Results 171 to 180 of about 6,729 (216)
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Notes on Cretaceous Asteroidea

Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 1940
Introduction The publication by the Palaeontographical Society of a monograph on the Cretaceous asteroids by Sladen and Spencer (1891–1908) and by the Royal Society of a paper by Dr. Spencer (1913) on the evolution of the same group might seem to have exhausted the subject for the time being. Very many of the starfish figured in the monograph,
Claud William Wright, E. V. Wright
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Asteroidea

1938
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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ASTEROIDEA

1932
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Digestive Systems: Asteroidea*

2020
info:eu-repo/semantics ...
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Asteroideae Lindl.

Published as part of Feng, Zhen-Hao, Huang, Zhang-Jie, Sun, Hao-Nan & Liu, Su, 2024, Meeting Necessity instead of Serendipity: Miscellaneous Nomenclatural Notes on Asteraceae, pp.
Feng, Zhen-Hao   +3 more
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Georgella asteroidea K.Viets 1930

2009
Published as part of Sabatino, Antonio Di, Gerecke, Reinhard, Gledhill, Terence & Smit, Harry, 2009, On the taxonomy of water mites (Acari: Hydrachnidia) described from the Palaearctic, part 2: Hydryphantoidea and Lebertioidea, pp.
Sabatino, Antonio Di   +3 more
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Food and Feeding Mechanisms: Asteroidea

2020
This chapter is concerned only with the food and feeding mechanisms of asteroids. Organically rich sediment grains and then-associated micro- and meiofauna appear to be an important food resource for deep-sea asteroids. Food specialization is only linked to prey availability as some species exhibit a real food preference.
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ECHINODERMATA (OTHER THAN ASTEROIDEA)

1932
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Larval Development and Metamorphosis of Acanthaster planci (Asteroidea)

Nature, 1971
LITTLE is known of the factors influencing survival during the planktonic phase of Acanthaster planci (Linnaeus), the crown of thorns starfish, apart from an observation of fish eating newly released eggs1. But it is not surprising that this phase has been suggested as the cause of the recent plague of the animal in the Pacific2–4, for large females ...
J A, Henderson, J S, Lucas
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Asteroidea de Blainville 1830

Published as part of Pourvali, Naser, Aliabadi, Mohammad-Ali Salari, Salamat, Negin, Hesni, Majid Askari, Ranjbar, Mohammad Sharif, Carter, Hugh & Price, Andrew. R. G., 2025, Systematics, distribution and ecology of sea stars (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from Iranian waters of the Persian Gulf and a revised identification key, pp.
Pourvali, Naser   +6 more
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