Results 161 to 170 of about 5,114 (184)
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Journal of Experimental Biology, 2005
![Figure][1] It's been known for some time that cuttlefish have contractile veins, but only from dissections; nobody had ever seen them contract in a live, free-swimming cuttlefish. To investigate this remarkable feature, Alison King and her colleagues at Dalhousie University and the ...
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![Figure][1] It's been known for some time that cuttlefish have contractile veins, but only from dissections; nobody had ever seen them contract in a live, free-swimming cuttlefish. To investigate this remarkable feature, Alison King and her colleagues at Dalhousie University and the ...
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1968
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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2021
Humans everywhere have always been fascinated by octopuses, squid, and cuttlefish, known biologically as cephalopods. They evolved hundreds of millions of years ago and are related to molluscs such as mussels and snails. They can grow to an enormous size with eyes as big as footballs, but they still live for only a couple of years.
Mouritsen, Ole G., Styrbæk, Klavs
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Humans everywhere have always been fascinated by octopuses, squid, and cuttlefish, known biologically as cephalopods. They evolved hundreds of millions of years ago and are related to molluscs such as mussels and snails. They can grow to an enormous size with eyes as big as footballs, but they still live for only a couple of years.
Mouritsen, Ole G., Styrbæk, Klavs
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Squids, cuttlefish and octopuses∗
Marine Behaviour and Physiology, 1990General biology of cephalopods is described. First, all commercially important cephalopods are classified and the general morphology and distribution of all major families is described in detail. Mating and spawning characteristics of all major families are discussed in detail.
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Nature, 1959
IT is generally recognized that the cuttlebone not only serves the cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis (L.), as a skeleton but also gives it buoyancy. The cuttlebone contains gas spaces which give it a density of about 0.6. It is also known that cuttlefish kept in aquaria sometimes tend to float at the surface and appear to be lighter than sea water.
E. J. DENTON, J. B. GILPIN-BROWN
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IT is generally recognized that the cuttlebone not only serves the cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis (L.), as a skeleton but also gives it buoyancy. The cuttlebone contains gas spaces which give it a density of about 0.6. It is also known that cuttlefish kept in aquaria sometimes tend to float at the surface and appear to be lighter than sea water.
E. J. DENTON, J. B. GILPIN-BROWN
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Translating Cuttlefish: Underwater Lifewritings
Biography, 2009In underwater life-writing, poetry, marine biology, and memoir meet like ocean currents. Both biography—the subject is the sea—and autobiography—the subject is the writer—the genre's practitioners explore metaphor and metamorphosis in sea life and in themselves.
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White reflection from cuttlefish skin leucophores
Bioinspiration & Biomimetics, 2018The highly diverse and changeable body patterns of cephalopods require the production of whiteness of varying degrees of brightness for their large repertoire of communication and camouflage behaviors. Leucophores are structural reflectors that produce whiteness in cephalopods; they are dermal aggregates of numerous leucocytes containing spherical ...
Roger T Hanlon +4 more
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New Scientist, 2008
Not content with being masters of camouflage, cuttlefish have a sophisticated system for talking to one another on the sly, reveals Michael ...
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Not content with being masters of camouflage, cuttlefish have a sophisticated system for talking to one another on the sly, reveals Michael ...
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Contact dermatitis from cuttlefish
Contact Dermatitis, 1992E, Burches, C, Morales, A, Pelaez
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