplingCobaltEuropean Biophysics Journal
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THERMOREGULATION CONSTRAINS EFFECTIVE WARNING SIGNAL EXPRESSION

2009

Evolution of conspicuous signals may be constrained if animal coloration has nonsignaling as well as signaling functions. In aposematic wood tiger moth (Parasemia plantaginis) larvae, the size of a warning signal (orange patch on black body) varies phenotypically and genetically. Although a large warning signal is favored as an antipredator defense, we hypothesized that thermoregulation may constrain the signal size in colder habitats. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a factorial rearing experiment with two selection lines for larval coloration (small and large signal) and with two temperature manipulations (high and low temperature environment). Temperature constrained the size and br…

biologyPigmentationEcologyfungiAnimal colorationAposematismLow temperature treatmentMothsThermoregulationbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionPredationTwo temperatureParasemia plantaginisLarvaPredatory BehaviorGeneticsAnimalsGrowth rateGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBody Temperature RegulationEvolution
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Changes of morphogenic competence in mature Pinus sylvestris L. buds in vitro.

2002

The effects of season and cold storage on morphogenic competence in mature Pinus sylvestris buds were investigated. Peroxidase and polyphenol oxidase activity were measured as markers of oxidative metabolism. No growth in vitro was observed on explants detached from the end of January until the beginning of March. Brachioblasts, each with a couple of needles, formed on 11 % of the buds without macrostrobili that were detached in early April and introduced immediately into culture. Of the explants detached in late July, 15 % formed shoots with brachioblasts and needles. The lowest activity of peroxidase and polyphenol oxidase in pine buds was observed from the end of April until the beginnin…

biologyShort CommunicationsCold storagefood and beveragesPinus sylvestrisPlant SciencePolyphenol oxidase activityPinusPolyphenol oxidaseIn vitroCold TemperatureOxygenPlant LeavesCulture TechniquesBotanyShootbiology.proteinCatechol oxidaseOxidation-ReductionBiomarkersCatechol OxidasePlant ShootsPeroxidaseExplant culturePeroxidaseAnnals of botany
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Latent measles virus infection in Vero cells depending on a temperature-sensitive phenomenon.

1978

A latent infection by measles virus in a line of Vero cells could be maintained only at 37 degrees C. The conditions of temperature nonpermissiveness were associated with some block in virus production and/or release and with the establishment of an autointerference phenomenon. Reduction of the incubation temperature to 33.5 degrees C induced a rather rapid transition from the latent to a lytical infection with a recue of virus. The rescued virus exhibited a restricted capacity to grow at 37 degrees C.

biologyvirusesTemperatureGeneral MedicineHaplorhinibiology.organism_classificationVirus ReplicationVirologyVirusMicrobiologyCell LineMeasles virusIncubation temperatureCytopathogenic Effect ViralMeasles virusVirologyViral InterferenceVero cellAnimalsTemperature sensitiveAntigens ViralArchives of virology
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Tarbellastraea (Scleractinia): A new stable isotope archive for Late Miocene paleoenvironments in the Mediterranean

2008

Abstract Geochemical proxy records of sea surface temperature (SST) or sea surface salinity (SSS) variability on intra- and interannual time-scales in corals from geological periods older than Pleistocene are extremely rare due to pervasive diagenetic alteration of coralline aragonite. Very recently, however, stable isotope data (δ18O, δ13C) from specimens of Porites of Late Miocene age (10 Ma) have been shown to preserve original environmental signatures. In this paper we describe new finds of the zooxanthellate corals Porites and Tarbellastraea in exceptional aragonite preservation from the island of Crete in sediments of Tortonian (∼ 9 Ma) and Early Messinian (∼ 7 Ma) age. Systematic, co…

biologyδ18OAragonitePoritesPaleontologyScleractiniaengineering.materialLate MioceneOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSea surface temperaturePaleontologyOceanographySclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyengineeringEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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