ubiquitous
(adjective)
Being everywhere at once: omnipresent.
Examples of ubiquitous in the following topics:
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Psychrophilic Crenarchaeota
- The environments they inhabit are ubiquitous on Earth, as a large fraction of our planetary surface experiences temperatures lower than 15°C.
- DNA sequences from Crenarchaea have also been found in soil and freshwater environments, suggesting that this phylum is ubiquitous to most environments.
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Environmental Diversity of Microbes
- Microbes are ubiquitous on Earth and their diversity and abundance are determined by the biogeographical habitat they occupy.
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Acidobacteria
- The members of this phylum are acidophilic, physiologically diverse, and are ubiquitous in soils.
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Microbial Environments and Microenvironments
- Microorganisms are ubiquitous despite the fact that the planet is host to extraordinarily diverse environments.
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Biosynthesis and Energy
- The process of gluconeogenesis, characterized by the production of glucose or fructose from noncarbohydrate precursors, is an ubiquitous process.
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Betaproteobacteria
- The Burkholderia (previously part of Pseudomonas) genus name refers to a group of virtually ubiquitous gram-negative, motile, obligately aerobic rod-shaped bacteria including both animal/human (see above) and plant pathogens as well as some environmentally important species.
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Attachment and Entry of Herpes Simplex
- Both HSV-1 (which produces most cold sores) and HSV-2 (which produces most genital herpes) are ubiquitous and contagious.
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Endophytes and Plants
- Endophytes are ubiquitous and have been found in all the species of plants studied to date.
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Amoebic Meningoencephalitis
- Naegleria fowleri is commonly referred to as an amoeba but is actually a unicellular parasitic protist that is ubiquitous in soils and warm, stagnant bodies of freshwater, especially during the summer months .
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Edible Fungi
- These organisms are ubiquitous all over the world.