Results 241 to 250 of about 28,732 (262)
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Nature, 1935
THE sea anemone fauna of Great Britain is -oo now known much better than that of any other area in the world, largely as a result of the twenty years work that has been put into Prof. T. A. Stephenson's magnificent monograph, just completed by the appearance of the descriptive volume. The British Sea Anemones. By Prof. T. A. Stephenson. Vol. 2.
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THE sea anemone fauna of Great Britain is -oo now known much better than that of any other area in the world, largely as a result of the twenty years work that has been put into Prof. T. A. Stephenson's magnificent monograph, just completed by the appearance of the descriptive volume. The British Sea Anemones. By Prof. T. A. Stephenson. Vol. 2.
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Sea Anemone Toxins Affecting Potassium Channels
2009The great diversity of K(+) channels and their wide distribution in many tissues are associated with important functions in cardiac and neuronal excitability that are now better understood thanks to the discovery of animal toxins. During the past few decades, sea anemones have provided a variety of toxins acting on voltage-sensitive sodium and, more ...
Sylvie, Diochot, Michel, Lazdunski
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1991
To romantics they are Gosse’s ‘blossomed beauties’ and Roughley’s ‘flowers of the reef’, but despite their botanical common name, sea anemones are voracious animals — Dalyell’s ‘fell devourers of whatever they can overpower’. They belong to the Anthozoa, one of four extant classes (Figure 1.1) within the phylum Cnidaria (tentacle-bearing Radiata having
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To romantics they are Gosse’s ‘blossomed beauties’ and Roughley’s ‘flowers of the reef’, but despite their botanical common name, sea anemones are voracious animals — Dalyell’s ‘fell devourers of whatever they can overpower’. They belong to the Anthozoa, one of four extant classes (Figure 1.1) within the phylum Cnidaria (tentacle-bearing Radiata having
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1985
Publisher Summary The absence of cytological studies on sea anemones during the first 60 years of the twentieth century led biologists to interpret their observations by reference to those of the nineteenth century or to those known in the most studied cnidarian, Hydra.
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Publisher Summary The absence of cytological studies on sea anemones during the first 60 years of the twentieth century led biologists to interpret their observations by reference to those of the nineteenth century or to those known in the most studied cnidarian, Hydra.
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