Yet one
leading journal declined to publish the study, and when it finally did make it into print, many people criticized his approach as well as the results.
Not exact matches
A recent study,
led by Mark McNeill from AgResearch's Biosecurity and Biocontrol team at Lincoln, New Zealand, and published in the open access
journal NeoBiota, shows that biosecurity risks from soil organisms are to increase with
declining transport duration and increasing protection from environmental extremes.
One study, reported in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, has found that consuming milk after resistance exercise
leads to greater muscle hypertrophy, a greater increase in lean body mass, and a greater
decline in body fat than consumption of a soy beverage with macronutrient (proteins, carbohydrates, fats) ratios equal to that of the milk.
In fact, a study published in the prestigious Brain
Journal singled out astaxanthin's potential brain - health benefits and its ability to fight oxidative damage that can
lead to mental
decline.
As is typical with many new findings published in
leading scientific
journals, our work documenting global
declines in marine phytoplankton has been subjected to further scrutiny by the scientific community.
Offshore Wind
Journal The Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) says the steep
decline in the cost of offshore wind energy is attracting the attention of countries outside Europe, which
leads the way in its development.
Published in the
journal Geophysical Research Letters on Thursday, the study uses satellite observations to demonstrate that the
decline in atmospheric chlorine that resulted from the implementation of the Montreal Protocol, enacted in 1989, has
led to «about 20 percent less ozone depletion during the Antarctic winter than there was in 2005 — the first year that measurements of chlorine and ozone during the Antarctic winter were made by NASA's Aura satellite.»
In Texas, a recent study in the New England
Journal of Medicine showed that blocking patients from going to Planned Parenthood
led to a 35 %
decline in women on Medicaid using the most effective methods of birth control and a dramatic 27 % spike in births among women who had previously had access to injectable contraception through Medicaid.
In Texas, a recent study in the New England
Journal of Medicine shows that «defunding Planned» Parenthood
led to a 36 %
decline in women on Medicaid using the most effective methods of birth control and a dramatic 27 % spike in births among women who had previously had access to injectable contraception.