Results 201 to 210 of about 34,695 (231)
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2023
Abstract Copepod species in the family Diaptomidae, also some Centropagidae and Pontellidae, produce two kinds of eggs, depending upon conditions: subitaneous eggs hatching after immediate development and resting eggs hatching only after conditions change to again favor full development. For Diaptomus species living in and “disappearing”
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Abstract Copepod species in the family Diaptomidae, also some Centropagidae and Pontellidae, produce two kinds of eggs, depending upon conditions: subitaneous eggs hatching after immediate development and resting eggs hatching only after conditions change to again favor full development. For Diaptomus species living in and “disappearing”
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Bulletin of Entomological Research, 2001
AbstractDesiccation resistance was examined in pre-diapause, diapause and post-diapause larvae of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens), in terms of passive water evaporation under three desiccation conditions: freeze-drying, desiccant-drying at 2°C and desiccant-drying 18°C.
, Bauce E, E, Han
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AbstractDesiccation resistance was examined in pre-diapause, diapause and post-diapause larvae of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens), in terms of passive water evaporation under three desiccation conditions: freeze-drying, desiccant-drying at 2°C and desiccant-drying 18°C.
, Bauce E, E, Han
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Transgenic Research, 2017
Diapause is a state of developmental arrest that is most often observed in arthropods, especially insects. The domesticated silkworm, Bombyx mori, is a typical insect that enters diapause at an early embryonic stage. Previous studies have revealed that the diapause hormone (DH) signaling molecules, especially the core members DH and DH receptor 1 (DHR1)
Chunying Gong +7 more
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Diapause is a state of developmental arrest that is most often observed in arthropods, especially insects. The domesticated silkworm, Bombyx mori, is a typical insect that enters diapause at an early embryonic stage. Previous studies have revealed that the diapause hormone (DH) signaling molecules, especially the core members DH and DH receptor 1 (DHR1)
Chunying Gong +7 more
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Diapause in Monogonont Rotifers
Hydrobiologia, 2005This review focuses on more recent findings on the diapause in Monogonont rotifers, since the major reviews by Pourriot & Snell (1983, Hydrobiologia 104: 213–224) and Gilbert (1992, Rotifera. In Adiyodi, K. G. & R. G. Adiyodi (eds), Reproductive Biology of Invertebrates, Vol. 5 – Sexual Differentiation and Behaviour. IBH Publishing Co., Oxford: 115–136;
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