Search results for "Photos"

showing 10 items of 701 documents

Hyperspectral response of agronomic variables to background optical variability: Results of a numerical experiment

2022

Understanding how biophysical and biochemical variables contribute to the spectral characteristics of vegetation canopies is critical for their monitoring. Quantifying these contributions, however, remains difficult due to extraneous factors such as the spectral variability of canopy background materials, including soil/crop-residue moisture, soil-type, and non-photosynthetic vegetation (NPV). This study focused on exploring the spectral response of two important agronomic variables (1) leaf chlorophyll content (Cab ) and (2) leaf area index (LAI) under various canopy backgrounds through a global sensitivity analysis of wheat-like canopy spectra simulated using the physically-based PROSAIL …

Atmospheric ScienceResilient LivelihoodsLEAF-AREA-INDEXSoil typePHOTOCHEMICAL REFLECTANCE INDEXBIOPHYSICAL PROPERTIESMeteorology & Atmospheric SciencesAdaptationLeaf chlorophyll contentGlobal and Planetary ChangeScience & TechnologyVEGETATION INDEXESSPECTRAL INDEXESGLOBAL SENSITIVITY-ANALYSISAgricultureNon-photosynthetic vegetationForestry22/4 OA procedureAgronomyHyperspectral responseGlobal sensitivity analysisITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLEPhysical SciencesLeaf area indexCHLOROPHYLL CONTENTGREEN LAILife Sciences & BiomedicineCANOPY REFLECTANCEAgronomy and Crop ScienceRADIATIVE-TRANSFER MODELAgricultural and Forest Meteorology
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Solar PAR and UVR modify the community composition and photosynthetic activity of sea ice algae

2015

The effects of increased photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and ultraviolet radiation (UVR) on species diversity, biomass and photosynthetic activity were studied in fast ice algal communities. The experimental set-up consisted of nine 1.44 m(2) squares with three treatments: untreated with natural snow cover (UNT), snow-free (PAR + UVR) and snow-free ice covered with a UV screen (PAR). The total algal biomass, dominated by diatoms and dinoflagellates, increased in all treatments during the experiment. However, the smaller biomass growth in the top 10-cm layer of the PAR + UVR treatment compared with the PAR treatment indicated the negative effect of UVR. Scrippsiella complex (mainly…

Baltic States0106 biological sciencesBaltic Sea010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesUltraviolet Raysbiomassata1172Sea iceChlorophytalevätUVRPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyyhteyttäminenAlgaeChlorophytaSnowBotanySolar EnergyIce CoverultraviolettisäteilyBiomasslajit14. Life underwaterPhotosynthesis0105 earth and related environmental sciencesDiatomsalgaeBiomass (ecology)Ecologybiologyjää010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyta1183photosynthetic activitybiology.organism_classificationdiversiteettiLight intensityDiatomAlveolataItämeriPhotosynthetically active radiationDinoflagellidata1181merijääGreen algaeFEMS Microbiology Ecology
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When do different C4 leaf anatomies indicate independent C4 origins? Parallel evolution of C4 leaf types in Camphorosmeae (Chenopodiaceae).

2014

Broad-scale phylogenetic studies give first insights in numbers, relationships, and ages of C 4 lineages. They are, however, generally limited to a model that treats the evolution of the complex C4 syndrome in different lineages as a directly comparable process. Here, we use a resolved and well-sampled phylogenetic tree of Camphorosmeae, based on three chloroplast and one nuclear marker and on leaf anatomical traits to infer a more detailed picture of C4 leaftype evolution in this lineage. Our ancestral character state reconstructions allowed two scenarios: (i) Sedobassia is a derived C3/C4 intermediate, implying two independent gains of C4 in Bassia and Camphorosma; or (ii) Sedobassia is a…

Bassia prostrataBassiabiologyPhylogenetic treePhysiologyLineage (evolution)BiogeographyWaterPlant ScienceChenopodiaceaebiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionCarbonModels StructuralPlant LeavesPhylogeneticsGenusBotanyParallel evolutionPhotosynthesisPlant Vascular BundlePhylogenyJournal of experimental botany
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Protochlorophyllide reduction - what is new in 2005?

2005

Because the transformation of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to chlorophyllide (Chlide) is an irradiation-dependent process, it is at the heart of the photosynthetic membrane biogenesis, turnover, and adaptation to changes of the environment. I review here the new data published during the year 2004 on Pchlide reduction to Chlide.

BiochemistryProtochlorophyllidePhysiologyPhotosynthetic membranePlant ScienceBiologyPhotosynthetica
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The role of size and protein shells in the toxicity to algal photosynthesis induced by ionic silver delivered from silver nanoparticles

2019

Abstract Because of their biocide properties, silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are present in numerous consumer products. The biocidal properties of AgNPs are due to both the interactions between AgNP and cell membranes and the release of dissolved silver (Ag+). Recent studies emphasized the role of different nanoparticle coatings in complexing and storing Ag+. In this study, the availability of dissolved silver in the presence of algae was assessed for three AgNPs with different silver contents (59%, 34% and 7% of total Ag), silver core sizes and casein shell thicknesses. The impact of ionic silver on the photosynthetic yield of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was used as a proxy to estimate the amo…

BiocideSilverEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesBiological AvailabilityMetal NanoparticlesNanoparticleIonic bonding010501 environmental sciencesProtective AgentsPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesSilver nanoparticleNanomaterialsEnvironmental ChemistryCysteinePhotosynthesisWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEC50IonsDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryPollutionMembraneChlamydomonas reinhardtiiNuclear chemistryScience of The Total Environment
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Monitoring barley and corn growth from remote sensing data at field scale

2004

Vegetation indices have been used for operational quantitative monitoring of vegetation. Here, corn and barley cultures have been used to relate meaningful biophysical parameters such as dry biomass and Crop Growth Rate (CGR) to the well-established Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). We explain these relationships by means of the use of the Light Use Efficiency (LUE) models, based on the positive relation between primary production and Absorbed Photosynthetically Active Radiation (APAR). In these models we introduce NDVI as a linear estimator of f APAR. Experimental data over corn and barley show that dry biomass is linearly related to the Time-Integrated Value of the NDVI (TIND…

Biomass (ecology)Photosynthetically active radiationmedicineGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceStage (hydrology)medicine.symptomScale (map)Linear growthVegetation (pathology)Normalized Difference Vegetation IndexField (geography)Remote sensingInternational Journal of Remote Sensing
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A photoswitchable helical peptide with light-controllable interface/transmembrane topology in lipidic membranes

2021

Summary The spontaneous insertion of helical transmembrane (TM) polypeptides into lipid bilayers is driven by three sequential equilibria: solution-to-membrane interface (MI) partition, unstructured-to-helical folding, and MI-to-TM helix insertion. A bottleneck for understanding these three steps is the lack of experimental approaches to perturb membrane-bound hydrophobic polypeptides out of equilibrium rapidly and reversibly. Here, we report on a 24-residues-long hydrophobic α-helical polypeptide, covalently coupled to an azobenzene photoswitch (KCALP-azo), which displays a light-controllable TM/MI equilibrium in hydrated lipid bilayers. FTIR spectroscopy reveals that trans KCALP-azo folds…

BiomoleculesMembranesMultidisciplinaryPhotoisomerizationPhotoswitchPhotoabsorptionScienceQArticleFolding (chemistry)chemistry.chemical_compoundCrystallographyMembraneAzobenzenechemistryMembrane topologyHelixLipid bilayer
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Synthesis and In Vitro Evaluation of a Photosensitizer-BODIPY Derivative for Potential Photodynamic Therapy Applications

2015

A new photosensitizer (1) based on the 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (BODIPY) scaffold has been synthesized. 1 is water soluble and showed an intense absorption band at 490 nm (e=77600 cm-1M-1) and an emission at 514 nm. In vitro toxicity of 1 in the presence of light and in darkness has been studied with HeLa, HaCaT, MCF-7, and SCC-13 cell lines. Moreover, internalization studies of 1 in these cell lines were also performed. These results suggested that 1 is more toxic for SCC-13 and HeLa carcinoma cells than for the HaCaT noncancerous immortal human keratinocytes. Toxicity upon light irradiation was due to the formation of singlet oxygen and reactive oxygen species (ROS). Cel…

Boron CompoundsLightmedicine.medical_treatmentBodipyPhotodynamic therapyPhotochemistrysensorsBiochemistryHeLachemistry.chemical_compoundQUIMICA ORGANICACell Line TumormedicineBIOQUIMICA Y BIOLOGIA MOLECULARHumansPhotosensitizerchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesPhotosensitizing AgentsphotochemistryMolecular StructureSinglet OxygenbiologySinglet oxygenEndoplasmic reticulumOrganic ChemistryQUIMICA INORGANICAGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationHaCaTPhotochemotherapychemistryphotodynamic therapyfluorescenceBODIPYReactive Oxygen Species
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The Second Flight of the Sunrise Balloon-borne Solar Observatory: Overview of Instrument Updates, the Flight, the Data, and First Results

2017

S. K. Solanki et. al.

Brightness010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesphotosphere [Sun]PolarimetryFOS: Physical scienceschromosphere [Sun]Sun: faculae plagesAstrophysicspolarimetric [Techniques]01 natural scienceslaw.inventionTelescopelaw0103 physical sciencesAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsSunrisefaculae plages [Sun]Sun: magnetic fields010303 astronomy & astrophysicsSolar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPhysicsPhotosphereSolar observatorySunspotsSun: chromosphereTechniques: polarimetricSun: photosphereAstronomy and AstrophysicsPolarimeterAstrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysicsmagnetic fields [Sun]Space and Planetary ScienceData reductionThe Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
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Sexes in gynodioeciousGeranium sylvaticumdo not differ in their isotopic signature or photosynthetic capacity

2017

• In gynodioecious plants, females are expected to produce more or better seeds than hermaphrodites in order to be maintained within the same population. Even though rarely measured, higher seed production can be achieved through differences in physiology. • In this work, we measured sexual dimorphism in several physiological traits in the gynodioecious plant Geranium sylvaticum. Photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductivity, transpiration rate, water use efficiency and isotopic signatures were measured in plants growing in two habitats differing in light availability. • Females have been reported to produce more seeds than hermaphrodites. However, we did not observe any significant difference…

C240 Plant Cell Science0106 biological sciencesLightGeraniumPopulationFlowersmetsäkurjenpolviPlant ScienceGynodioecy010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeranium sylvaticumBotanyC750 Plant Biochemistrygynodioecyisotopic signaturesWater-use efficiencyeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTranspirationSex Characteristicseducation.field_of_studyphotosynthesisbiologyδ13CReproductionfood and beveragesPlant TranspirationGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPhotosynthetic capacitySexual dimorphismsexual dimorphismSeedsGeranium sylvaticumshadeta1181010606 plant biology & botanyPlant Biology
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