Results 181 to 190 of about 28,227 (230)
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Barnacle reattachment: a tool for studying barnacle adhesion

Biofouling, 2008
Standard approaches for measuring adhesion strength of fouling organisms use barnacles, tubeworms or oysters settled and grown in the field or laboratory, to a measurable size. These approaches suffer from the vagaries of larval supply, settlement behavior, predation, disturbance and environmental stress.
D, Rittschof   +6 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Hæmoglobin in Barnacles

Nature, 1963
HAEMOGLOBIN is known from many groups of Crustacea, excluding Malacostraca; but it has not previously been found in the non-parasitic Cirripedia1. It is, therefore, interesting to record the occurrence of haemoglobin in Balanus perforatus Bruguiere, a common intertidal barnacle of southern Britain, south-west Europe, the Mediterranean and north-west ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Making Mountains out of Barnacles: The Dynamics of Acorn Barnacle Hummocking

Ecology, 1998
Like plants, sessile invertebrates are often morphologically modified at high densities. At high densities acorn barnacles commonly form hummocks of tall, densely packed individuals. We examined hummock development and its consequences on filter feeding and growth in the northern acorn barnacle, Semibalanus balanoides.
Mark D. Bertness   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Darwin’s Barnacles

2015
The collection of both recent and fossilised barnacles that are amongst those that Darwin studied, are now stored within the Natural History Museum (NHM) in London. Occasionally parts of this collection of over 180 fossil and 1,500 extant barnacle specimens are put on public view as part of special exhibitions.
Miranda Lowe, Carolyn J. Boulter
openaire   +1 more source

Feeding of Barnacles

Nature, 1955
AT the start of an investigation into the rate of feeding of the different species of intertidal barnacles, I was surprised to find that there was very little published information on the methods employed for the capture of food or on the organisms eaten by these ubiquitous animals.
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Barnacles

2009
Dagmar Fertl, William A. Newman
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Barnacles

2020
Avelin Mary, R. Sarojini
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Mobility of Barnacles

Nature, 1960
IF a young barnacle is removed from a surface the remains of the antennal suckers, marking the point at which the individual cemented itself as a cypris larva, may sometimes be found near the centre of its base. It has generally been assumed that this point of basal attachment is fixed.
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