(n.) Any rodent of the genus Arctomys. The common European marmot (A. marmotta) is about the size of a rabbit, and inhabits the higher regions of the Alps and Pyrenees. The bobac is another European species. The common American species (A. monax) is the woodchuck.
(n.) Any one of several species of ground squirrels or gophers of the genus Spermophilus; also, the prairie dog.
Example Sentences:
(1) Plasma ANF of both groups of nonhibernating marmots was significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than that the hibernating group, but there was no difference between nonhibernating males and females.
(2) The aim of this study was to determine the effects of circulating catecholamines and light on the daily melatonin rhythm in the marmot.
(3) CV Sir Michael Marmot Age 65 Lives London Education University of Sydney; University of Berkeley PhD Career 1971-85: epidemiologist, University of Berkeley; research professor of epidemiology and public health, University College London 1986-present: chair of the Commission on Social Determinants of Health set up by the World Health Organisation in 2005; led the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (Elsa) 2004: won the Balzan Prize for Epidemiology 2006: gave the Harveian Oration 2008: won the William B Graham Prize for Health Services Research 2010 (February): published the report, Fair Society, Healthy Lives, based on a review of health inequalities he conducted at the request of the British government 2010-2011: president of the British Medical Association Family married, three children Interests tennis, playing viola The Marmot Review NHS Confederation Conference The Black Report
(4) "By all means make special efforts on the poorest," says Marmot.
(5) An earlier version misquoted Michael Marmot as referring to a contraction of capital and income, instead of a concentration of capital and income.
(6) When Sir Michael Marmot published his official report earlier this year examining the link between health and wealth, the findings demonstrated an alarming "social gradient".
(7) Responses of normothermic and hibernating marmots to manipulations of the preoptic-hypothalamic temperature (TPO) were studied.
(8) The rest is left to mule deer, cougars, marmots, badgers – and me.
(9) It was concluded that normothermic marmots have a RAA system comparable to other mammalian species.
(10) Over 75% of local governments are now working to embed Marmot principles in their approaches to improving health and reducing inequalities, and the Institute of Health Equity have developed partnerships across London, England and Europe to further develop and implement approaches to health inequality.
(11) There were bears out west, mountain lions, coyotes and wolves, badgers, marmots, golden eagles – and what did we have?
(12) Hunting, skinning and eating marmots or other infected animals are the main causes of infection.
(13) Extras: Mountain Marmots morning ski school, £249 per child, Monty’s Afternoon Club, including lunch, £239 per child, skifamille.co.uk MARCH: FOR SPRING SKIING It’s low season again, so the crowds have gone, prices are lower, and the snow should be good – along with some warmer spring days, when there’s ample opportunity to sit outside for a long lunch in the sun.
(14) So, while the response to the Marmot review locally and nationally has more than met our expectations and hopes, there are also some worrying signs.
(15) It will be chaired by Sir Michael Marmot and will include some eminent statisticians, none of whom have been involved in the breast screening controversy before.
(16) In brown adipose tissue of alp-marmot (Marmota marmota), badger (Meles meles) and Wistar rats steroids of C21- and C19-type are identified and quantified.
(17) Body contact with euthermic nestmates warmed torpid marmots passively.
(18) The lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) isozymes from heart, liver, kidney and skeletal muscle in Himalayan marmots (Marmota himalayana robusta) in non-hibernation were investigated in the present experiment.
(19) Glucose uptake was measured throughout the year in marmots (Marmota flaviventris) by the hyperglycemic clamp technique.
(20) Adrenal steroid secretion rates and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAA) system were studied in the normothermic marmot.
Nutria
Definition:
(n.) The fur of the coypu. See Coypu.
Example Sentences:
(1) The distal cauda of mouse, gerbil, and nutria was the site for lectin-stained light cells interspersed among the low principal cells.
(2) The authors describe two isolates, the first is obviously an incidental finding from the faeces of a 5-year-old girl who was symptom-free, the second is from the contents of an abscess of a nutria.
(3) The chromatographical components of nutria hemoglobin proved to differ in their physical and chemical properties as well as in the structure.
(4) Because ursodeoxycholic and chenodeoxycholic acids are interconverted in humans via 7-ketolithocholic acid, bile acid metabolism was studied in the nutria (Myocastor coypus), the bile of which is known to contain these three bile acids.
(5) Larval Echinococcus multilocularis was found in a nutria (Myocastor coypus) on a fur farm situated south of the Thuringian Forest near the border the Federal Republic of Germany.
(6) A nuclear staining was prominent in zygotene and pachytene spermatocytes in the mouse, weak in the nutria, but absent in gerbil and guinea pig.
(7) Of 35 nutria (Myocaster coypus) at a city zoo, 20 died or were killed because of a progressive central nervous system disease.
(8) Digestibilities of feed, and transit and retention time of fluid and particle digesta marker measured in nutrias (Myocaster coypus) and guinea-pigs (Cavia porcellus) fed on a diet containing 50% alfalfa.
(9) Diseases in farm raised nutria (Myocastor coypus) often depend on hygienic fatalities in the different housing systems of the farms.
(10) Narrow cells active in absorption of testis-derived material were lectin-positive in the initial segment of mouse, gerbil, and nutria epididymis.
(11) The principle ways of accomodation for nutria are briefly described with reference to the specific hygienic problems.
(12) Beaver, otter and nutria hemoglobin chromatographical components were isolated, a comparative analysis of the studied proteins was carried out and their intraspecific heterogeneity was established.
(13) An analysis of probability of distribution curves of alpha-helical sites and bends of polypeptide chains of myoglobins in half-water mammals (beaver, nutria, muskrat, otter) carried out in comparison with those of myoglobins of the horse and Sperm whale (X-ray diffraction analysis has revealed their tertiary structure) has revealed a coincidence of the secondary structure sites end bends of the chain in the studied respiratory hemoproteins of muscles.
(14) The digestibility of fibre was higher in the nutria, along with the longer retention time of digesta.
(15) In the nutria, corresponding cells were arranged as islands within the low epithelium.
(16) Injection of either [14C]cholesterol, [14C]ursodeoxycholic, [14C]7-ketolithocholic acid, or a mixture of [7 beta-3H]chenodeoxycholic acid and [14C]chenodeoxycholic acid into bile fistula nutria demonstrated that all three bile acids can be synthesized hepatically from cholesterol, that they are interconverted sparingly (2%-5%) by the liver, but that 7-ketolithocholic acid is an intermediate in the hepatic transformation of chenodeoxycholic acid to ursodeoxycholic acid.
(17) The apparent digestibility of protein in the nutria was superior to the guinea-pig and other small hindgut fermenters, suggesting that the contribution of coprophagy on protein nutrition of nutrias is significant.
(18) Chronic dermatitis in nutria (Myocastor coypus) in Louisiana was traced to secondary bacterial and fungal infection resulting from the penetration of achene awns of smooth beggartick (Bidens laevis) into the skin.
(19) Coccidiosis and strongyloidosis are frequently observed in nutria farms.
(20) Fish, chicken and nutria were digested rapidly and all their component essential amino acids disappeared quickly and at the same rate.