Results 251 to 260 of about 1,273,785 (287)
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First inventory of sea anemones (Cnidaria: Actiniaria) from La Paz Bay, southern Gulf of California (Mexico).

Zootaxa, 2019
Sea anemones from the Mexican Pacific are poorly known. We report and redescribe eight species of sea anemones from La Paz Bay in the southern Gulf of California, Mexico.
Yamaly Barragán   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Population dynamics of corkscrew sea anemones Bartholomea annulata in the Florida Keys

, 2017
Corkscrew sea anemones Bartholomea annulata are important ecologically as hubs of a mutualistic network involving cleaner shrimps and client fishes on Caribbean reefs.
Erin E. OReilly, N. E. Chadwick
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Habitat segregation and population structure of Caribbean sea anemones and associated crustaceans on coral reefs at Akumal Bay, Mexico

, 2017
Sea anemones and associated crustaceans are important components of coral reefs, but their population structure and microhabitat use remain poorly understood.
Alexandra M Colombara   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Chitin in Sea Anemone Shells

Science, 1983
Chitin, which is widely distributed among life forms, is well documented in the coelenterate class Hydrozoa and is contained in one member of class Scyphozoa. In class Anthozoa, hard corals synthesize it but soft corals do not. Chitin was identified by infrared spectrophotometry in the trochoid shell of the actinian Stylobates
Daphne Fautin Dunn, Martin H. Liberman
openaire   +3 more sources

Structures of sea anemone toxins

Toxicon, 2009
Sea anemones produce a variety of toxic peptides and proteins, including many ion channel blockers and modulators, as well as potent cytolysins. This review describes the structures that have been determined to date for the major classes of peptide and protein toxins.
openaire   +3 more sources

Narcotising Sea Anemones

Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1989
Many techniques have been devised to overcome certain problems encountered when narcotising actiniarians. From these a few have been selected as being at least partly successful. Further modifications to these narcotising methods have been introduced in order to block more effectively the nervous pathways responsible for secondary contraction reactions.
openaire   +2 more sources

Digestion in sea anemones

Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1959
A sea anemone, normally a passive-looking animal, reacts to suitable food-stuffs by a series of fairly complicated activities. When its tentacles encounter solid food there is, first of all, a discharge of cnidae, which poison living prey and adhere to the food mass.
openaire   +2 more sources

New records of Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic sea anemones (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Actiniaria and Corallimorpharia) from the Weddell Sea, Antarctic Peninsula, and Scotia Arc.

Zootaxa, 2013
Herein we provide new records for 22 Antarctic species of sea anemone sensu lato (Anthozoa: Actiniaria and Corallimorpharia) from the Weddell Sea, Antarctic Peninsula, and the Scotia Sea.
E. Rodríguez
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The British Sea Anemones

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.
openaire   +2 more sources

Overview of sea anemones

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
openaire   +2 more sources

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