stress regime - meaning and definition. What is stress regime
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What (who) is stress regime - definition

NEGATIVE IMPACT OF NON-LIVING FACTORS ON THE LIVING ORGANISMS IN A SPECIFIC ENVIRONMENT
Stress resistant; Stress resistant varieties; Stress resistances
  • Sunflowers are hyperaccumulator plants that can absorb large amount of metal.

regime         
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FORM OF GOVERNMENT OR THE SET OF RULES, CULTURAL OR SOCIAL NORMS, ETC. THAT REGULATE THE OPERATION OF A GOVERNMENT OR INSTITUTION AND ITS INTERACTIONS WITH SOCIETY
Régime; Regime government; Regimes; Political regime; Ruling regime; Regieme
n.
1) to establish a regime
2) to overthrow a regime
3) a puppet; totalitarian regime
regime         
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FORM OF GOVERNMENT OR THE SET OF RULES, CULTURAL OR SOCIAL NORMS, ETC. THAT REGULATE THE OPERATION OF A GOVERNMENT OR INSTITUTION AND ITS INTERACTIONS WITH SOCIETY
Régime; Regime government; Regimes; Political regime; Ruling regime; Regieme
(regimes)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
If you refer to a government or system of running a country as a regime, you are critical of it because you think it is not democratic and uses unacceptable methods.
...the collapse of the Fascist regime at the end of the war...
N-COUNT: oft supp N [disapproval]
2.
A regime is the way that something such as an institution, company, or economy is run, especially when it involves tough or severe action.
The authorities moved him to the less rigid regime of an open prison.
N-COUNT
3.
A regime is a set of rules about food, exercise, or beauty that some people follow in order to stay healthy or attractive.
He has a new fitness regime to strengthen his back.
N-COUNT: oft supp N
Adversity         
  • Schematic overview of the classes of stresses in plants
  • A diagram of the general adaptation syndrome model
  • Neurohormonal response to stress
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ORGANISM'S RESPONSE TO A STRESSOR SUCH AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITION OR A STIMULUS
General adaptation syndrome; Stress syndrome; Physiological stress; Adversity; General Adaptation Response; General adaptation response syndrome; Environmental stress; General Adaptation Syndrome; Stress out; Stress (medicine); Stress (medecine); General adaptative syndrome; Environmental stresses; Stress (medical); Stress (biological); Medical stress; Stress (physiology); Stress (Physiology); Stress (mental); Stress in humans; Biological stress; Biology of stress; Effects of chronic stress; Chronic stress and cardiovascular disease
·noun Opposition; contrariety.

Wikipedia

Abiotic stress

Abiotic stress is the negative impact of non-living factors on the living organisms in a specific environment. The non-living variable must influence the environment beyond its normal range of variation to adversely affect the population performance or individual physiology of the organism in a significant way.

Whereas a biotic stress would include living disturbances such as fungi or harmful insects, abiotic stress factors, or stressors, are naturally occurring, often intangible and inanimate factors such as intense sunlight, temperature or wind that may cause harm to the plants and animals in the area affected. Abiotic stress is essentially unavoidable. Abiotic stress affects animals, but plants are especially dependent, if not solely dependent, on environmental factors, so it is particularly constraining. Abiotic stress is the most harmful factor concerning the growth and productivity of crops worldwide. Research has also shown that abiotic stressors are at their most harmful when they occur together, in combinations of abiotic stress factors.