Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
which emphasize the different kind or levels, known as layers, of connections between the elements of the network and the interactions between these levels as well. In order to capture the structure and
-
are seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher specializing in nuclear physics and its applications, with expertise in radiochemistry applied to the phosphate industry. Key Responsibilities Analysis and Monitoring
-
fertilizers, nutrient use efficiency, and biogeochemical cycling of elements in the soil-plant-human system, aiming to generate knowledge that will allow us to build healthier, more sustainable, and productive
-
in sampling, preparation & samples analysis. Ability to assess and analyze trace elements by different techniques. Ability to carry out feasibility, cost, risk and opportunity assessment studies. A
-
nutrients has attracted less studies. This situation is all the more critical now that we know that the pure “liebigian” limitation (one factor limits the growth) is not true for most ecosystems (Wurzburger
-
studies on magnetic/electromagnetic techniques for the separation, concentration, recovery, or destruction of certain elements. Therefore, the chosen candidate will be expected to contribute
-
applied to the phosphate industry. Key Responsibilities 1. Analysis and Monitoring of Radionuclides and Heavy Metals: o Develop and implement nuclear analysis methods to characterize phosphate ores
-
. This project seeks to comprehend how antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) disseminate within microbial populations via horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) and how these processes
-
to identify dysbiosis signatures. Apply bioinformatics tools for microbiome data analysis (ex, QIIME2, MetaPhlAn, Kraken2). Collaborate on multi-omics data integration and analysis. Contribute to manuscript
-
nutrients has attracted less studies. This situation is all the more critical now that we know that the pure “liebigian” limitation (one factor limits the growth) is not true for most ecosystems (Wurzburger