Institution
Stockholm University
Education•Stockholm, Sweden•
About: Stockholm University is a education organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Supernova. The organization has 21052 authors who have published 62567 publications receiving 2725859 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Stockholm & Stockholms universitet.
Topics: Population, Supernova, Galaxy, Large Hadron Collider, Arctic
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the issues related to adsorption in post-combustion capture of CO2 and present a review of the impact of these issues on the performance of the adorption process.
358 citations
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TL;DR: The isotopic composition and concentration of molybdenum in sedimentary rocks are used to couple the redox history of the atmosphere and oceans to major events in animal evolution, suggesting two episodes of global ocean oxygenation and suggesting that early metazoans evolved in a relatively low oxygen environment.
Abstract: The evolution of Earth’s biota is intimately linked to the oxygenation of the oceans and atmosphere. We use the isotopic composition and concentration of molybdenum (Mo) in sedimentary rocks to explore this relationship. Our results indicate two episodes of global ocean oxygenation. The first coincides with the emergence of the Ediacaran fauna, including large, motile bilaterian animals, ca. 550–560 million year ago (Ma), reinforcing previous geochemical indications that Earth surface oxygenation facilitated this radiation. The second, perhaps larger, oxygenation took place around 400 Ma, well after the initial rise of animals and, therefore, suggesting that early metazoans evolved in a relatively low oxygen environment. This later oxygenation correlates with the diversification of vascular plants, which likely contributed to increased oxygenation through the enhanced burial of organic carbon in sediments. It also correlates with a pronounced radiation of large predatory fish, animals with high oxygen demand. We thereby couple the redox history of the atmosphere and oceans to major events in animal evolution.
358 citations
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TL;DR: The nanometer particles cause a higher degree of DNA damage and cause a significantly higher percentage of cell death compared to cytotoxicity induced by micrometer-sized particles, and the Cytotoxic effects related to the released copper fraction are found to be significantly lower than the effectsrelated to particles.
Abstract: An interdisciplinary and multianalytical research effort is undertaken to assess the toxic aspects of thoroughly characterized nano- and micrometer-sized particles of oxidized metallic copper and copper(II) oxide in contact with cultivated lung cells, as well as copper release in relevant media. All particles, except micrometer-sized Cu, release more copper in serum-containing cell medium (supplemented Dulbecco's minimal essential medium) compared to identical exposures in phosphate-buffered saline. Sonication of particles for dispersion prior to exposure has a large effect on the initial copper release from Cu nanoparticles. A clear size-dependent effect is observed from both a copper release and a toxicity perspective. In agreement with greater released amounts of copper per quantity of particles from the nanometer-sized particles compared to the micrometer-sized particles, the nanometer particles cause a higher degree of DNA damage (single-strand breaks) and cause a significantly higher percentage of cell death compared to cytotoxicity induced by micrometer-sized particles. Cytotoxic effects related to the released copper fraction are found to be significantly lower than the effects related to particles. No DNA damage is induced by the released copper fraction.
358 citations
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358 citations
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TL;DR: A synthetic approach is advocated in which population models accounting for both density dependence and effects of environmental drivers are used to make integrated predictions of equilibrium abundance and distribution across entire landscapes.
Abstract: Environmental changes are expected to alter both the distribution and the abundance of organisms. A disproportionate amount of past work has focused on distribution only, either documenting historical range shifts or predicting future occurrence patterns. However, simultaneous predictions of abundance and distribution across landscapes would be far more useful. To critically assess which approaches represent advances towards the goal of joint predictions of abundance and distribution, we review recent work on changing distributions and on effects of environmental drivers on single populations. Several methods have been used to predict changing distributions. Some of these can be easily modified to also predict abundance, but others cannot. In parallel, demographers have developed a much better understanding of how changing abiotic and biotic drivers will influence growth rate and abundance in single populations. However, this demographic work has rarely taken a landscape perspective and has largely ignored the effects of intraspecific density. We advocate a synthetic approach in which population models accounting for both density dependence and effects of environmental drivers are used to make integrated predictions of equilibrium abundance and distribution across entire landscapes. Such predictions would constitute an important step forward in assessing the ecological consequences of environmental changes.
358 citations
Authors
Showing all 21326 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hongjie Dai | 197 | 570 | 182579 |
Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
Richard S. Ellis | 169 | 882 | 136011 |
Stanley B. Prusiner | 168 | 745 | 97528 |
Anders Björklund | 165 | 769 | 84268 |
Yang Yang | 164 | 2704 | 144071 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |
Bengt Winblad | 153 | 1240 | 101064 |
Zhenwei Yang | 150 | 956 | 109344 |
Marvin Johnson | 149 | 1827 | 119520 |
Jan-Åke Gustafsson | 147 | 1058 | 98804 |
Markus Ackermann | 146 | 610 | 71071 |
Hans-Olov Adami | 145 | 908 | 83473 |
Markku Kulmala | 142 | 1487 | 85179 |
Kjell Fuxe | 142 | 1479 | 89846 |