Search alternatives:
significant decrease » significant increase (Expand Search), significantly increased (Expand Search)
we decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search), mean decrease (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
significant decrease » significant increase (Expand Search), significantly increased (Expand Search)
we decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search), mean decrease (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
-
4361
Kinetics of coagulation parameters between the survivors and non-survivors during hospitalization.
Published 2025Subjects: -
4362
-
4363
Restricted cubic spline models depicting the relationship between APTT and mortality risk in SFTS.
Published 2025Subjects: -
4364
Growth and color data for all specimens and tank temperature and pH conditions.
Published 2024Subjects: -
4365
-
4366
Overall cardiovascular disease DALYs age-standardised rate over time 1990-2021 in Chile.
Published 2025Subjects: -
4367
-
4368
-
4369
-
4370
Subset of juvenile <i>M</i>. <i>arenaria</i> specimens at the end of the experiment.
Published 2024Subjects: -
4371
-
4372
-
4373
The coastline changes of the Aral Sea from 1960 to 2023. Land cover data are from LANDSAT 8 (
Published 2025Subjects: -
4374
Unraveling the Mechanism of 1‑Deoxynojirimycin (DNJ) Accumulation: The Role of SWEET3 in Mulberry Chloroplasts
Published 2025“…Transient overexpression or RNA interference of <i>SWEET3</i> in mulberry leaves significantly increased or decreased DNJ levels, respectively, while stable overexpression in hairy roots enhanced DNJ accumulation. …”
-
4375
Global Land Use Change Impacts on Soil Nitrogen Availability and Environmental Losses
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. …”
-
4376
-
4377
-
4378
-
4379
-
4380