Related Concept Videos
Migration
9.0K
Migration is long-range, seasonal movement from one region or habitat to another. This common strategy, carried out by many different organisms around the world, is an adaptive response that typically corresponds to changes in an organism’s environment, like resource availability or climate. Migrations can involve huge groups of thousands of animals as well as single individuals traveling alone and can range from thousands of kilometers to just a few hundred meters.
9.0K
Rab Cascades
3.7K
Rab GTPases act in a regulated cascade during membrane fusion, helping the lipid bilayers mix. The Rab family of proteins are active when bound to GTP, and inactive when bound to GDP. Hence, they act as guanine nucleotide-dependent molecular switches. Rab-GTP recognizes and binds to long or short-range tethering proteins to capture the target vesicle. These tethers coordinate with SNAREs on the vesicle and the target membrane to assemble the trans SNARE complex that locks the mixing bilayers.
3.7K
Frequency of Spring-Mass System
8.0K
One interesting characteristic of the simple harmonic motion (SHM) of an object attached to a spring is that the angular frequency, and the period and frequency of the motion, depend only on the mass and the force constant of the spring, and not on other factors such as the amplitude of the motion or initial conditions. We can use the equations of motion and Newton's second law to find the angular frequency, frequency, and period.
Consider a block on a spring on a frictionless surface. There...
Consider a block on a spring on a frictionless surface. There...
8.0K
Responses to Salt Stress
14.8K
Salt stress—which can be triggered by high salt concentrations in a plant’s environment—can significantly affect plant growth and crop production by influencing photosynthesis and the absorption of water and nutrients.
14.8K
Osmoregulation in Insects
17.8K
Malpighian tubules are specialized structures found in the digestive systems of many arthropods, including most insects, that handle excretion and osmoregulation. The tubules are typically arranged in pairs and have a convoluted structure that increases their surface area.
17.8K
Water and Mineral Acquisition
36.0K
Specialized tissues in plant roots have evolved to capture water, minerals, and some ions from the soil. Roots exhibit a variety of branching patterns that facilitate this process. The outermost root cells have specialized structures called root hairs that increase the root surface, thus increasing soil contact. Water can passively cross into roots, as the concentration of water in the soil is higher than that of the root tissue. Minerals, in contrast, are actively transported into root cells.
36.0K
You might also read
Related Articles
Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.
Sort by
Same author
The oasis effect: response of birds to exurban development in a southwestern savanna.
Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America·2008
Same author
Relationships between species richness, evenness, and abundance in a southwestern savanna.
Ecology·2007
Same author
Pleistocene rewilding: an optimistic agenda for twenty-first century conservation.
The American naturalist·2006
Same author
Rodent communities in an exurbanizing southwestern landscape (U.S.A.).
Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology·2006
Same journal
Superorganismal Anisogamy: A Comparative Test of an Extended Theory.
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Same journal
The role of microbial resource mutualists in plant adaptation to abiotic environments.
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Same journal
Museum genomics links MC1R alleles to adaptive winter coat color polymorphism in the long-tailed weasel.
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Same journal
Repeated evolution of iridescence and hindwing tails is associated with morphometric flight proxies in skipper butterflies.
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Same journal
Temperature-dependent competition predicts contrasting outcomes of adjacent secondary contact zones in darters (Percidae:Etheostoma).
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Same journal
Sex allocation of hermaphrodites in metapopulations with frequent population extinction and recolonization.
Evolution; international journal of organic evolution·2026
Related Experiment Video
Updated: Mar 1, 2026

10:30
Soil Lysimeter Excavation for Coupled Hydrological, Geochemical, and Microbiological Investigations
Published on: September 11, 2016
11.4K
SONORAN DESERT SPRING
1Department of Environmental, Population, and Organismic Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, 80309.
Summary
No abstract available in PubMed .

