Life at Extremes: Environments, Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival
The Romans were first to employ the term 'extremus', the superlative of 'exterus' (out- side), and somewhere between AD 1425 and 1475 the word 'extreme' is thought to have entered common usage in Europe. Extreme is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as '...
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oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-371072023-11-11T05:05:03Z Life at Extremes: Environments, Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival Bell, Elanor M Environments Organisms The Romans were first to employ the term 'extremus', the superlative of 'exterus' (out- side), and somewhere between AD 1425 and 1475 the word 'extreme' is thought to have entered common usage in Europe. Extreme is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as 'reaching a high or the highest degree; very great; not usual; exceptional; very severe or serious' (Oxford Dictionaries. 2010). We now define a multitude of envi- ronments on planet Earth and beyond as extreme, and we continue to discover organ- isms capable not only of surviving but also thriving in many of them. These organisms Macelroy (1974) named 'extremophiles'; lovers (from the Greek, 'philos') of extreme environments. There are two basic degrees of extremophile-ness: those organisms that can tolerate an extreme and become domi- nant over others and those that really love the extreme environment and actually thrive there without release of competition. 2014-04-24T01:28:36Z 2014-04-24T01:28:36Z 2012 Book 978 1 84593 814 7 https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/37107 en application/pdf CABI |
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Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt |
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Thư viện số |
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English |
topic |
Environments Organisms |
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Environments Organisms Bell, Elanor M Life at Extremes: Environments, Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
description |
The Romans were first to employ the term
'extremus', the superlative of 'exterus' (out-
side), and somewhere between AD 1425
and 1475 the word 'extreme' is thought to
have entered common usage in Europe.
Extreme is defined in the Oxford English
Dictionary as 'reaching a high or the highest
degree; very great; not usual; exceptional;
very severe or serious' (Oxford Dictionaries.
2010). We now define a multitude of envi-
ronments on planet Earth and beyond as
extreme, and we continue to discover organ-
isms capable not only of surviving but also
thriving in many of them. These organisms
Macelroy (1974) named 'extremophiles';
lovers (from the Greek, 'philos') of extreme
environments. There are two basic degrees
of extremophile-ness: those organisms that
can tolerate an extreme and become domi-
nant over others and those that really love
the extreme environment and actually
thrive there without release of competition. |
format |
Book |
author |
Bell, Elanor M |
author_facet |
Bell, Elanor M |
author_sort |
Bell, Elanor M |
title |
Life at Extremes: Environments,
Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
title_short |
Life at Extremes: Environments,
Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
title_full |
Life at Extremes: Environments,
Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
title_fullStr |
Life at Extremes: Environments,
Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
title_full_unstemmed |
Life at Extremes: Environments,
Organisms and Strategies fa , Survival |
title_sort |
life at extremes: environments,
organisms and strategies fa , survival |
publisher |
CABI |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/37107 |
_version_ |
1819825250906406912 |