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1. Environmental and Health Impacts of Graphene and Other Two-Dimensional Materials: A Graphene Flagship Perspective

2. Applicability of OECD TG 201, 202, 203 for the aquatic toxicity testing and assessment of 2D Graphene material nanoforms to meet regulatory needs

3. Applicability of OECD test guideline 201 to graphene-related materials (GRMs): new insights into GRMs dispersions stability and possible modifications of the standard protocol

4. Contenuto elementare nei talli del lichene epifita Pseudevernia furfuracea (L.) Zopf. raccolti in aree remote d’Italia

9. Background element content in the lichen Pseudevernia furfuracea: a comparative analysis of digestion methods

10. Applicability of OECD TG 201, 202, 203 for the aquatic toxicity testing and assessment of 2D Graphene material nanoforms to meet regulatory needs

11. Is the South-Mediterranean Canopy-Forming Ericaria giacconei (= Cystoseira hyblaea) a Loser From Ocean Warming?

12. Beyond graphene oxide acidity: Novel insights into graphene related materials effects on the sexual reproduction of seed plants

13. Effects of Few-Layer Graphene on the Sexual Reproduction of Seed Plants: An In Vivo Study with Cucurbita pepo L

14. Background element content of the lichen Pseudevernia furfuracea: A supra-national state of art implemented by novel field data from Italy

15. Congruence Evaluation of Mercury Pollution Patterns Around a Waste Incinerator over a 16-Year-Long Period Using Different Biomonitors

16. The Interaction of Graphene Oxide with the Pollen−Stigma System: In Vivo Effects on the Sexual Reproduction of Cucurbita pepo L

17. The sound of lichens: ultrasonic acoustic emissions during desiccation question cavitation events in the hyphae.

18. Interactions of airborne graphene oxides with the sexual reproduction of a model plant: When production impurities matter.

19. Is airborne graphene oxide a possible hazard for the sexual reproduction of wind-pollinated plants?

20. Graphene environmental biodegradation: Wood degrading and saprotrophic fungi oxidize few-layer graphene.

21. How dry is dry? Molecular mobility in relation to thallus water content in a lichen.

22. Enhanced culturing techniques for the mycobiont isolated from the lichen Xanthoria parietina .

23. Abundance and Extracellular Release of Phytohormones in Aero-terrestrial Microalgae (Trebouxiophyceae, Chlorophyta) As a Potential Chemical Signaling Source 1 .

24. Effects of Few-Layer Graphene on the Sexual Reproduction of Seed Plants: An In Vivo Study with Cucurbita pepo L.

25. Beyond graphene oxide acidity: Novel insights into graphene related materials effects on the sexual reproduction of seed plants.

26. Phytohormone release by three isolated lichen mycobionts and the effects of indole-3-acetic acid on their compatible photobionts.

27. Graphene-based materials do not impair physiology, gene expression and growth dynamics of the aeroterrestrial microalga Trebouxia gelatinosa .

28. Background element content in the lichen Pseudevernia furfuracea: a comparative analysis of digestion methods.

29. Safety Assessment of Graphene-Based Materials: Focus on Human Health and the Environment.

30. Relation between water status and desiccation-affected genes in the lichen photobiont Trebouxia gelatinosa.

31. Background element content of the lichen Pseudevernia furfuracea: A supra-national state of art implemented by novel field data from Italy.

32. Ozone and desiccation tolerance in chlorolichens are intimately connected: a case study based on two species with different ecology.

33. Biomagnetic monitoring and element content of lichen transplants in a mixed land use area of NE Italy.

34. Desiccation tolerance and lichenization: a case study with the aeroterrestrial microalga Trebouxia sp. (Chlorophyta).

35. Ozone tolerance in lichens: a possible explanation from biochemical to physiological level using Flavoparmelia caperata as test organism.

36. Seasonal acclimation in the epiphytic lichen Parmelia sulcata is influenced by change in photobiont population density.

37. Heat shock treatments: a new safe approach against lichen growth on outdoor stone surfaces.

38. Lichen transplants as a suitable tool to identify mercury pollution from waste incinerators: a case study from NE Italy.

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