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P17-15: Behavioural response to microplastics: case study with woodlice and daphnids

Toxicology Letters, 2023
A. Jemec, D. Kuhnel, D. Drobne, P. Zidar
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Exotic Woodlice in the British Isles

Nature, 1943
I HAVE recently received from a greenhouse near York a small (2 mm. long) white woodlouse, which I identify as Trichorina thermophila (Dollfus)1, a Central American species. This, or an allied species, has previously been reported from glasshouses at Kew, Newcastle-on-Tyne, Winlaton Mill2, Glasgow3 and Belfast4.
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Woodlice as material for research projects

Journal of Biological Education, 1980
Abstract Woodlice are easy to obtain in large numbers, their biology is relatively simple, they are easy to culture, and the common species can usually be recognized with the naked eye: consequently they provide ideal material for student research projects.
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TEGUMENTAL GLANDS AND TERRESTRIAL LIFE IN WOODLICE

Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1956
SUMMARY The lobed tegumental glands would seem to play an important part in adapting woodlice to life on land, but although the problem seems a simple one, it has by no means been easy to determine their function. Evidence from comparative anatomy and physiology is unhelpful and often puzzling, and inactivating the glands seems to have no effect on ...
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Woodlice on the Map

Journal of Biogeography, 1986
G. D. Fussey   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Clustering in woodlice

Journal of Biological Education, 1989
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Stevenia deceptoria (Diptera, Rhinophoridae): Chile’s second woodlice-parasitizing fly species studied using citizen science

Journal of Asia-Pacific Entomology
R. M. Barahona‐Segovia   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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