Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dietary_element> ?p ?o }
- Dietary_element abstract "Dietary elements (commonly known as dietary minerals) or mineral nutrients are the chemical elements required by living organisms, other than the four elements carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen present in common organic molecules. The term \"dietary mineral\" is archaic, as the substances it refers to are chemical elements rather than actual minerals.Chemical elements in order of abundance in the human body include the seven major dietary elements calcium, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, and magnesium. Important trace dietary elements, necessary for mammalian life, include iron, cobalt, copper, zinc, manganese, molybdenum, iodine, bromine, and selenium. These are also called minor dietary elements, with \"minor\" referring to their amount, as opposed to their importance.Over twenty dietary elements are necessary for mammals, and several more for various other types of life. The total number of chemical elements that are absolutely needed is not known for any organism. Ultratrace amounts of some elements (e.g., boron, chromium) are known to clearly have a role but the exact biochemical nature is unknown, and others (e.g. arsenic, silicon) are suspected to have a role in health, but without proof.Most chemical elements that enter into the dietary physiology of organisms are in the form of simple compounds. Larger chemical compounds of elements need to be broken down for absorption. Plants absorb dissolved elements in soils, which are subsequently picked up by the herbivores that eat them and so on; the elements move up the food chain. Larger organisms may also consume soil (geophagia) and visit salt licks to obtain limiting dietary elements they are unable to acquire through other components of their diet.Bacteria play an essential role in the weathering of primary elements that results in the release of nutrients for their own nutrition and for the nutrition of others in the ecological food chain. One element, cobalt, is available for use by animals only after having been processed into complicated molecules (e.g., vitamin B12) by bacteria. Scientists are only recently starting to appreciate the magnitude and role that microorganisms have in the global cycling and formation of biominerals.".
- Dietary_element wikiPageExternalLink 721.full.pdf.
- Dietary_element wikiPageExternalLink intronut.htm.
- Dietary_element wikiPageID "235195".
- Dietary_element wikiPageLength "30617".
- Dietary_element wikiPageOutDegree "187".
- Dietary_element wikiPageRevisionID "704994283".
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Adenosine_triphosphate.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Alcohol_dehydrogenase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Aldehyde_oxidase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Amino_acid.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Anemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Antioxidant.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Apatite.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Apex_predator.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Archaism.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Arsenic.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Arsenic_poisoning.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Bacterivore.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Banana.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Basement_membrane.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Biological_engineering.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Biomineralization.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Boron.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Bromine.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Bromism.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Cadmium.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Carbon.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Carbonic_anhydrase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Carboxypeptidase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Category:Dietary_minerals.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Category:Food_science.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nutrition.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_compound.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_element.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_reaction.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chlorine.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chocolate_liquor.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chromium.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chromium(III)_picolinate.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Chromium_toxicity.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Cobalt.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Cobalt_poisoning.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Cofactor_(biochemistry).
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Consumer.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Copper.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Copper_deficiency.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Copper_toxicity.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Cytochrome_c_oxidase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Dairy_product.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Dietary_Reference_Intake.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Dietary_supplement.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Dietitian.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Edible_seaweed.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Electrolyte.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Enzyme.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Fish_as_food.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Flagellate.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Fluoride.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Fluoride_toxicity.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Fluorine.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Food_chain.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Food_composition_data.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Food_fortification.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Geophagia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Glutathione_peroxidase.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Goitre.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Health_food.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hemoglobin.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypercalcaemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hyperchloremia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hyperkalemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypermagnesemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypernatremia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hyperphosphatemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypocalcaemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypochloremia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypokalemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypomagnesemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hyponatremia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Hypophosphatemia.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iodine.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iodine_deficiency.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iodine_in_biology.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iodised_salt.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iron.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Iron_overload.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Leaf_vegetable.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Legume.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Lithium.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Magnesium.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Magnesium_deficiency_(medicine).
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Mammal.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Manganese.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Manganese_deficiency_(medicine).
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Manganism.
- Dietary_element wikiPageWikiLink Metabolism.