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The Compendium on continuing education for the practicing veterinarian Volume 19 Issue 4
pp. 422 - 429
published_at 1997-04
Creators :
Atkins Clarke E.
Atwell Rick B.
Dillon Ray
Genchi Claudio
Hayasaki Mineo
Holmes Robert A.
Knight David H.
Lukof David K.
McCall John W.
Slocombe J. Owen D.
Publishers : Veterinary Learning Systems
Applied Soil Ecology Volume 17 Issue 2
pp. 183 - 187
published_at 2001-06
森林立地 Volume 36 Issue 2
pp. 55 - 63
published_at 1994
Creators :
Okabe Hiroaki
Ezaki Tsugio
Marumoto Takuya
Hayakawa Seiji
Akama Keiko
Publishers : 森林立地学会
Soil science and plant nutrition Volume 26 Issue 2
pp. 185 - 190
published_at 1980-06
Decomposition of organic nitrogenous materials in soil was affected by C/N ratio.Immobilization of nitrogen mineralized from nitrogenous material added to the soil was influenced by the degradability of carbonaceous and nitrogenous materials.The turnover of nitrogen which had been freshly immobilized in the presence of glucose in the soil was faster than that immobilized with cellulose or lignin. The effect of soil-drying on the mineralization of organic nitrogen immobilized through the decomposition of carbonaceous and nitrogenous materials in the soil depended significantly on the availability of carbonaceous materials as a microbial energy source.However, the drying effect was not always proportional to the amount of organic nitrogen accumulated in the soil.
Soil science and plant nutrition Volume 25 Issue 4
pp. 591 - 600
published_at 1979-12
Phenolic compounds in the soils collected from plow layers of greenhouse and field cultures were surveyed quantitatively by gas chromatography. The results are as follows : 1) p-Coumaric, ferulic, salicylic, p-hydroxybenzoic, vanillic, syringic, and protocatechuic acids were detected in all upland soils, as in the case of paddy and forest soils reported previously. Among these phenolics, p-coumaric acid was present in the largest quantity in most of the upland soils up to 29.0 ppm. 2) The total amounts of individual phenolic acids in the upland soils ranged from 9.5 to 62.0 ppm (average 26.0 ppm). Also, the amounts were less than 0.18% (average 0.10%) of the total soil organic matter. The average values in the upland soils were higher than those in the paddy soils, but were lower than those in the forest soils. 3) In upland soils, the concentrations of p-hydroxybenzoic, vanillic, syringic, p-coumaric, and ferulic acids, which have no chelating ability, were considerably related to the carbon content of soil, but the concentrations of protocatechuic and salicylic acids, which are chelating agents, were not related to that of soil. These relationships agreed with those found in paddy and forest soils.
Cell biology international reports Volume 13 Issue 5
pp. 427 - 436
published_at 1989-05
Creators :
Makita T.
Kagabu Satoshi
Kagabu S.
Manba K.
Naito I.
Lindblom R.
Hatsuoka M.
Okawa T.
Publishers : Elsevier
Journal of the Japan Veterinary Medical Association Volume 25 Issue 10
pp. 598 - 599
published_at 1972
Creators :
早崎 峯夫
大石 勇
小林 茂雄
久米 清治
Publishers : 日本獣医師会
Veterinary parasitology Volume 114 Issue 3
pp. 231 - 236
published_at 2003
Creators :
Song K. H.
Lee S. E.
Hayasaki Mineo
Shiramizu K.
Kim D. H.
Cho K. W.
Publishers : Elsevier
The Journal of veterinary medical science Volume 66 Issue 6
pp. 599 - 609
published_at 2004
Creators :
Inui Azusa
Itamoto Kazuhito
Takuma Tetsuya
Tsutsumi Hideki
Tanigawa Manabu
Hayasaki Mineo
Taura Yasuho
Mamba Kouichi
Publishers : 日本獣医学会
The Journal of veterinary medical science Volume 56 Issue 6
pp. 1181 - 1183
published_at 1994
The journal of veterinary medical science Volume 56 Issue 4
pp. 729 - 733
published_at 1994
Creators :
Sakonju Iwao
Taura Yasuho
Nakaichi Munekazu
Nakama Sanenori
Kagabu Satoshi
Publishers : 日本獣医学会
Journal JSAVA Volume 36
pp. 43 - 47
published_at 1996
Creators :
Hayasaki Mineo
Publishers : 日本小動物獣医師会