Results 151 to 160 of about 5,611 (212)
Grape Marc as a Functional Feed Ingredient for Farmed Snails <i>(Cornu aspersum maximum</i>): Effects on Production Performance, Parasitological Status, and Meat Quality. [PDF]
Hatziioannou M +7 more
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THE MUCOPROTEINS OF THE SNAILS, HELIX ASPERSA AND HELIX POMATIA
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On the regeneration of the eye in Helix aspersa and Cryptomphallus aspersa
Zeitschrift f�r Zellforschung und Mikroskopische Anatomie, 1973The distal half of the posterior tentacle of adult Helix aspersa and Cryptomphallus aspersa was removed and the proximal half was studied with light and electron microscopy after different intervals. The tentacle itself does not regenerate, but the receptor organs at the distal end of the normal tentacle differentiate at the level of the section.
V F, Scarsso, A, Pellegrino de Iraldi
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Ionic regulation in the snail, Helix aspersa
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1968Abstract 1. 1. Sodium in the blood of Helix aspera varied between 58 and 138 mM/l. and other cations comparably. 2. 2. In specimens that had fasted 1–11 days and had then been in contact with water for 2 hr, sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium averaged 68 ± S.D. 6, 2·9 ± S.D. 0·3, 6·2 ± S.D. 1·1 and 3·6 ± S.D.
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CO2 chemoreception in the pulmonate snail, Helix aspersa
Respiration Physiology, 1993We have studied the response of the pneumostome to CO2, O2 and combined CO2 and O2 in intact snails. We found that pneumostomal opening increases in response to both hypercapnia and mild hypoxia. We determined which neural structures were essential for the pneumostomal response to CO2 by eliminating parts of the nervous system: the subesophageal ...
J S, Erlichman, J C, Leiter
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Metal binding by Helix aspersa blood
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1981Abstract 1. 1. A technique is described for measuring the ultrafilterable and non-ultrafilterable fractions of metals in the blood of the snail H. aspersa . 2. 2. The degree of metal binding is similar to that of chelating agents such as EDTA. 3. 3.
B. Howard, K. Simkiss
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Observations on Reproduction in Helix aspersa
American Midland Naturalist, 1962There are five distinct periods involved in the life history of Helix aspersa. This study is concerned with those portions of the reproductive cycle which are grossly visible, and particularly with the time involved in each period. Preliminary maneuvering averages 30 minutes, and subsequent copulation time 6.5 hours.
Fred Herzberg, Anne Herzberg
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