Search

Your search keyword '"Lepidium sativum drug effects"' showing total 137 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "Lepidium sativum drug effects" Remove constraint Descriptor: "Lepidium sativum drug effects"
137 results on '"Lepidium sativum drug effects"'

Search Results

1. Ecotoxicological assessment of biomass-derived furan platform chemicals using aquatic and terrestrial bioassays.

2. Physicochemical and ecotoxicological approaches for Moknine Continental Sebkha in Tunisia.

3. Three Active Phytotoxic Compounds from the Leaves of Albizia richardiana (Voigt.) King and Prain for the Development of Bioherbicides to Control Weeds.

4. Biochemical Characterization, Phytotoxic Effect and Antimicrobial Activity against Some Phytopathogens of New Gemifloxacin Schiff Base Metal Complexes.

5. Ecotoxicity profile of heavily contaminated surface water of two rivers in Tunisia.

6. Short-term physiological and biometrical responses of Lepidium sativum seedlings exposed to PET-made microplastics and acid rain.

7. An Oxygen Delivery Polymer Enhances Seed Germination in a Martian-like Environment.

8. Characterization of heavy metal toxicity in some plants and microorganisms-A preliminary approach for environmental bioremediation.

9. Assessment of phytotoxicity of leachates from landfilled waste and dust from foundry.

10. Decomposition and organic amendments chemistry explain contrasting effects on plant growth promotion and suppression of Rhizoctonia solani damping off.

11. Biotransformation and toxicity effect of monoanthraquinone dyes during Bjerkandera adusta CCBAS 930 cultures.

12. Thymol Chemotype Origanum vulgare L. Essential Oil as a Potential Selective Bio-Based Herbicide on Monocot Plant Species.

13. Potential use of Schumannianthus dichotomus waste: the phytotoxic activity of the waste and its identified compounds.

14. Impact of ZnO and ZnS nanoparticles in sewage sludge-amended soil on bacteria, plant and invertebrates.

15. Physicochemical and toxicological characterization of hazardous wastes from an old glasswork dump at southeastern part of Sweden.

16. Effect of inoculated azotobacteria and Phanerochaete chrysosporium on the composting of olive pomace: Microbial community dynamics and phenols evolution.

17. Microplastics accumulate on pores in seed capsule and delay germination and root growth of the terrestrial vascular plant Lepidium sativum.

18. Glucopyranosylidene-spiro-benzo[ b][1,4]oxazinones and -benzo[ b][1,4]thiazinones: Synthesis and Investigation of Their Effects on Glycogen Phosphorylase and Plant Growth Inhibition.

19. Ecotoxicological effects of traffic-related pollutants in roadside soils of Moscow.

20. Biological Investigations and Spectroscopic Studies of New Moxifloxacin/Glycine-Metal Complexes.

21. Phytotoxicity of wear debris from traditional and innovative brake pads.

22. Phytotoxic Effect of Invasive Heracleum mantegazzianum Essential Oil on Dicot and Monocot Species.

23. Anaesthetics stop diverse plant organ movements, affect endocytic vesicle recycling and ROS homeostasis, and block action potentials in Venus flytraps.

24. Changes of total and freely dissolved polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and toxicity of biochars treated with various aging processes.

25. Changes in Phenolic Compounds and Phytotoxicity of the Spanish-Style Green Olive Processing Wastewaters by Aspergillus niger B60.

26. Use of Chemical Indicators and Bioassays in Bottom Sediment Ecological Risk Assessment.

27. Assessing toxicity of metal contaminated soil from glassworks sites with a battery of biotests.

28. Comparative study of eco- and cytotoxicity during biotransformation of anthraquinone dye Alizarin Blue Black B in optimized cultures of microscopic fungi.

29. Phytotoxicity assessment of olive mill solid wastes and the influence of phenolic compounds.

30. Effect of addition of sewage sludge and coal sludge on bioavailability of selected metals in the waste from the zinc and lead industry.

31. Asparagus decline: Autotoxicity and autotoxic compounds in asparagus rhizomes.

32. The influence of the Cucurbitaceae on mitigating the phytotoxicity and PCDD/PCDF content of soil amended with sewage sludge.

33. Effect of biochar activation by different methods on toxicity of soil contaminated by industrial activity.

34. The Influence of pH of Extracting Water on the Composition of Seaweed Extracts and Their Beneficial Properties on Lepidium sativum .

35. Phytotoxic and Antibacterial Activity of Essential Oil of New Peppermint Cultivar.

36. Emerging Concern from Short-Term Textile Leaching: A Preliminary Ecotoxicological Survey.

37. Addition of biochar to sewage sludge decreases freely dissolved PAHs content and toxicity of sewage sludge-amended soil.

38. Risks and benefits of marginal biomass-derived biochars for plant growth.

39. Effect of Medicago sativa L. and compost on organic and inorganic pollutant removal from a mixed contaminated soil and risk assessment using ecotoxicological tests.

40. Effect of steam activated biochar application to industrially contaminated soils on bioavailability of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and ecotoxicity of soils.

41. Potential for Phytoremediation of PCDD/PCDF-Contaminated Sludge and Sediments Using Cucurbitaceae Plants: A Pilot Study.

42. A Potent Phytotoxic Substance in Aglaia odorata Lour.

43. Assessment of phenolic herbicide toxicity and mode of action by different assays.

44. Use of digestate from a decentralized on-farm biogas plant as fertilizer in soils: An ecotoxicological study for future indicators in risk and life cycle assessment.

45. Application of liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization ion trap tandem mass spectrometry for the evaluation of global nucleic acids: methylation in garden cress under exposure to CuO nanoparticles.

46. Phytotoxicity of ionic, micro- and nano-sized iron in three plant species.

47. Photocatalytic degradation of the antibiotic chloramphenicol and effluent toxicity effects.

48. Plant Growth Biostimulants Based on Different Methods of Seaweed Extraction with Water.

49. Diversity of organotrophic bacteria, activity of dehydrogenases and urease as well as seed germination and root growth Lepidium sativum, Sorghum saccharatum and Sinapis alba under the influence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

50. Erythromycin oxidation and ERY-resistant Escherichia coli inactivation in urban wastewater by sulfate radical-based oxidation process under UV-C irradiation.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources