0 present participle of scavenge
1 to look for or get food or other objects in other people's rubbish:
Thus, a first step requires organizational and technical support to scavenging activity through the formation of cooperative societies or micro-enterprises.
The efficiency of this reaction supports scavenging (below) as a realistic process.
The results support a link between aerobic resistance and defective oxygen scavenging.
Apart from their strong affinity for proteins, condensed tannins can form complexes with metal ions and have radical scavenging properties10.
This requires new evacuation and scavenging routines to be compiled for each closure in the program.
We report the first quantified assessment of the potential error caused by scavenging in post-mortem measurements of predation in a slug- carabid system.
It could be speculated that this similarity is linked to the relatively low head position of stalking lions and of hyenas during scavenging on carrions.
Thus, desiccation sensitivity may result from an inadequate provision of free radical scavenging mechanisms.