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Weed Control Row cultivation can give relatively easy weed control if long rows are used at a spacing which enables use of various size cultivators as the planting grows.
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
neutral
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Weeds Any plant can be considered a weed when it is growing where it is not wanted.
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
entails
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them, such as gardens and lawns.
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
entails
|
Weeds are simply those plants that grow where they are not wanted.
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
entails
|
Weeds, for purposes of our discussion, can be simply defined as plants growing where they are not desired.
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
entails
|
weed and plant growth control;
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
neutral
|
weeds and plant growth control;
|
Weeds are plants that grow where people don't want them to and can take up space and use resources which hinders growth of more desirable plants.
|
neutral
|
It is composed of an O -polysaccharide chain, a core sugar, and a lipophilic fatty acid.
|
Polysaccharides are polymers composed of many sugar building blocks called.
|
neutral
|
Polysaccharides are polymers of many sugar units and are hydrolyzable into their component monesaccharides.
|
Polysaccharides are polymers composed of many sugar building blocks called.
|
entails
|
The acid polysaccharides were composed of 27% of reducing sugar, 42% of neutral sugars and 21% of uronic acid.
|
Polysaccharides are polymers composed of many sugar building blocks called.
|
neutral
|
These are polymers, called polysaccharides, which are made up of chains of simple sugars connected via glycosidic bonds.
|
Polysaccharides are polymers composed of many sugar building blocks called.
|
entails
|
All animals, including humans, have evolved circadian rhythms, which respond to the earth's 24-hour cycle.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Back to Top Circadian Rhythms Circadian rhythms pertain to changes in body function that occur throughout a 24-hour period.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Both schedules induced a lack of synchrony between the subjects' sleep-wake cycle and their circadian rhythm (a biological pattern based on a cycle of approximately 24 hours).
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Circadian Rhythm The cyclical changes in physiological processes and functions that are related to the 24-hour diurnal cycle.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Circadian rhythms are biological rhythms with an intrinsic period of approximately 24 hours that are driven by an endogenous pacemaker in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus;
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Circadian rhythms are tied to the 24-hour cycle of the earth's rotation and are possibly a result of changing amounts of light and darkness as the day progresses.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Circadian rhythms are, in part, tied to the 24-hour cycle of the Earth's rotation and the amount of daylight to which you're exposed.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Circadian rhythms, the patterns of activity that occur on a 24-hour cycle, are important biological regulators in virtually every living creature.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Infradian rhythm A biological rhythm with a cycle of more than 24 hours;
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
neutral
|
The most important rhythm in chronobiology is the circadian rhythm, a roughly 24-hour cycle shown by physiological processes in all these organisms.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
Therefore, circadian rhythms in nature are related to the day-night cycle which occurs every 24 hours.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
When a human's circadian clock is working correctly, the normal rhythms adhere to a 24-hour cycle.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
circadian rhythm A regular change in physiological function occurring in approximately 24-hour cycles.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
circadian rhythms the regular recurrence, in cycles of about 24 hours, of biological processes or activities especially known in sleep.
|
Regular changes in biology or behavior that occur in a 24 hour cycle are part of the circadian rhythm.
|
entails
|
A mechanism is proposed for the regulation of dynein binding to organelles through the changes in the content of the IC isoform pool (Nurminsky, 1998).
|
Dyneins are responsible for the bending movements of the organelle.
|
neutral
|
Cytoplasmic Dynein-Mediated Organelle Transport.
|
Dyneins are responsible for the bending movements of the organelle.
|
neutral
|
Dynein comprises a family of microtubule associated ATPases responsible for diverse and vital cell functions including ciliary and flagellar motility, directed transport of cellular organelles, assembly and function of the Golgi, and assembly and function of the mitotic spindle.
|
Dyneins are responsible for the bending movements of the organelle.
|
entails
|
Together, these proteins regulate the function of motor-molecules called dyneins that transport cellular cargo such as organelles within the cell.
|
Dyneins are responsible for the bending movements of the organelle.
|
entails
|
A powerful volcanic uplifting caused Paoha Island's white, chalky surface to rise above the water.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Atolls are also created when water levels rise to cover an island and the surrounding reef grows to keep up with the surface of the water.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Examples are the 2000 km long chain of the Foundation Seamounts located southwest of Easter Island, or the East Pacific Rise Seamount field.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
First, the rising sun heats the island surface of sand or rock much quicker than it can heat the surrounding waters.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Green jack are also known to consume zooplankton, especially in deeper waters around islands and seamounts where the plankton is aggregated.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
However, many of the ocean's volcanic islands and seamounts are found in what are called island arcs, bending chains of islands rising from the sea floor, usually paralleling the concave edges of an oceanic trench.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
It is found in warm waters on the continental shelf, around islands and in the vicinity of seamounts.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
It is responsible for creating the Pitcairn Islands and two large seamounts called Adams and Bounty.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Occasionally a seamount, fed by an extraordinary volume of magma, becomes massive and rises above sea level to become an island such as Iceland, the Azores, or the Galapagos Archipelago.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
entails
|
Peirce Seamount, also called Pierce Seamount, is a seamount located in the Pacific Ocean west of the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Submarine eruptions may produce seamounts which may break the surface to form volcanic islands and island chains.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
entails
|
The Bowie Seamount located 180 mi west of the Queen Charlotte Islands, is perhaps the shallowest seamount in Canada's Pacific waters.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The Bowie Seamount, located 180 kilometre offshore west of the Queen Charlotte Islands, represents a relatively uncommon, shallow-water habitat in offshore waters.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The Dellwood Seamounts, also called the Dellwood Seamount Range or the Dellwood Seamount Chain, is a range of seamounts located in the Pacific Ocean northwest of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The Detroit Seamount is as big as the island of Hawaii.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The Island's shoreline is a sheer cliff rising 100 above the ocean and 30 below the water's surface to the ocean floor.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The black cardinal fish is a deepwater bentho-pelagic fish that is found on continental slopes, undersea ridges and seamounts in the northern Atlantic, ranging from Iceland to the Canary Islands and the Corner Rise Seamounts.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The destination this time is the Kodiak Seamount, a volcano that lies 7,500 feet beneath the surface of the Gulf of Alaska, approximately 120 miles southeast of Kodiak Island, Alaska.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The highest ones rise above the surface of the water as islands, which in many cases linear groups such as the Hawaiian Islands.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The individuals in the NOAA image are adults of 2 cm (0.75 in) living on rock surfaces at a hydrothermal vent at the East Diamante seamount, which is westsouthwest of the small island of Farallon de Medinilla in the Southern Seamount Province of the Mariana Islands.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The island is granite rock that rises nearly perpendicularly to 60 m above the surface of Lake Superior, surrounded by deep water.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The lake's salty waters a welcoming cool embrace, you float at eye level to the surface, looking to the islands, imagining the lake rising.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The seamount lies at the southern end of a long underwater volcanic mountain range called the Pratt-Welker or Kodiak-Bowie Seamount chain, stretching from the Aleutian Trench in the north almost to the Queen Charlotte Islands in the south.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The summit of Loihi seamount is more than 3,200 feet below the surface of the ocean and some 20 miles southeast of the big island of Hawaii.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
The surface of the Island is mostly water if it can be called water.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
Usually it is located in places close to the coast of shallow water, around groups of islands, reefs, atolls and even bays and seamounts.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
archipelagic apron A gentle slope with a generally smooth surface on the sea floor, particularly found around groups of islands or seamounts.
|
Seamounts that rise above the water surface are called islands.
|
neutral
|
A prokaryote is a single-celled organism that lacks a membrane-bound nucleus (karyon), mitochondria, or any other membrane-bound organelles.
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled or colonial organisms that do not have membranebound nuclei.
|
entails
|
Prokaryote An organism or cell that lacks a membrane-bounded nucleus.
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled or colonial organisms that do not have membranebound nuclei.
|
entails
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that lack a membrane-bound nucleus and usually lack membrane-bound organelles (mitochondria, chloroplasts).
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled or colonial organisms that do not have membranebound nuclei.
|
entails
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that lack a membrane-bound nucleus and usually lack membrane-bound organelles (mitochondria, chloroplasts; see cell, in biology).
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled or colonial organisms that do not have membranebound nuclei.
|
entails
|
prokaryote A cell or organism lacking a unit membrane-bound (true) nucleus and other organelles , usually having its DNA in a single circular molecule.
|
Prokaryotes are single-celled or colonial organisms that do not have membranebound nuclei.
|
entails
|
A single giant puffball can harbor millions of basidiospores, and the mucelium can produce several each year for the life of the mycelium (For the sake of argument, say 10 years).
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
At some point the fungi produce a reproductive structure, mushrooms for example, which produces thousands of tiny spores, these are then dispersed to other areas and grow into a new mycelium.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
During wet weather, a dense white mycelium and some sclerotia often will be produced both inside and outside the stalk.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
In addition to this, some species also produce distinctly different conidia in the aerial mycelium (often referred to as microconidia).
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
Often a dense white mycelium and some sclerotia will be produced both inside and outside the stalk, especially during wet weather.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
One case of superficial fairy ring, where the white mat of mycelium forms a hydrophobic layer on the soil surface, has been submitted to the diagnostic lab.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
entails
|
Pascoe (1990) introduced the concept of mesoconidia to describe fusiform, septate conidia that are produced in the aerial mycelium of some species.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
The dense, white mycelium of the fairy ring fungus moves outward through the soil from this spot and follows the enlarging dark green ring of grass.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
entails
|
The mycelium is superficial on host tissue in most genera, but in some such as Oidiopsis , the mycelium is internal.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
They germinate and start to produce mycelium in the soil.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
This causes the fungus to grow fruiting bodies only on the outer rim of the mycelium, producing a ring.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
This penetrates the mycelium matt on top of the Fairy Ring habitat(s) and allows the BioVam Mycorrhiza and organic fertilizer to enter the soil and have better contact with live grass roots.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
When A97- 17 has produced some mycelium, it leaches out sufficient growth factor and some carbon compounds that allow growth of RM146-9.
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
and produce mycelium and more
|
Some of the giant fairy rings are produced by mycelia.
|
neutral
|
A comparison of the straight breakwater extension concept versus the angled breakwater extension concept revealed that the angled structure provided similar wave protection in the mooring areas with less breakwater length.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
Better criteria would take into account the elevations of roads-- and other lifelines -- as well as the elevations of protective barriers such as breakwaters and spits of land.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
Breakwater A structure protecting a shore area, harbor, anchorage, or basin from waves.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
entails
|
Breakwaters are structures that protect the coast like barrier islands.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
entails
|
Breakwaters are wave energy barriers designed to protect the land or nearshore area behind them from the direct assault of waves.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
entails
|
Build" a breakwater to protect the coast.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
Coastlines, Structures and Breakwaters '98.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
No protection of Breakwater Island because military security purposes no longer exist.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
Originally, the island was a breakwater for the Oostelijke Handelskade, just like the adjacent Java Island.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
They have been studying reflections at two engineering structures, rock islands protecting a beach and residential community at Elmer, West Sussex, and a berm breakwater at Plymouth Harbor.
|
Structures that protect the coast like barrier islands are called breakwaters.
|
neutral
|
All matter is made up of substances called elements, which have specific chemical and physical properties and cannot be broken down into other substances through ordinary chemical reactions.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
An element cannot be broken down into simpler substances, but the unknown substance breaks down into a solid and a gas.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
An element is defined as a substance that cannot be broken down into any other substance.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Classify substances such as elements, compounds and mixtures based on their properties.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
Coach for manipulating thermochemical properties of elements, substances and reactions;
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
Element An element is a substance that cannot be split chemically into simpler substances.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Elements are pure substances that are made up of a single kind of atom (atoms with the same number of protons) and cannot be separated into different substances by ordinary chemical methods.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Elements are pure substances that have a set of unique properties and cannot be further broken down or decomposed into other elements by chemical methods.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Elements are substances that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical means.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Elements cannot be broken down into any other substance.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Individual substances are called elements , substance which cannot be broken down or subdivided by ordinary chemical means.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
entails
|
Many commercial products, such as drugs, plastics, and elastomers (elastic substances similar to rubber), have been developed by organic chemists who synthesize elements or simple compounds to create new compounds or substances that have different properties and applications.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
Organic chemists who synthesize elements or simple compounds to create new compounds or substances that have different properties and applications have developed many commercial products, such as drugs, plastics, and elastomers (elastic substances similar to rubber).
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
Recall that matter is composed of different substances that are called elements .
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
Substances or elements have physical properties.
|
Substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances with different properties are called elements.
|
neutral
|
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