Unbalanced predatory communities and a lack of microbial degraders characterize the microbiota of a highly sewage-polluted Eastern-Mediterranean stream. [PDF]
Cohen Y +5 more
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Nutrient-driven growth and microbiome shifts in the brown alga Sargassum fluitans III. [PDF]
Theirlynck T +7 more
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Identification and characterization of the de novo methyltransferases for eukaryotic <i>N</i><sup>6</sup>-methyladenine (6mA). [PDF]
Cheng T +9 more
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18S rRNA Metagenomic Analysis of Nodular Gill Disease in Swiss Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). [PDF]
Wynne JW +7 more
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Microbes with plastic-degrading and pathogenic potentials are present on plastics in the final polishing pond of a wastewater treatment plant. [PDF]
Wallbank JA +9 more
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The Ecology, Morphology and Taxonomy of Freshwater Peritrich Ciliates
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What the Peritrichs Have Taught Us*†
Journal of Protozoology, 1969SYNOPSIS. The peritrichs have taught naturalists, biologists, zoologists, and other kinds of scientists many of their secrets. Consequently, we know many details regarding their gross structure, ultrastructure, ecology, and life history. Their sexual phenomena are rather clearly understood.
Harold E Finley
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On the stalks of certain peritrichs
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B, Biological Sciences, 1962Abstract The stalks of peritrich protozoa have aroused great interest for many years and for many reasons. Some are contractile, some are not. This attribute of contractility, first observed by Leeuwenhoek in Vorticella and published in this journal in 1676, is one good reason for further studies of a structural, cytochemical and ...
John Turton Randall
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Observations on Argentophilic Granules of Certain Peritrichs*
Journal of Protozoology, 1964SYNOPSIS. Studies of certain members of the order Peritrichida, namely species of Carchesium, Epistylis, Vorticella and Zoothamnium, have revealed prominent argentophilic granules, probably cuticular pores, on the bells of all species, located on the transverse striations which encircle the bells. With light microscopy they appear similar to the basal
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