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Venomous Animals and Their Venoms [PDF]
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Ant Venoms: A Study of Venom Diversity
1978Ant venoms appear to represent an almost untapped reservoir of information capable of adding several exciting chapters to the story of toxinology. Ants share with some bees and wasps the distinction of being the only truly social group of venomous animals. This fact implies that most of the venomous individuals belong to an essentially sterile class of
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Venoms and Venom Glands of Marine Molluscs
1984The phylum Mollusca, consisting of about 100,000 living species, is divided into seven classes. Venom glands occur in molluscs belonging to the classes Gastropoda and Cephalopoda. Toxins acquired from the environment, such as paralytic shellfish poisons, are found in certain Pelecypoda (bivalves), but also some gastropods have been found to accumulate ...
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‘Venomics’ or: The venomous systems genome project
Toxicon, 2006Dietrich Mebs+2 more
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The Venom Glands of Snakes and Venom Secretion
1979The origin of snake venom has been variously ascribed to different body organs. The idea that the venom virulence depends on the snake’s anger led to a famous controversy in the late 17 th century. Redi, an Italien biologist, ascribed the dangerous nature of the venom to the yellow liquid issuing from the fangs, while the French chemist, Charas ...
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More in spider venom than venom?
The Lancet, 1990BerylA. Oppenheim, Ian Taggart
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VENOM GLANDS, VENOM SYNTHESIS, VENOM SECRETION AND EVOLUTION
1980E. Kochva+4 more
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Bibliography of Snake Venoms and Venomous Snakes
Copeia, 1965Richard Shirley Scharffenberg+2 more
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