Results 141 to 150 of about 5,164 (176)
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Hormones in Plants and Invertebrates

Nature, 1952
The Action of Hormones in Plants and Invertebrates Edited by Kenneth V. Thimann. (Reprinted, with additions and supplementary bibliographies, from ‘The Hormones’, Vol. 1.) Pp. viii + 228. (New York: Academic Press, Inc., 1952.) 5.80 dollars.
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Invertebrate Systems for the Study of Hormonal Effects on Behavior

1978
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses invertebrate systems for the study of hormonal effects on behavior. It has long been known that hormones can have profound effects on behavior. The most familiar examples of these effects are the changes that occur in many vertebrates during their breeding seasons.
J W, Truman, L M, Riddiford
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Complex of Steroid Hormones in Invertebrate Hydrobionts

Inland Water Biology
S. M. Nikitina, Ju. Ju. Polunina
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The Complex of Steroid Hormones in Invertebrate Hydrobionts

Biologiâ vnutrennih vod
The presence of a complex of biologically active steroid compounds (BASC) – hydrocortisone, corticosterone, progesterone, testosterone and estrogens (vertebrate hormones) in invertebrate hydrobionts of different phylogenetic levels was revealed in the experiments.
S. M. Nikitina, J. J. Polunina
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Hormonal Influences on Invertebrate Aggressive Behavior

1983
Aggressive behavior has been described in nearly all of the invertebrate groups. In many cases the presence or absence of aggression, or the intensity of aggressive expression, is known to vary with time or with changing environmental conditions; such variation is suggestive of hormonal influences, but direct hormonal control of aggression has been ...
Michael D. Breed, William J. Bell
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Vertebrate Protein and Peptide Hormones

2016
When analyzing invertebrates in the 1930s and 1940s, Berta and Hans Schaller developed the idea of neurosecretion using the large oceanic snail A. californica (Califonia sea hare) with its few and relatively large neurons. Neuropeptides have been found in all metazoans. Where whole genome sequences are available such as in bees A.
Bernhard Kleine, Winfried G. Rossmanith
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Gonadotropin-releasing hormone in invertebrates: Structure, function, and evolution

General and Comparative Endocrinology, 2006
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is central to the initiation and maintenance of reproduction in vertebrates. GnRH is found in all major groups of Phylum Chordata, including the protochordates. Studies on functional and structural evolution of GnRH have, in the past, focused exclusively on chordates.
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Hormonal regulation and disruption in invertebrates – An historical perspective and recent findings

Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology
Invertebrates are the most successful and evolutionary diverse animals. Due to their long evolutionary history and vast distribution and adaptations to several environmental niches, they exhibit an astounding degree of morphological and functional diversity. Invertebrates make up more than 90% of the world’s species and their existence is essential for
Vinagre, Anapaula Sommer   +2 more
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Hormones in Invertebrates

1964
MANFRED GABE, PETER KARLSON, JEAN ROCHE
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