Pages that link to "Q23905955"
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The following pages link to Are Organisms Adapting to Ionizing Radiation at Chernobyl? (Q23905955):
Displaying 14 items.
- Addressing ecological effects of radiation on populations and ecosystems to improve protection of the environment against radiation: Agreed statements from a Consensus Symposium (Q26750658) (← links)
- Capacity of blood plasma is higher in birds breeding in radioactively contaminated areas (Q33852900) (← links)
- Quantitative modeling of responses to chronic ionizing radiation exposure using targeted and non-targeted effects (Q38820720) (← links)
- PERM Hypothesis: The Fundamental Machinery Able to Elucidate the Role of Xenobiotics and Hormesis in Cell Survival and Homeostasis (Q39093579) (← links)
- Lower prevalence but similar fitness in a parasitic fungus at higher radiation levels near Chernobyl (Q41946390) (← links)
- Defenses against keratinolytic bacteria in birds living in radioactively contaminated areas (Q50911146) (← links)
- Understanding Forest Health with Remote Sensing -Part I—A Review of Spectral Traits, Processes and Remote-Sensing Characteristics (Q56705575) (← links)
- Microsatellite polymorphism of Trifolium pratense population at the conditions of radioactive and chemical contamination of soil (Komi republic, Russia) (Q57462353) (← links)
- Fibroblasts from bank voles inhabiting Chernobyl have increased resistance against oxidative and DNA stresses (Q58696559) (← links)
- Skin and gut microbiomes of a wild mammal respond to different environmental cues (Q59326871) (← links)
- Environmental radiation alters the gut microbiome of the bank vole Myodes glareolus (Q89485904) (← links)
- Ionizing Radiation, Higher Plants, and Radioprotection: From Acute High Doses to Chronic Low Doses (Q89576561) (← links)
- Plants in the Light of Ionizing Radiation: What Have We Learned From Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Other "Hot" Places? (Q95841069) (← links)
- Anther-smut fungi from more contaminated sites in Chernobyl show lower infection ability and lower viability following experimental irradiation (Q98159220) (← links)