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1

Calvo-Flores, Francisco G. Lignin and lignans as renewable raw materials: Chemistry, technology and applications. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2015.

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2

Le architetture lignee dei cori: Il settecentesco coro ligneo della Chiesa Madre di Linguaglossa. Roma: Aracne, 2005.

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3

D, Loike J., ed. Lignans: Chemical, biological, and clinical properties. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 1990.

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4

Koshijima, T. Association between lignin and carbohydrates in wood and other plant tissues. Berlin: Springer, 2003.

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5

Koshijima, Tetsuo. Association Between Lignin and Carbohydrates in Wood and Other Plant Tissues. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003.

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6

Koshijima, Tetsuo, and Takashi Watanabe. Association Between Lignin and Carbohydrates in Wood and Other Plant Tissues. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-05191-7.

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7

author, Yin Jun, and Qin Chuixin author, eds. Schisandra chinensis: An herb of north eastern China origin. New Jersey: World Scientific, 2015.

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8

Tax, Frans. Receptor-like Kinases in Plants: From Development to Defense. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012.

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9

Northern Electric & Mfg. Co. Comment construire les lignes téléphoniques rurales. Montréal: La Compagnie, 1995.

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10

Ngwiri, Kathleen Webb. Lignes directrices pour la definition des plans d'actions pour 1991-1994. Antananarivo: UNICEF, 1991.

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11

Kozik, Andrzej. Thiamine-protein interaction: Chemical mechanism of ligand-binding and bioanalytical application of thiamine-binding proteins from seeds. Kraków: Nakł. Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, 1996.

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12

Canada. Comité consultatif de la radioprotection. Lignes directrices pour les plans d'urgence des hôpitaux aux fins de la gestion des accidents radiologiques mineurs. Ottawa, Ont: Commission canadienne de sûreté nucléaire, 2001.

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13

Vöttiner-Pletz, Patricia. Lignum sanctum: Zur therapeutischen Verwendung des Guajak vom 16. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert. Frankfurt am Main: Govi, 1990.

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14

1974-, Williams Anthony D., ed. Macrowikinomics: New solutions for a connected planet. London: Portfolio/Penguin, 2012.

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15

Canada. Treasury Board. Official Languages and Employment Equity Branch. Guidelines for the development of a mentoring program =: Lignes directrices pour le développement d'un programme de mentorat. Ottawa, Ont: Treasury Board of Canada = Conseil du trésor du Canada, 1995.

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16

Programme des urgences environnementales (Canada). Lignes directrices pour la mise en application de la Loi canadienne sur la protection de l'environnement, 1999: Article 199, avis obligeant des plans d'urgence environnementale. Ottawa, Ont: Environnement Canada, 2001.

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17

Hsia, Huei-Fen. Quantitative HPLC determination of plant lignans and isoflavones in cereal grains. 1993.

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18

Ayres, David C., and John D. Loike. Lignans: Chemical, Biological and Clinical Properties (Chemistry and Pharmacology of Natural Products). Cambridge University Press, 1990.

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19

Kemmerling, Birgit, and Frans Tax. Receptor-like Kinases in Plants: From Development to Defense. Springer, 2014.

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20

He, Xu. Down-regulating the expression of a lignin biosynthetic gene by antisense technology to improve forage quality. 1999.

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21

Kirchman, David L. Degradation of organic matter. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789406.003.0007.

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The aerobic oxidation of organic material by microbes is the focus of this chapter. Microbes account for about 50% of primary production in the biosphere, but they probably account for more than 50% of organic material oxidization and respiration (oxygen use). The traditional role of microbes is to degrade organic material and to release plant nutrients such as phosphate and ammonium as well as carbon dioxide. Microbes are responsible for more than half of soil respiration, while size fractionation experiments show that bacteria are also responsible for about half of respiration in aquatic habitats. In soils, both fungi and bacteria are important, with relative abundances and activity varying with soil type. In contrast, fungi are not common in the oceans and lakes, where they are out-competed by bacteria with their small cell size. Dead organic material, detritus, used by microbes, comes from dead plants and waste products from herbivores. It and associated microbes can be eaten by many eukaryotic organisms, forming a detritus food web. These large organisms also break up detritus into small pieces, creating more surface area on which microbes can act. Microbes in turn need to use extracellular enzymes to hydrolyze large molecular weight compounds, which releases small compounds that can be transported into cells. Fungi and bacteria use a different mechanism, “oxidative decomposition,” to degrade lignin. Organic compounds that are otherwise easily degraded (“labile”) may resist decomposition if absorbed to surfaces or surrounded by refractory organic material. Addition of labile compounds can stimulate or “prime” the degradation of other organic material. Microbes also produce organic compounds, some eventually resisting degradation for thousands of years, and contributing substantially to soil organic material in terrestrial environments and dissolved organic material in aquatic ones. The relationship between community diversity and a biochemical process depends on the metabolic redundancy among members of the microbial community. This redundancy may provide “ecological insurance” and ensure the continuation of key biogeochemical processes when environmental conditions change.
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22

How to build rural telephone lines. Montreal: Northern Electric & Mfg. Co., 1995.

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23

Lignes directrices de l'OCDE sur la capitalisation et la sécurité des prestations dans les plans de pension professionnels. Éditions OCDE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264034594-fr.

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24

Saha, Jayanta Kumar. Total synthesis of (±)-bostrycin, synthesis of a chiral catechol-based C b2 s-symmetric ligand and studies directed towards the synthesis of dienoyl tetramic acid section of tirandamycin. 1986.

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25

Programme des urgences environnementales (Canada), ed. Lignes directrices pour la mise en application de la partie 8 de la Loi canadienne sur la protection de l'environnement (1999): Plans d'urgence environnementale. Ottawa, Ont: Programme des urgences environnementales, Environnement Canada, 2003.

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26

Williams, Anthony D., and Don Tapscott. MacroWikinomics: New Solutions for a Connected Planet. Atlantic Books, Limited, 2010.

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27

Liede-Schumann, Sigrid, Ulrich Meve, Gildas Gâteblé, Gabrielle Barriera, and Silvio Fici. Apocynaceae pro parte, Phellinaceae, Capparaceae : Flore de la Nouvelle Calédonie, volume 27. Publications scientifiques du Muséum, Paris ; IRD, Marseille, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/fft49.

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L’exceptionnelle richesse floristique de la Nouvelle-Calédonie est mondialement connue. Plus de 3 400 espèces de plantes vasculaires indigènes y sont répertoriées, dont les trois-quarts sont endémiques de l’archipel. L’endémisme ne concerne pas seulement les espèces, mais aussi les genres (près d’une centaine) et même trois familles. La diversité se décline aussi sur le plan écologique, en lien avec l’histoire géologique originale de la Nouvelle-Calédonie, qui a favorisé le micro-endémisme et les espèces inféodées aux substrats ultramafiques. De nouvelles espèces continuent à être découvertes, aussi reste-t-il nécessaire de poursuivre prospections et recherches botaniques, afin de mieux comprendre l’origine et l’évolution de cette flore, et contribuer à sa préservation. Le présent volume regroupe trois familles d’Angiospermes. Celle des Apocynaceae dont la classification a été profondément remaniée depuis la publication en 1981 du fascicule « Apocynaceae », volume 10 de la Flore de la Nouvelle-Calédonie et Dépendances : les trois sous-familles traitées ici (Periplocoideae, Secamonoideae et Asclepiadoideae) formaient auparavant la famille des Asclepiadaceae. Les Phellinaceae qui, avec 10 espèces ligneuses, constituent l’une des trois familles endémiques du territoire. Enfin, la Nouvelle-Calédonie héberge quelques espèces de la famille cosmopolite des Capparaceae, toutes appartenant au genre du câprier (Capparis). Conformément à la ligne éditoriale de la collection, cet ouvrage comporte, pour chaque famille traitée indépendamment : une présentation générale suivie de descriptions détaillées des genres et des espèces ; des clés d’identification, en français et en anglais ; une illustration variée comprenant des dessins au trait et des photographies des plantes vivantes ; des cartes de répartition et une évaluation des besoins de conservation selon les critères de l’UICN.
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28

1655-1716, Pechey John, ed. Some observations made upon the wood called lignum nephriticum imported from Hispaniola: Shewing its admirable virtues in dissolving the stone in the reins and bladder, helping the strangury and stoppings in the water and easing all pains proceeding from thence, &c. [London: s.n.], 1989.

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