| edge |
the zone or ecotone where two habitat types come together, for example, open land and woodland, or forest stands of different ages or species. Both habitat types contribute plants and animals to the transition zone, making edge more valuable to wildlife than either habitat type alone. Creating substantial edge during a timber harvest can also reduce the visual impact of the harvest.
Ãâó: www.sfrc.ufl.edu/Extension/ssfor11.htm
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|---|---|
| ED |
The dose of a drug that is pharmacologically effective for 50% of the population exposed to the drug or a 50% response in a biological system that is exposed to the drug.
Ãâó: www.uni-graz.at/~binder/science/def.html
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| edema |
Condition characterized by an excess of watery fluid collecting in the cavities or tissues of the body.
Ãâó: www.himalayasaltcrystal.com/glossary.htm
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| edema |
A swelling, usually in the legs or feet, caused when the body tissues contain an excessive amount of fluid (plasma).
Ãâó: calder.med.miami.edu/pointis/glossary.html
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| EDC |
A 32-bit (4 byte) CRC-like code appended at the end of a DVD data sector.
Ãâó: www.dvd-makers.com/public/482.cfm
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| ED | United States novelist |
|---|---|
| ED | United States poet (1892-1950) |
| ED | Irish writer (born in 1932) |
| ED | United States poet (1892-1950) |
| ED | the capital and largest city of Japan |
| ED | Belgian cosmologist who proposed the big-bang theory of the origin of the universe (1894-1966) |
| ED | French painter whose work influenced the impressionists (1832-1883) |
| ED | French painter (1868-1940) |
| ED | automatic data processing by electronic means without the use of tabulating cards or punched tapes |
| ED | an antidepressant drug that blocks the reuptake of norepinephrine |
| ED | son of Henry Ford (1893-1943) |
| ED | German organic chemist who studied alcoholic fermentation and discovered zymase (1860-1917) |
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