Sentences with phrase «such symbiosis»

Not only is this the first time that an art fair is being held in the design center, but the Pacific Design Center is owned by Charles S. Cohen, who had envisioned such symbiosis of art, design and architecture.
But this is just one example of such symbiosis.
The example of Ukraine has proved that in such a symbiosis it will be the semi-authoritarian elements that will prevail.
However circumspect his recommendations are, the possibility that such a symbiosis might go horribly wrong should inspire caution.

Not exact matches

When marriage is reduced to mere symbiosis of two persons essentially hidden from one another, peaceful though such life may sometimes be, it has completely missed its goal.
There was a time in American life, not so very long ago, when the only significant relation between religion and popular culture seemed to be the tedious symbiosis enjoyed by such envelope - pushing television producers as Steven Bochco and David E. Kelley and the conservative Christians who loved to....
The fungal symbiosis also makes the plants more tolerant to certain diseases and environmental factors such as drought.
ET: «What this data analysis pipeline, moreover, creates is motivation to look for similar forms of gene loss in other types of symbioses, such as that between humans and their gut microbiomes.
The discovery gives wider insights into future research on the mechanisms of symbiosis in other marine organisms such as giant tubeworms and giant clams.
The general mechanisms of symbiosis revealed in the study are of relevance to other symbiotic organisms such as deep - sea tubeworms and giant clams.»
«Such fungal symbioses assisted plants to make the transition to land.
This symbiosis allows plants, such as peas or clover, to grow on nitrogen - poor soils — and in agriculture it replaces artificial fertilisers.
Corals such as the one depicted below have a symbiosis with multiple single - celled organisms called zooxanthellae.
In the short term, corals with flexible symbioses may shuffle or switch zooxanthellae; and an increase in the abundance of thermally tolerant zooxanthellae strains (such as those of clade D) is expected with an increasing frequency of bleaching conditions.
The focus is on molecular microbiology and virology, and includes topics such as genomics, the gamut of plant and animal host - pathogen interactions, host immune responses, characterization and evolution of virulence determinants, cell cycle and differentiation, symbiosis in plant and animal associations, environmental microbiology, biodiversity and evolution, population dynamics, sex and mutagenesis, antibiotic resistance and production, drug and vaccine targets, as well as aspects of prion diseases and of fungal and protozoan biology.
In the traditional view of this symbiosis, the plants photosynthesize and provide carbon to the fungi in return for nutrients that the fungi take up from the soil (I say traditional because mycorrhizal fungi can also provide other benefits to their hosts such as helping them deal with summer water stress and protecting them from pathogens that attack their roots).
The author also describes how animals use senses as well as adaptations, such as camouflage and symbiosis, to catch prey and avoid predators.
Such an approach promises greater understanding and symbiosis within our family packs.
Culture, history, nature and folklore are in perfect symbiosis to offer an extraordinary journey to the roots of a rich, joyful and romantic country, such as Mexico.
Bleaching — the response to heat in which coral rejects the algae with which it normally lives in symbiosis — has always happened: research earlier this year suggests it could become five times more frequent, and reefs such as Australia's Great Barrier would have no time to recover.
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