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halophil

NOUN
  1. archaebacteria requiring a salt-rich environment for growth and survival

How To Use halophil In A Sentence

  • As far as they know, no one had yet made a quality close-up of halophile colonies embedded in salt crystals. Strobist
  • The population of viable halophiles is hypothesized to decrease as resources are depleted over time.
  • With these adaptations the extreme halophiles are able to live in environments where most other organisms die and they therefore take advantage of a niche that is rich in nutrients.
  • The halophilic salt-loving archaeon Haloquadratum walsbyi is, of course, both. Archive 2006-11-01
  • I finitely them that it is an anthropomorphous paedophile patchwork of colourful unconcern, and is sinuously halophile by the antineoplastic. Rational Review
  • Studying extremophiles such as halophiles on Earth may provide insights helpful in our search for life elsewhere in the universe.
  • This article provides evidence for identification of halophilic microbes as the major cause of fish spoilage, and is one of the earliest publications in the field of halophile microbiology. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • Atropis distans-Limonium gmelinii association: This association does not form a continuous belt but rather grows in patches; it is less halophilous than the species below. Central Anatolian steppe
  • 1966-70 Continued microcosm studies: with Scott Nixon metabolism of brine microcosms and analog simulation showed rhodopsin photorespiration in pink Halophilic bacteria before it was found by physiologists. Annotated contributions of Howard T. Odum
  • In the desert coastal areas of western Venezuela, mangrove forests are associated with xerophilous littoral scrubs, and halophilous and psammophilous littoral meadows. Coastal Venezuelan mangroves
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