complete records of events in vegetation history and in plant evolutionary history depend on accuracy in dating sediments, interpretation of structures preserved, reconstruction of whole organisms or communities from the preserved material, and interpretation of the interaction between past abundance and foss...
National Geographic photographer Brian Skerry has been diving in the Gulf of Maine for more than 40 years. After learning these waters were a harbinger of climate change, he set out to document the rapid shift and its ripple effects.
In biology, culling is the process of segregating organisms from a group according to desired or undesired characteristics. In animal breeding, it is the process of removing or segregating animals from a breeding stock based on specific trait. What does Culed mean? 2 :to reduce or control the...
This abundance of data challenges the memory limits of scientists’s workstations and requires imaging software that is optimized for handling such high-resolution, multi-channel, and time series imaging data. The new Xplore5D extension for Amira Software allows cell biologists...
What does the ecological environment mean? What are ecological principles? What is ecological awareness? What is abundance in ecology? What is deep ecology? What is ecological engineering? What is ecological degradation? What is environmental sustainability?Explore...
While this abundance of new techniques has generated global excitement within the field, a critical question emerges: will we witness an AlphaFold moment for functional protein engineering and design? In other words, will we solve the protein design problem — that is, the ability to create ...
What Does Density-Dependent Mean? Populations within ecosystems tend to be regulated by natural reasons that limit or control the growth of populations. Limiting factors are influences within an ecosystem that affect population growth. That is, there are factors within ecosystems that determine the ...
What is relative abundance in ecology? What is a dispersion in ecology? What is an agro-ecological zone? What does high water potential mean? What does habitat mean? What is meant by sustainable aquaculture? What are the 5 mass extinctions? What is cohesion in biology? What is fecundity in...
How does this work when, as we know from history, human progress is sometimes dependent on civil disobedience? The ethical questions are many, but we need ways of establishing them in popular discourse. It follows that an open debate is needed leading to public awareness. In our discussions,...
Malthus' severe theory on population growth was shaped by his status as an 18th-century Anglican cleric. He believed that poor people would work hard enough to produce an abundant food supply in favorable times. However, he thought that they would then abuse their newfound abundance, particularly...