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barker ed - echinoderms 2000

Echinoderms 2000




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Dettagli

Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Editore:

CRC Press

Pubblicazione: 06/2001
Edizione: 1° edizione





Note Editore

This book focuses on the role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration taking into account the neurotrophic control of regeneration and the specific involvement of neurally derived factors in regulating cellular phenomena such as proliferation, migration and differentiation.




Sommario

General 1. Cidaroid-crinoid interactions as observed from a submersible 2. Role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration 3. New Mesozoic echinoderms (Serpianotiaris: Euechinoidea; Cottreauaster. Asteroidea) from New Zealand 4. Maintaining fluid balance in echinoderms 5. Depth/substrate relationships of echinoderms, off NW Hokkaido Island, Japan Sea 6. Stress and deviant reproduction in echinoderms 7. Different echinoderm classes have different Hox gene clusters 8. Implications of a proposed anterior-posterior bilateral body axis in echinoderms 9. Quantitative biogeography in the Southern Ocean: Deriving processes from pattern 10. Bathyal echinoderms of the Galapagos Islands 11. Genic patterning of the radial echinoderm central nervous system and evolution of the echinoderm body plan 12. Strategies to identify differentially expressed genes during regeneration 13. Echinoderm eggs: Biochemistry and larval biology 14. Growing a stalked echinoderm within the Extraxial-Axial Theory 15. Species of echinoderms described 16. Evolution of development rates 17. Fluxes and impact of anthropogenic contaminants (metals and PCBs) in echinoderms 18. Evolution of a gene network in echinoderms 19. Crisp's Rule, epidemic spawning, and pheromones: What we still don't know about the control of reproduction in deep-sea echinoderms Extinct classes 20. Attachment strategies in Diploporita inhabiting soft-substratum communities 21. Stylophoran morphology in the light of a new system of skeletal homologies for echinoderms 22. Holothurians from the Late Cretaceous of the Isle of Rügen (Baltic Sea) 23. Ordovician holothurians from the Baltic Sea area 24. Ophiocistioids and holothurians from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden 25. A new Sphaeronitid-like Aristocystitid (Diploporita) from the Ordovician of Spain Crinoids Crinoids 26. Light stable isotope geochemistry of the crinoid skeleton and its use in biology and paleobiology 27. Morphology of the stalked crinoid aboral nervous system (Echinodermata) and its possible phylogenetic implications 28. Distribution, morphology, and possible phylogeny of Triassic Crinoidea from New Zealand and New Caledonia 29. A comparison of current and previous surveys of comatulid crinoid populations at Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles 30. Antarctic comatulid crinoids (Echinodermata) 31. Just what is Atelecrinusl: Unique morphology in a living bathyal feather star 32. Stalk growth rates of Isocrinidae (Echinodermata: Crinoidea): A summary of a decade of in situ experiments 33. Life and death of the crinoid Uintacrinus (Late Cretaceous) 34. Microstructure preservation and microbial sealing in Uintacrinus Lagerstatten 35. The Seamount crinoid fauna off southern Tasmania (preliminary results) 36. Occurrence and expression of a novel Transforming Growth Factor-beta homologue in crinoids 37. Initial phylogeny of the Comasteridae (Crinoidea) from mtDNA sequences 38. Symbiosis in crinoids from the Wenlock of Britain 39. Quantification of the current regimes experienced by crinoids and ophiacanthids on the Bahamian Slope: Taller is not always better Asteroids 40. The use of lectins, particularly concanavalin - the development of primary cell cultures from echinoderms 41. Evolution of neurogenesis in the sea star genus Patiriella 42. Clade specific cleavage alteration in the genus Patiriella 43. Serotonin depletion by para-chlorophenylalanine (L-PCPA) on the larvae of Patiriella regularis (Asteroidea): Effects on feeding and swimming behavior 44. The asteroid family Goniasteridae 45. Differential expression during regeneration 46. Asterina at the millennium; Revelations from a Pembroke tide-pool 47. Coscinasterias acutispina: Distribution and ecology in Toyama Bay 48. Why is asteroid phylogeny so difficult? 49. Larval development and asexual development of the sea star, Distolasterias nipon (Doderlein) 50. Molecular data and phylogeny of the Asteroidea 51. Larval development of the sea-star, Archaster typicus Muller et Troschell, with a note on the structure of the attachment organs 52. Ampullary systems in asteroids 53. Maternal control of development in five Patiriella species 54. The haemal sinus - A possible conduit for migratory cells involved in repair and regeneration of the radial nerve cord of Coscinasterias muricata following autotomy 55. Fertilization success in the tropical sea star Oreaster reticulatus 56. Phosphorylation of 64-kDa and 96-kDa proteins by the signaling pathway induced by 1-methyladenine in starfish oocytes 57. Behavioural responses to salinity and light affects dispersal of larvae of the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, in the Derwent Estuary 58. Impact of the northern Pacific seastar Asterias amurensis on natural communities in south east Tasmania 59. High concentration of maturation-inducing hormone accelerate the activation of maturation promoting factor but not germinal vesicle breakdown in starfish oocytes 60. Of size and space: An evolutionary trade-off in fertilization strategy among oreasterid sea stars 61. Population characteristics of the sea star Oreaster reticulatus in the Bahamas and across the Caribbean 62. Surplus energy in starfish eggs 63. Parasitism of sea stars from Puget Sound, Washington by Orchitophrya stellarum 64. Feeding niche breadth and feeding niche overlap of paxillosid starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from a midshelf upwelling region, Cabo Frio, Brazil 65. Expression of the Xlox gene in a starfish Ophiuroids 66. Localisation of the neuropeptide S1 in an ophiuroid larva 67. Respiration and excretion of a dense Ophiothrix fragilis population in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France) 68. Luminescence control of the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis: Preliminary results 69. Does luminous capabilities and polychromatism reflect the genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata? ?? 70. Arm regeneration in the luminous ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata: A functional approach 71. Morphological, physiological and genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata from the lagoon system of Oliveri-Tindari (Sicily) 72. Submersible observations on the euryaline brittle star, Asteronyx loveni (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea), living in association with a gorgonacean coral 73. Zooplanktivory by the burrowing brittlestar Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1985) 74. Digestion of biofilm carbohydrates by the deposit-feeding brittlestar Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) (Ophiuroidea: Amphiuridae) 75. Assimilation of microbial exopolymers by a deposit-feeding brittlestar, Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) 76. Suture line of ophiuroid vertebral ossicles and its taxonomic significance 77. Escape behavior of epibenthic ophiuroids buried in the sediment: Observations of extant and fossil Ophiura sarsii sarsii 78. Horizontal distribution of Ophiothrix fragilis planktonic larvae associated with a tidal front in an open coastal sea 79. Effects of variable water motion on regeneration of the infaunal brittlestar, Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1825) (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) 81. Functional approach to regeneration in the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis 82. Bioluminescence and regeneration in the ophiuroid Amphiura filiformis 83. The recent evolutionary history of Ophiactis savignyi (Echinodermata; Ophiuroidea) 84. Lecithotrophic development of Ophionereis schayeri: With an overview of evolution of development within the Ophionereididae 85. Evolutionary genetics of Amphipholis squamata 86. Amphipholis linopneusti n.sp., a sexually dimorphic amphiurid brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea), epizoic on a spatangoid sea urchin 87. Cellular and molecular bases of arm regeneration in Brittlestars 88. The early development of the brittle star, Ophiodaphne formata Koehler Holothuroids 90. Brood-protection by the New Zealand cucumariid Squamocnus niveus (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) 91. Reproduction and development of sea cucumbers in the Solomon Islands: Implications for Beche-de-mer broodstock availability










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9789026518683

Condizione: Nuovo
Dimensioni: 10 x 7 in Ø 2.30 lb
Formato: Copertina rigida
Pagine Arabe: 612


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