نتایج جستجو برای: spicules

تعداد نتایج: 919  

Journal: :Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 2023

Freshwater sponges (Porifera: Spongillida) are sessile invertebrates with skeletons composed of siliceous elements termed spicules. Sponge spicules (megascleres, microscleres, and gemmuloscleres) characterized by widely varying sizes shapes. These well-preserved in lacustrine, wetland, riverine sediments hold significant ecological limnological information that can be applied as diagnostic tool...

Journal: :Folia parasitologica 2002
David González-Solís Frantisek Moravec

A new nematode species, Atractis vidali sp. n., is described from the intestine of cichlid fishes, Vieja intermedia (Günther) (type host) and Cichlasoma pearsei (Hubbs), from specimens collected in three localities in the Mexican states of Campeche (Santa Gertrudis Creek) and Chiapas (Cedros and Lacanjá Rivers). It differs from the only other atractid species reported in fishes of Mexico, Atrac...

Journal: :Biophysical journal 2002
Ranjan Mukhopadhyay Gerald Lim H W Michael Wortis

We study the shapes of human red blood cells using continuum mechanics. In particular, we model the crenated, echinocytic shapes and show how they may arise from a competition between the bending energy of the plasma membrane and the stretching/shear elastic energies of the membrane skeleton. In contrast to earlier work, we calculate spicule shapes exactly by solving the equations of continuum ...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2015
Julia Zograf Yulia Trebukhova Olga Pavlyuk

In deep-sea sediments from the Sea of Japan, two new species, Halichoanolaimus brandtae sp. n. and Siphonolaimus japonicus sp. n., were found and described. Siphonolaimus japonicus sp. n. is characterized by having short anterior sensillae, body length of 3670-4500 μm, buccal cavity with axial spear, and length of the spicules. Halichoanolaimus brandtae sp.n is characterized by the number of am...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2015
Henry M Reiswig

A new sac-shaped hexactinellid collected from western Canada bearing long lateral prostal spicules was first thought to be a typical Rossellinae.  Subsequent examination of its spiculation proved it to have distinctive strobiloplumicomes, typical of the subfamily Lanuginellinae.  Other spicules showed it to be a member of the monospecific genus Doconesthes, known previously only from the North ...

Journal: :Astronomy & Astrophysics 2007

Journal: :Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 2004

Journal: :Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy 2015

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