PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «POLYPIDE»
polypide
bryozoans
encompasses
most
organs
tissues
each
individual
zooid
this
includes
tentacles
tentacle
sheath
shaped
digestive
tract
musculature
nerve
cells
housed
zooidal
skeleton
which
cyclostomes
tubular
cheilostomes
polypide
merriam
webster
zooids
bryozoan
colony
origin
polyp
greek
idēs
patronymic
suffix
first
known
learn
more
about
define
with
pronunciation
look
wiktionary
edit
noun
plural
polypides
internal
contents
muscular
systems
retrieved
from
anatomy
encyclopedia
britannica
degenerates
periodically
during
lifetime
compact
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «POLYPIDE»
Descubre el uso de
polypide en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
polypide y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Recent and Fossil Bryozoa: Papers Presented at the 5th ...
Concurrent with growth recommencement, there is mass polypide regeneration
in the fronds. Lutaud (1957) observed the same re-activation process in C.
papyracea colonies on the French coast. The French population differs from that
at ...
Gilbert Powell Larwood, Claus Nielsen, 1981
2
Monograph of the Fresh-water-polyzoa, including all the ...
It is the rudimental polypide, and we soon find in it a cavity, which is to become
that of the tentacular sheath, within which, when viewed in front, may be seen an
oval ring (fig. 5) which is afterwards to become the lophophore of the polypide.
George-James Allman, 1856
3
Bryozoan Studies 2004: Proceedings of the 13th International ...
and suppress some influence linked to the presence of an active polypide. The
influence must be a neurosecretion, the degeneration of the polypide including
necrosis of the central nervous system (the nervous lophophoral ganglion of a ...
Hugo Moyano, Juan Cancino, Patrick Wyse Jackson, 2005
It is the rudimental polypide, and we soon find in it a cavity, which is to become
that of the tentacular sheath, within which, when viewed in front, may be seen an
oval ring (fig. 5) which is afterwards to become the lophophore of the polypide.
5
Bryozoa: Ordovician to Recent : Papers Presented at the 6th ...
We have measured vestibule length; depth below skeletal aperture of ligament
attachment, mouth and caecum terminus; tentacle and polypide length; diameters
of tentacle sheath and living chamber; nearest- neighbour spacing of zooids on ...
Claus Nielsen, Gilbert Powell Larwood, 1985
6
Invertebrate Palaeontology and Evolution
When the polypide is retracted, it lies entirely within the cystid and the orifice is
closed. \X/hen it emerges, it comes through the distal part of the orifice as the
anter lifts up. Connected to the proximal part of the orifice below the poster is a
sac, ...
7
Ctenostome Bryozoans: Keys and Notes for the Identification ...
As the polypide of the new autozooid nears completion the filament severs its
connection with the originating hetero- zooid and a new Aethozoon colony is
created. The filament remains as the finely tapered proximal portion of the new ...
Peter Joseph Hayward, Linnean Society of London, 1985
8
A Student's Text-book of Zoology: Protozoa to Chaetognatha
The larva which issues, either by the degeneration of the polypide or the opening
out of the zooecium, is covered with cilia by means of which it swims. It is the
primary zooecium: during its free-swimming life it develops a complete polypide,
...
Adam Sedgwick, Joseph Jackson Lister, Sir Arthur Everett Shipley, 1808
The polypide and cystid are contained within a capsule. The polypide is the
name given to the flexible and extensible part of the soft body (tentacles,
digestive and reproductive organs, etc.). It can degenerate and regenerate. The
so-called ...
10
Biology and Palaeobiology of Bryozoans: Proceedings of the ...
Similar size problems occur with particles (e.g. the dinoflagellate Peridinium
steinii) possessing spiny or elongate processes which effectively increase the
size of the organisms beyond the mouth diameter of the polypide. In a few cases
the ...
Peter J. Hayward, John Stanley Ryland, Paul D. Taylor, 1994