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  2. Laminaria digitata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminaria_digitata

    Laminaria digitata is found mostly on exposed sites on shores in the lower littoral where it may form extensive meadows and can be the dominant algal species. It has a fairly high intrinsic growth rate compared to other algae, 5.5% per day, and a carrying capacity of about 40 kg wet weight per square meter.

  3. Osmotic dilator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmotic_dilator

    Laminaria (right) Osmotic dilators, also known as hygroscopic dilators, are medical implements used to dilate the uterine cervix by swelling as they absorb fluid from surrounding tissue. [1] They may be composed of natural or synthetic materials. A laminaria stick or tent is a thin rod made of the stems of dried Laminaria, a genus of kelp.

  4. Laminaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminaria

    Laminaria is a genus of brown seaweed in the order Laminariales (kelp), comprising 31 species native to the north Atlantic and northern Pacific Oceans. This economically important genus is characterized by long, leathery laminae and relatively large size.

  5. Kelp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelp

    In Russia, especially in the Russian Far East, and former Soviet Union countries several types of kelp are of commercial importance: Saccharina latissima, Laminaria digitata, Saccharina japonica. Known locally as "Sea Cabbage" (Морская капуста in Russian), it comes in retail trade in dried or frozen, as well as in canned form and ...

  6. Laminarin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminarin

    The molecule laminarin (also known as laminaran) is a storage glucan (a polysaccharide of glucose) found in brown algae.It is used as a carbohydrate food reserve in the same way that chrysolaminarin is used by phytoplankton, especially in diatoms. [1]

  7. Laminaria hyperborea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminaria_hyperborea

    Laminaria hyperborea is a species of large brown alga, a kelp in the family Laminariaceae, also known by the common names of tangle and cuvie. It is found in the sublittoral zone of the northern Atlantic Ocean. A variety, Laminaria hyperborea f. cucullata (P.Svensden & J.M.Kain, 1971) is known from more wave sheltered areas in Scandinavia. [2]

  8. Medical scoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_scoring

    SOFA was designed to provide a simple daily score, that indicates how the status of the patient evolves over time.; Glasgow Coma Scale (also named GCS) is designed to provide the status for the central nervous system.

  9. Gyrista - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyrista

    Gyrista was first described in 1998 by protistologist Thomas Cavalier-Smith in his work A revised six-kingdom system of life, originally as a superphylum containing two phyla: Ochrophyta, the heterokont algae; and Bigyra, which then contained the pseudofungi and bigyromonads together with the opalines. [1]