释义 |
Definition of biogenic in English: biogenicadjective ˌbʌɪə(ʊ)ˈdʒɛnɪkˌbaɪoʊˈdʒɛnɪk Produced or brought about by living organisms. Example sentencesExamples - This is due to the special biogenic amine in chocolate, which can change internal secretions.
- If intrinsic changes in biogenic amine neurochemistry occur because of winning or losing experiences, these changes may be reflected in the types of chemicals released into the urine of dominant and subordinate crayfish.
- This topography is interpreted as formed by contour-parallel bottom currents, which caused erosion, transport and deposition of sediment drifts and ridges, and possibly also build-up of biogenic mounds.
- In 1988, William Chameides of the Georgia Institute of Technology used Atlanta as a case study to show that the impact of such biogenic emissions from trees on urban ozone levels could be significant.
- These observations strongly implicate the synthesis and regulation of biogenic amines in regulating mating behavior and causing variation in mating behavior within and between species.
- This would permit survival of an intermittent bottom-dwelling fauna whose activities would result in the mixing of the biogenic input to destroy any lamination.
- Carbon occurs in marine sediments as organic carbon linked with metabolic processes of plants and animals, and as carbon contained within biogenic and abiogenic carbonate minerals.
- Some other possible mechanisms could include increased dust deposition, volatile biogenic emissions, or tectonic activity.
- The European Space Agency will launch Mars Express in that year with a lander, Beagle - 2, with a scientific payload dedicated to detecting signs of biogenic activity on Mars.
- The monthly settling particulate samples provide a data set of seasonal and interannual export fluxes of organic carbon, biogenic opal, calcium carbonate, and lithogenic material.
- Some of our results suggest that the extractable agent in nest soil is organic, and possibly biogenic.
- ‘This demonstrates that looking for biogenic signatures alone will complicate the process of looking for life,’ he said.
- In terms of biomass, organic carbon fixation, space occupation, and biogenic habitat, kelps are the dominant reef-inhabiting organisms in cool seas, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.
- He expanded this idea to the propose the ‘deep, hot biosphere’ which both generates methane and adds biogenic signatures to inorganic petroleum, and that part, at least, is looking more correct every year.
- Pelagic biogenic sediments consist of the fine-grained skeletal debris of marine planktonic and benthonic organisms.
- The methods of distinguishing biogenic from nonbiogenic carbon developed by van Zuilen and Lepland have helped support this new evidence and it has now gained widespread acceptance, Arrhenius said.
- It serves as a timely reminder that simple molecules, such as biogenic amines and many others, were not ‘invented’ by animals, but that their origin dates back long before the diversification of plant and animal evolutionary lineages.
- Slow transmission can take many minutes and is enormously more complex, involving at least 100 different chemicals falling into four classes: biogenic amines, peptides, amino acids and nitric oxide.
- Snake venoms are a complex mixture of proteins, polypeptides, biogenic amines, and other components that may have neurotoxic, hemostatic, and/or hemorrhagic effects on prey.
- Given their consistent morphology, these structures are considered biogenic.
Definition of biogenic in US English: biogenicadjectiveˌbaɪoʊˈdʒɛnɪkˌbīōˈjenik attributive Produced or brought about by living organisms. Example sentencesExamples - This is due to the special biogenic amine in chocolate, which can change internal secretions.
- It serves as a timely reminder that simple molecules, such as biogenic amines and many others, were not ‘invented’ by animals, but that their origin dates back long before the diversification of plant and animal evolutionary lineages.
- Snake venoms are a complex mixture of proteins, polypeptides, biogenic amines, and other components that may have neurotoxic, hemostatic, and/or hemorrhagic effects on prey.
- This topography is interpreted as formed by contour-parallel bottom currents, which caused erosion, transport and deposition of sediment drifts and ridges, and possibly also build-up of biogenic mounds.
- Some other possible mechanisms could include increased dust deposition, volatile biogenic emissions, or tectonic activity.
- In terms of biomass, organic carbon fixation, space occupation, and biogenic habitat, kelps are the dominant reef-inhabiting organisms in cool seas, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.
- ‘This demonstrates that looking for biogenic signatures alone will complicate the process of looking for life,’ he said.
- In 1988, William Chameides of the Georgia Institute of Technology used Atlanta as a case study to show that the impact of such biogenic emissions from trees on urban ozone levels could be significant.
- The European Space Agency will launch Mars Express in that year with a lander, Beagle - 2, with a scientific payload dedicated to detecting signs of biogenic activity on Mars.
- The monthly settling particulate samples provide a data set of seasonal and interannual export fluxes of organic carbon, biogenic opal, calcium carbonate, and lithogenic material.
- These observations strongly implicate the synthesis and regulation of biogenic amines in regulating mating behavior and causing variation in mating behavior within and between species.
- If intrinsic changes in biogenic amine neurochemistry occur because of winning or losing experiences, these changes may be reflected in the types of chemicals released into the urine of dominant and subordinate crayfish.
- He expanded this idea to the propose the ‘deep, hot biosphere’ which both generates methane and adds biogenic signatures to inorganic petroleum, and that part, at least, is looking more correct every year.
- Slow transmission can take many minutes and is enormously more complex, involving at least 100 different chemicals falling into four classes: biogenic amines, peptides, amino acids and nitric oxide.
- Pelagic biogenic sediments consist of the fine-grained skeletal debris of marine planktonic and benthonic organisms.
- Some of our results suggest that the extractable agent in nest soil is organic, and possibly biogenic.
- Given their consistent morphology, these structures are considered biogenic.
- Carbon occurs in marine sediments as organic carbon linked with metabolic processes of plants and animals, and as carbon contained within biogenic and abiogenic carbonate minerals.
- The methods of distinguishing biogenic from nonbiogenic carbon developed by van Zuilen and Lepland have helped support this new evidence and it has now gained widespread acceptance, Arrhenius said.
- This would permit survival of an intermittent bottom-dwelling fauna whose activities would result in the mixing of the biogenic input to destroy any lamination.
|