Showing 1 - 20 results of 3,468 for search '(((( a ((large decrease) OR (large degree)) ) OR ( b largest decrease ))) OR ( c larger decrease ))', query time: 0.36s Refine Results
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    The introduction of mutualisms into assembled communities increases their connectance and complexity while decreasing their richness. by Gui Araujo (22170819)

    Published 2025
    “…When they stop being introduced in further assembly events (i.e. introduced species do not carry any mutualistic interactions), their proportion slowly decreases with successive invasions. (B) Even though higher proportions of mutualism promote higher richness, introducing this type of interaction into already assembled large communities promotes a sudden drop in richness, while stopping mutualism promotes a slight boost in richness increase. …”
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    Geographical distribution of large cities and small cities. by Saul Estrin (8629173)

    Published 2024
    “…The Figure reveals two patterns: 1) the maximum level of innovation is higher in large cities (2.53) than in small cities (2.02); 2) among large cities in <b>a</b>, innovation levels in general decrease with nightlight density. …”
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    Data from: Large subsurface carbon stocks in a long-term no-tillage site are vulnerable to potential mineralization by Qiuping Peng (20147290)

    Published 2024
    “…</p> <p>Results showed that SOC concentrations declined with depth, but the fraction that was mineralized in 350-day laboratory incubations increased with depth. We found 51% larger stocks of readily mineralized SOC stocks for the 30-153 cm depth (18.3 ± 4 Mg C ha<sup>-1</sup>) compared to 0-30 cm (12.1 ± 1.6 Mg C ha<sup>-1</sup>), when summing the kinetic pools that had transit times of up to 2 years. …”
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    MEDOC: A Fast, Scalable, and Mathematically Exact Algorithm for the Site-Specific Prediction of the Protonation Degree in Large Disordered Proteins by Martin J. Fossat (3714079)

    Published 2025
    “…To address this problem, we developed "multisite extent of deprotonation originating from context" (MEDOC) to determine the degree of protonation of a protein based on the local sequence context of each ionizable residue. …”
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