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Steven D. Siciliano

Researcher at University of Saskatchewan

Publications -  232
Citations -  13569

Steven D. Siciliano is an academic researcher from University of Saskatchewan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 217 publications receiving 11978 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven D. Siciliano include Geological Survey of Canada & National Research Council.

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Protecting vulnerable individuals in a population: is the avoidance response of juvenile soil invertebrates more sensitive than the adults response?

TL;DR: Analysis of the avoidance response in two life stages of three standardized soil toxicity test invertebrates exposed to phenanthrene, copper and sodium chloride contaminated soil found the juvenile's avoidance response could be more sensitive, less sensitive and the same as the adult's avoidance Response.
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Inclusion of molecular descriptors in predictive models improves pesticide soil-air partitioning estimates.

TL;DR: A model that combined linear regression of soil, environmental and molecular parameters with the quantitative structural-property relationship (QSPR) to predict Ksa for pesticides showed better predictability and was validated and characterized by the applicability domain.
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From the Outside in: An Overview of Positron Imaging of Plant and Soil Processes.

TL;DR: How positron imaging is used in porous soils and sediments to visualize transport, flow, and microbial metabolic processes is described, and the interface between positron Imaging and other imaging approaches is addressed.
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Phenotypic plasticity of Pseudomonas aureofaciens (lacZY) introduced into and recovered from field and laboratory microcosm soils

TL;DR: There was little phenotypic drift of this genetically engineered bacterium during its survival in field and laboratory microcosm soils and carbon substrate utilization by isolates varied only slightly over the growing season.
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The role of monodentate tetrahedral borate complexes in boric acid binding to a soil organic matter analogue.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the interaction between boric acid and varying concentrations of an aromatic, polyphenolic SOM analogue (tannic acid at 5, 10 and 20 g L−1) from pH = 5.0 to 9.0.