Results 161 to 170 of about 3,571 (228)
Proteome-wide neuropeptide identification using NeuroPeptide-HMMer (NP-HMMer)
Zandawala M +4 more
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The Use of Environmental DNA as Preliminary Description of Invertebrate Diversity in Three Sicilian Lakes. [PDF]
Mauro M +14 more
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Of sequences and images - diversity and quantity of Arctic epipelagic zooplankton by an integrative approach. [PDF]
Laakmann S +7 more
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Species diversity of bdelloid rotifer (Rotifera, Bdelloidea) in different areas in China, with a description of two new species. [PDF]
Wang W, Yang Y, Örstan A, He Z, Wang Q.
europepmc +1 more source
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2015
AbstractRotifers are some of the smallest known invertebrates and have been described from all aquatic (marine, estuarine, freshwater) and some semi-terrestrial (soils, mosses) environments. They were the first ‘animalcules’, described by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in the seventeenth century, and since then, have been the subject of countless ...
Fontaneto Diego, De Smet Willem H
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AbstractRotifers are some of the smallest known invertebrates and have been described from all aquatic (marine, estuarine, freshwater) and some semi-terrestrial (soils, mosses) environments. They were the first ‘animalcules’, described by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in the seventeenth century, and since then, have been the subject of countless ...
Fontaneto Diego, De Smet Willem H
openaire +5 more sources
Rotifera from Burundi: the Lepadellidae (Rotifera: Monogononta)
Hydrobiologia, 2001We studied the distribution of Lepadellidae (Rotifera) in freshwater habitats in the floodplain of the River Rusizi in northwest Burundi. Twenty-three species belonging to Colurella Bory de St. Vincent, 1824 (3 species), Lepadella Bory de St. Vincent, 1826 (18 species) and Squatinella Bory de St.
Deo Baribwegure, Hendrik Segers
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Rotifera from Australian inland waters. I. Bdelloidea (Rotifera : Digononta)
Marine and Freshwater Research, 1986In this paper, the first of a series providing a systematic revision of all Rotifera now known from Australian inland waters, the common bdelloid rotifers are reviewed. The group is epiphytic or epibenthic in habit, but some species commonly occur in open water of billabongs, lakes and rivers, particularly in association with algal blooms.
Koste, W., Shiel, R. J.
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