This symbiosis, mediated by chemical communication between the plant and the bacteria, is a vital component of the global nitrogen cycle. |
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Consequently the products of such genes can be considered as involved in the symbiosis initiation. |
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Data about antioxidative systems in mycorrhizal fungi in pure culture and in symbiosis are scarce. |
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A less common example of symbiosis occurs when a hermit crab lives on another species. |
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The old dichotomies begin to collapse as artists emphasize their sense of symbiosis with, rather than detachment from, Nature. |
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Singh manifests myriad hues creating a symbiosis between animate and inanimate objects. |
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Bacteria that have lost the ability to colonize are called symbiosis mutants. |
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The author notes a symbiosis between Cold War events and southern red-baiting but never fully explores these connections. |
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The classical examples of symbiosis are the lichens, in which a fungus is associated with an alga or a cyanobacterium. |
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There are numerous other examples of symbiosis, mutualism, commensalism and parasitism between ray-finned fishes and other groups. |
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Since these two cover crops are legumes, they form a symbiosis with specialized soil bacteria called rhizobia. |
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The superimposition of the tonic and dominant forms of the motif does not bring a resolution, only an uneasy symbiosis. |
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In this book review he discusses symbiosis in evolution, an oft neglected part of the whole evolutionary story. |
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There is a curious, arguably perverse, symbiosis in football between physical prowess and serious injury which remains unexamined. |
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Forging a symbiosis with the force that rules their world, some are viridescent, mimicking the foliage that surrounds them. |
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As mentioned before there is a symbiosis between the insides and the outsides, between our inner selves and the outside world. |
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The reason for this is that the rich soil as well as the rest of the ecosystem has evolved a fairly balanced symbiosis. |
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The establishment of symbiosis is the result of a complex series of interactions between the symbiont and the host plant. |
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The significance of symbiosis is now recognized for its abundance, wide distribution, and fundamental importance in many ecological processes. |
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In that way the clownfish gets protection and attracts prey for the anemone, an example of symbiosis, or co-operation between different animals. |
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A remarkable part of this exquisite symbiosis is the way the squid keeps the bacterial culture fresh within its light organ. |
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Unlike most other corals, they have no algae living in symbiosis with them, so they must absorb nutrients that pass on the current. |
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These associations therefore represent a valuable source for our general understanding of the dynamics and evolution of symbiosis. |
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In a neat yin-yang symbiosis, the two main floors embody entirely different but complementary functions and design principles. |
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What was the nature of the uneasy symbiosis between religious organizations and the local authorities? |
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It is hard not to marvel at the peaceful symbiosis of two ancient religions, so different yet so similar. |
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Among American painters, few achieved more fully the impressionist symbiosis of public ambition and private life than Edmund C. Tarbell. |
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Drasko Jovanovic points out the important symbiosis between particle physics and cosmology. |
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A generic peasantry living in symbiosis with the land, trapped in unchanging landscapes, helped to convey this message. |
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The symbiosis of electronic communication technology with visitor guidance continues to provide benefits inside as well as out. |
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The visual communication between members bordered on symbiosis as they smoothly switched up guitars, worked pedals, bashed away at keyboards and wailed through guitar solos. |
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Independent dispersal of algal and fungal cultures therefore can lead to a successful establishment of the lichen symbiosis even under harsh Antarctic conditions. |
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Regardless, the symbiosis between the Democratic Party and Silicon Valley is, on a real level, disquieting. |
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The products of many symbioses, and the effects of symbiosis on plant, animal and human hosts are of ecological, agricultural and medical importance. |
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Yet decades of efforts at bioengineering to extend the legume symbiosis to the roots of other crops have not yet shown promise. It is certainly no single-gene affair. |
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It's a fateful symbiosis in a downward spiral of political aspiration. |
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There's a lot of symbiosis between the activists and the mainstream. |
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I can think of no better example of perfect symbiosis of image and music. |
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But delicate rituals of symbiosis are at perpetual risk of breaking down when mob hysteria takes over. |
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The pig and Kris live in symbiosis, sharing feelings and visions with one another. |
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One form of symbiosis especially attractive for divers and snorkelers is the one between the hermit crab and the sea anemone. |
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The symbiosis of the arm band and link wristlet imparts new quality to this design. |
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The fact of little transfer of words from one language to another does not mean there cannot have been long-term symbiosis of speakers of different languages. |
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The two brothers are very close, and the album is the result of artistic as much as fraternal symbiosis. |
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It's impossible to separate her commissioned work from her parallel research, the symbiosis between them being such a necessity. |
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We should see it as a symbiosis because it is not a separate issue from speaking with one voice. |
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The NDP often accuses us of all manner of things in this area, but the Bloc Québécois has always been in symbiosis with those industries. |
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In it, she demonstrates, among other things, how cells can be created from the symbiosis of various species of bacteria. |
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A two degree rise for a few weeks can disrupt the crucial symbiosis between coral and micro-algae, forcing the algae out of the coral. |
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So where does this recurrent talk of nature worship or symbiosis with nature come from? |
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Six episodes in six different places of the world are told in a symbiosis of modern story-telling and popular music. |
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The aim should be a symbiosis of competitiveness, social cohesion and sustainable development. |
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The objective of the gathering is the symbiosis of business interests with respect for the environment. |
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Biogenic bacteria literally sterilize the food on which they live in perfect symbiosis. |
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The Gogo reef was a different kind of reef, no symbiosis between polyp and algae, more a community of sponges and sea mosses that formed hard skeletons. |
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Even Hollywood received a nod at the world's largest book fair in a special forum highlighting the symbiosis between the printed word and the movies. |
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This concept of hardware symbiosis could teach the military a great deal. |
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The partnership is growing from day to day and we can now talk of a genuine symbiosis. |
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A unique symbiosis of architectural art, functionality and durability is thus created through the ceramic halftone silk screening. |
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We have developed a novel bio-remediation system based on the symbiosis between leguminous plant and genetically engineered rhizobia. |
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It was this symbiosis between large herbivores and micro-organisms that sustained biological decay as well as adequate disturbance on a periodic basis. |
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This symbiosis developed during the attritional years of the cold war. |
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So we might take pleasure in imagining-in all this music, most of which is imbued with or inspired by dance-a complete symbiosis of harmony and rhythm. |
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The peculiar lamp and chair, the result of a symbiosis between digital film and industrial technology, look as if they had come directly from a comic strip. |
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As we shall see in these pages, the Bushbuckridge traditional healers in South Africa personify this symbiosis between biological and cultural diversity. |
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The symbiosis between the mountains and the sea is one of the most important characteristics of our natural environment, shaped mainly by long meadowlands that roll down towards beaches or spectacular cliffs. |
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The Hornby nest and the fossil frass now provide strong circumstantial evidence that this termite-protozoan symbiosis dates, at least, from the Late Cretaceous. |
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And ultimately, this symbiosis between a highly specialized team, the know-how and constant investment in technology that makes the difference between Fotoprix and the rest. |
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This symbiosis is designed to create the optimum conditions for care, especially for people who suffer spinal paralysis as a result of an accident. |
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It is a true symbiosis between the culture and the Gospel. |
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Europe's biological diversity, in addition to displaying a number of important ecological characteristics, is testament to the millennial symbiosis between man and his natural environment. |
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The Organization will support and promote scientific cooperation at all levels drawing on its unique symbiosis of natural and social sciences to adapt science to societal needs. |
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In seed production of giant clams, larvae are presented with Symbiodinium but the probability of symbiosis establishment is low. |
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Cultural symbiosis and separation are found in Poland, Ireland and Switzerland, all countries with competing denominations. |
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During the 3rd millennium BC, a cultural symbiosis developed between the Sumerians and the Akkadians, which included widespread bilingualism. |
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The mycorrhizal symbiosis is ancient, dating to at least 400 million years ago. |
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There is evidence to suggest that the lichen symbiosis is parasitic or commensalistic, rather than mutualistic. |
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Geosiphon is not usually considered to be a lichen, and its peculiar symbiosis was not recognized for many years. |
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Another important area of symbiosis between carnivorous plants and insects is pollination. |
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Yo-yo enthusiasts say that they expect the symbiosis between yoyo designers and players to continue to drive innovation. |
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The breakdown of mutualisms can lead to parasitism or even the complete dissolution of the symbiosis. |
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Are Anna and Grace opposites doing different things or is there symbiosis? |
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In this case, at least, selection pressure favoured symbiosis. |
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Communication, orientation and information form the perfect symbiosis when it comes to the reception and guidance of visitors. They interact to lend unique character to a building. |
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The rural landscape in Europe has been formed by agricultural practices over the centuries and the symbiosis between farmers and the environment is complex and close. |
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Things functioned smoothly in a comfortable symbiosis. |
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The symbiosis that he achieves in his works marvellously expresses, it seems to me, the message of dialogue and mutual respect among cultures and civilizations that we advocate. |
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Set on the Great Barrier Reef, Zobi and the Zoox is a story of symbiosis between microbes and larger forms of life. |
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Many of the civilisational achievements of Mesopotamia are the product of that symbiosis. |
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The new District Administrative Office with two lengthways building volumes of different heights, a glass hallway, assembly room, roof terrace and cafeteria is a successful symbiosis of practicality and aspirational design. |
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Nothing has been published on the effect of the cultivation environment on the synthesis of nodulation factors as key molecules in this symbiosis. |
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Klaus Johannsen, the architect, has introduced a symbiosis of pedagogics and architecture to us. The project represents an opportunity for Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. |
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The Polish team was just as perfectly structured as our team in 1972, which was a team with a true symbiosis between artists, technical players, fighters, sloggers, youth, old hands and experience. |
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In that regard, this inquiry will consider a time where there was a disturbing symbiosis between Church and State where sin became not a civil wrong but a societal offence. |
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These costs are now well known and there is effort to address them by improving efficiency, reducing waste, using industrial symbiosis, and eliminating harmful chemicals. |
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In this paper, a quintet of Russian scientists investigates the developmental genetics of plant-microbial symbiosis from developmental and applied viewpoints. |
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Arbuscule represents a dead end in the growth of AM fungi as they senesce and collapse after 4-10 days of symbiosis and thus the plant cell recovers its original morphology. |
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Causae et curae illustrated a view of symbiosis of the body and nature, that the understanding of nature could inform medical treatment of the body. |
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Evidence that lichens are examples of successful symbiosis is the fact that lichens can be found in almost every habitat and geographic area on the planet. |
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Organisms can also respond to selection by cooperating with each other, usually by aiding their relatives or engaging in mutually beneficial symbiosis. |
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