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1996 74 295 303 Hansen, P. (2004) Physiological and cellular adaptations of zebu cattle to thermal stress. Animal
Gonchar, O. (2005) Muscle fiber specific antioxidative system adaptation to swim training in rats: influence of intermittent hypoxia. J. Sport Sci. Med. 4 , 160–169. Gonchar O
Blum, A. 2006. Drought adaptation in cereal crops: Aprologue. In: Ribaut, J.M. (ed.), Drought Adaptation in Cereals. Food Products Press, New York, USA, pp. 3–15. Blum A
RCBS appropriate in measuring the CB in both developing and developed countries and hence facilitate the cross-cultural adaptation. Six items (from an initial pool of 21 potential items that were constructed based on a review of over 300 research
Xeromorphism and halomorphism were investigated in five species of Chenopodiaceae grown under natural growth conditions in the saline soil in Mirzachul (Uzbekistan, Province Sirdarya) and Kyzylkum (Uzbekistan, Province Buhora, Navoiy, Karakalpakstan, Province Miskin). The structure of leaf epidermis and mesophyll was analysed. The adaptation mechanism of succulent species with Kranz anatomy to xero- and halofactors was identified. In leaves two types of mesophyll cells were found: on the basis there is a Kranzventro- dorsal structure. In the middle part and the tip, however, the structure is close to Kranz-centric (Salsoloid type), but differs from species of the genus Salsola by not having dense chlorenchyma at the adaxial side and between peripheral conductive bundles and a Kranz-facing it is located 1–3 numbers small water-bearing cells. At species of genus Salsola conductive bundles adjoin to Kranz-facing cells. We consider this structure as specific of Climacoptera and term it, therefore, Climacoptera type. High analogy coefficients of the same section species under different growing conditions were found using cluster analysis.
This article discusses how the simplification of adaptation can actually empower a translation with a historically and culturally significant function. The study analyses and discusses the fairly unknown first Danish translation of Herman Melville’s classic novel Moby Dick made in 1942. The translation was made by the internationally famous Arctic explorer and writer Peter Freuchen, and his version of the novel has been so drastically cut down to the bare skeleton of the plot that we may speak of amputation rather than adaptation. The result is a so-called real “man’s book”, as is pronounced on the back cover of the book, but what is a man’s book? The aim of this study is to draw attention to an interesting story of translation strategies for a male readership as well as to provide new insight into verbal adaptations classified as interlingual translation.
References N. D. Anderson H. R. Wilson 2005 The nature of synthetic face adaptation
The competitive and adaptive capacity of Cochliobolus sativus were determined using the two major pathotypes in populations on barley in Syria Pt1 and Pt4, which differed widely in their virulence. Following greenhouse co-inoculation with the two pathotypes, Pt4 frequency average increased from the first to the last of four infection cycles, but decreased for Pt1. The number of lesions caused by Pt4 was individually higher than their mixture on both barley cultivars, Bowman and WI 2291. Moreover, the number of lesions was increased over the four cycles on both cultivars. The results suggest that isolates of different pathotypes would adapt at different rates in a mixed environment due to competitive advantage imposed by their virulence properties.
. 1998 38 152 157 Finlay, K.W., Wilkinson, G.N. 1963. The analysis of adaptation in a plant breeding programme. Aust. J
-elméletek 2003 Beaton, D. E., Bombardier, C., Guillemin, F., Ferraz, M. B. (2000): Guidelines for the process of cross-cultural adaptation of self