Showing 601 - 620 results of 107,493 for search '(( 5 ((ppm decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( a ((point decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ))', query time: 1.67s Refine Results
  1. 601
  2. 602
  3. 603
  4. 604
  5. 605

    The <i>P[syt<sup>P-L</sup>]</i> mutation decreases the Ca<sup>2+</sup> affinity of release and vesicular release probability, but the readily releasable pool is unchanged. by Mallory C. Shields (4474210)

    Published 2017
    “…Left, representative traces of responses stimulated with a 20 ms interpulse interval. Scale bar 5 mV, 40 ms. …”
  6. 606
  7. 607

    Data from Queiroz et al Ant diversity decreases during the dry season: a meta-analysis of the effects of seasonality on ant richness and abundance.xlsx by Antonio Queiroz (12529531)

    Published 2022
    “…<p>Data from Queiroz et al 2022 Biotropica</p> <p><strong>Ant diversity decreases during the dry season: a meta-analysis of the effects of seasonality on ant richness and abundance</strong></p> <p>Abstract</p> <p>Tropical studies traditionally describe insect diversity variation throughout the year. …”
  8. 608
  9. 609
  10. 610
  11. 611
  12. 612
  13. 613
  14. 614
  15. 615

    Prb1 overexpression decreased APCs in ESCRT-mutant cells after nitrogen starvation. by Zulin Wu (4451572)

    Published 2022
    “…<p><b>A.</b> The accumulation of GFP-Atg8-labeled APCs in ESCRT- mutant (<i>snf7Δ</i>, <i>vps4Δ</i>) cells decreased with Prb1 overexpression. …”
  16. 616
  17. 617
  18. 618

    Global Land Use Change Impacts on Soil Nitrogen Availability and Environmental Losses by Jing Wang (6206297)

    Published 2025
    “…However, how global land use changes impact soil N supply and potential N loss remains elusive. By compiling a global data set of 1,782 paired observations from 185 publications, we show that land use conversion from natural to managed ecosystems significantly reduced NNM by 7.5% (−11.5, −2.8%) and increased NN by 150% (86, 194%), indicating decreasing N availability while increasing potential N loss through denitrification and nitrate leaching. …”
  19. 619
  20. 620