Nghĩa của từ cryptogamic bằng Tiếng Việt

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Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "cryptogamic", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ cryptogamic, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ cryptogamic trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt

1. Both total Cryptogamic cover and the number of Cryptogamic

2. 1 synonym for Cryptogamic: cryptogamous

3. A Hand-book of Cryptogamic Botany

4. Phytosociology and Ecology of Cryptogamic Epiphytes

5. Cryptogamic crust reestablishment when domestic grazers are excluded

6. Cryptogamic meaning Of or pertaining to the cryptogams.

7. Definition of Cryptogamic in the Definitions.net dictionary

8. What does Cryptogamic mean? Information and translations of Cryptogamic in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

9. When frozen, the Cryptogamic crust uplifts and cracks

10. Such information combined with an understanding of the effects of grazing and soil chemistry on Cryptogamic crust development should permit managers to develop management practices that utilize Cryptogamic

11. Cryptogamic Herbaria The collections of non-vascular Cryptogamic plants (i.e., fungi and slime molds, lichens, algae and bryophytes) held by the Academy are among the oldest and historically richest in …

12. The effects of grazing on Cryptogamic crust development also was examined

13. Other somewhat confusing labels applied are Cryptogamic, microbiotic, cryptobiotic, and microphic crusts

14. Cryptogamic Botany Vol II Item Preview > remove-circle Share or Embed This Item

15. Vascular cryptogam definition is - a Cryptogamic plant (as a fern or moss) that has a vascular system.

16. Electrical conductivity, percentage silt, and soil phosphorus were found to be correlated with well-developed Cryptogamic crusts

17. Influence of Cryptogamic crusts on moisture relationships of soils in Navajo National Monument, Arizona Jack D

18. It goes by the name of cryptobiotic soil crust, also known as biological soil, Cryptogamic, or microbiotic soil crust

19. These communities, known as Cryptogamic covers, comprise variable proportions of cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, lichens and bryophytes, and are able to fix carbon dioxide …

20. Cryptogamic; cryptogamous Pertainym: cryptogam (formerly recognized taxonomic group including all flowerless and seedless plants that reproduce by means of spores: ferns, mosses, algae, fungi)

21. The more extensive and largely Cryptogamic vegetation on the central peak had a poor fauna probably composed mainly of micro-arthropods

22. William Gilson Farlow (1844-1919) was an eminent mycologist and phycologist and the first Professor of Cryptogamic Botany in North America

23. Cryptogamic crust is made up of mosses, lichens, algae, and bacteria which are important for building soil and promoting plant growth

24. Cryptogamic covers, which consist of some of the oldest life forms on our Planet, are also found on cliffs and in soils in dry regions

25. The cool and moist conditions of these Fokienia forests often promote lush growth of Cryptogamic epiphytes and an accumulation of organic litter on the forest floor.

26. Of flowering plants there are, as far as atpresent is known, 185 species, and 40 Cryptogamic species, makingtogether 225; of this number I was fortunate enough to bring home193

27. Biological soil crust, also called cryptobiotic soil crust, microbiotic soil crust, or Cryptogamic soil crust, thin layer of living material formed in the uppermost millimetres of soil where soil particles are aggregated by a community of highly specialized organisms.

28. Biological soil crust, also called Cryptobiotic soil crust, microbiotic soil crust, or cryptogamic soil crust, thin layer of living material formed in the uppermost millimetres of soil where soil particles are aggregated by a community of highly specialized organisms.

29. Cryptogamic ground covers (CGCs) are a type of biological soil crust comprising a complex association of early divergent organisms includ - ing non-vascular plants (bryophytes; liverworts, hornworts, mosses), fungi (free-living, saprotrophic and mycorrhizal), bacteria (free- living

30. Cryptogamic colonization increases ecosystem primary productivity initiating cascading processes that result in changes in soil texture (Linstädter and Baumann, 2013), increases in organic matter accumulation and redistribution via roots and microorganisms (Hook et al., 1991; Schlesinger et al., 1990), increases in fertility and potential soil

31. I may here mention, that on apart of the coast of Ascension, where there is a vast accumulationof shelly sand, an incrustation is deposited on the tidal rocks, bythe water of the sea, resembling, as represented in Plate 4,certain Cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often seen on damp walls.

32. Biological crusts (also known as Cryptogamic, microbiotic, crytobiotic and microphytic crusts) are microscopic non-vascular assemblages composed of blue-green algae, diatoms, golden brown algae, lichens, mosses and a few xerophytic (adapted for growth with a limited water supply) liverworts on more mesic (moderate amount of moisture) sites.

33. ‘The Cryptogamic organisms help to stabilize the soil, hold moisture, and provide protection for germination of the seeds of other plants.’ 1.1 Ecology (of a desert soil or surface crust) covered with or consisting of a fragile black layer of cyanobacteria, mosses, and lichens, which is often important in preventing erosion.

34. ‘The Cryptogamic organisms help to stabilize the soil, hold moisture, and provide protection for germination of the seeds of other plants.’ 2 Ecology (of a desert soil or surface crust) covered with or consisting of a fragile black layer of cyanobacteria, mosses, and lichens, which is often important in preventing erosion.

35. The personal herbarium and library of William Gilson Farlow (1844-1919), eminent mycologist and phycologist and first Professor of Cryptogamic Botany in North America, bequeathed to Harvard in 1919, form the nucleus of the Farlow Herbarium and Reference Library.Further bequests from Roland Thaxter (1858-1932), as well as specimens, manuscripts, correspondence, illustrations and field notes