124 results on '"Raven, John"'
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2. Front Cover Image
3. Do phytoplankton require oxygen to survive? A hypothesis and model synthesis from oxygen minimum zones
4. Avoiding and allowing apatite precipitation in oxygenic photolithotrophs
5. Environmental Variability and Its Control of Productivity
6. Evolution of Aquatic Photoautotrophs
7. Forensic carbon accounting: Assessing the role of seaweeds for carbon sequestration
8. Marine macroalgae are an overlooked sink of silicon in coastal systems
9. Cell size influences inorganic carbon acquisition in artificially selected phytoplankton
10. Algal Metabolism
11. The maximum growth rate hypothesis is correct for eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms, but not cyanobacteria
12. Cell size influences inorganic carbon acquisition in artificially selected phytoplankton
13. Origin of the roles of potassium in biology
14. Inorganic carbon concentrating mechanisms in free‐living and symbiotic dinoflagellates and chromerids
15. Will rising atmospheric CO2 concentration inhibit nitrate assimilation in shoots but enhance it in roots of C3 plants?
16. Chloride involvement in the synthesis, functioning and repair of the photosynthetic apparatus in vivo
17. Evolutionary temperature compensation of carbon fixation in marine phytoplankton
18. Iron in Diatoms
19. Sampling bias misrepresents the biogeographical significance of constitutive mixotrophs across global oceans
20. How long have photosynthetic organisms been aggregating soils?
21. A tale of two eras: Phytoplankton composition influenced by oceanic paleochemistry
22. Costs of acquiring phosphorus by vascular land plants: patterns and implications for plant coexistence
23. Biotic interactions as drivers of algal origin and evolution
24. Biotic interactions as drivers of algal origin and evolution
25. Intraspecific chemical communication in microalgae
26. The relative availability of inorganic carbon and inorganic nitrogen influences the response of the dinoflagellate Protoceratium reticulatum to elevated CO2
27. Terrestrial nitrogen cycling in Earth system models revisited
28. Energy cost and putative benefits of cellular mechanisms modulating buoyancy in aflagellate marine phytoplankton
29. Pluses and minuses of ammonium and nitrate uptake and assimilation by phytoplankton and implications for productivity and community composition, with emphasis on nitrogen-enriched conditions
30. Could land-based early photosynthesizing ecosystems have bioengineered the planet in mid-Palaeozoic times?
31. Gas Transfer Controls Carbon Limitation During Biomass Production by Marine Microalgae
32. Harry Smith, FRS: co‐founding editor and first Chief Editor of Plant, Cell & Environment
33. Growth rate hypothesis and efficiency of protein synthesis under different sulphate concentrations in two green algae
34. Compartmentation of defensive compound synthesis in a red alga
35. The future of the northeast Atlantic benthic flora in a high CO2world
36. Low levels of ribosomal RNA partly account for the very high photosynthetic phosphorus‐use efficiency of P roteaceae species
37. Growth rate affects the responses of the green algaTetraselmis suecicato external perturbations
38. Calcification and ocean acidification: new insights from the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi
39. R ubisco: still the most abundant protein of Earth?
40. Opportunities for improving phosphorus‐use efficiency in crop plants
41. Protein elemental sparing and codon usage bias are correlated among bacteria
42. Algal Metabolism
43. IMPACT OF TAXONOMY, GEOGRAPHY, AND DEPTH ON δ13C AND δ15N VARIATION IN A LARGE COLLECTION OF MACROALGAE1
44. Impact of irradiance on the C allocation in the coastal marine diatom Skeletonema marinoi Sarno and Zingone*
45. The cost of photoinhibition
46. IS THE GROWTH RATE HYPOTHESIS APPLICABLE TO MICROALGAE?1
47. TESTING THE EFFECTS OF OCEAN ACIDIFICATION ON ALGAL METABOLISM: CONSIDERATIONS FOR EXPERIMENTAL DESIGNS1
48. INORGANIC CARBON ACQUISITION BY CHRYSOPHYTES1
49. PRIMARY CARBON AND NITROGEN METABOLIC GENE EXPRESSION IN THE DIATOMTHALASSIOSIRA PSEUDONANA(BACILLARIOPHYCEAE): DIEL PERIODICITY AND EFFECTS OF INORGANIC CARBON AND NITROGEN1
50. Horsetails get the wind up
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