PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «ASCIDIAN TADPOLE»
ascidian tadpole
ascidian
tadpole
labeled
slide
larvae
settlement
metamorphosis
ascidians
texture
preferences
during
marine
larva
comparative
molecular
development
genet
genomics
satoh
evolution
interest
only
noun
swimming
they
have
tail
like
that
contains
notochord
ascidiaceae
class
solitary
into
sessile
filter
feeding
juveniles
divided
phases
rapid
reaction
followed
define
having
containing
what
meaning
laboratory
biology
typical
cavity
sensory
vesicle
neck
nerve
cord
neurohypophysis
ocellus
otolith
post
posterior
figure
panel
shows
adults
with
incurrent
siphons
arrowhead
outcurrent
asterisk
circulating
seawater
from
which
plankton
neurobiology
given
phylogenetic
significance
long
tracted
attention
biologists
nevertheless
many
studies
vocabulary
distribution
structural
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «ASCIDIAN TADPOLE»
Scopri l'uso di
ascidian tadpole nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
ascidian tadpole e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
A Textbook of Vertebrate Zoology
The tail is not like that of the ascidian tadpole, it is a broad structure held at an
angle to the rest of the body. It is an efficient locomotor organ supported by a
notochord that does not extend into the trunk. The dorsal and ventral fin-folds of
the tail ...
S N Prasad, S. N. Prasad, Vasantika Kashyap, 1989
2
The Changing Role of the Embryo in Evolutionary Thought: ...
He later discovered that the earliest stages of am- phioxus development were not
recognizably vertebrate, but they were similar to the early stages of development
of the ascidian tadpole. Ascidian tadpoles are active swimmers, but they ...
3
Morphogenesis: An Analysis of the Development of Biological ...
G. O. Mackle and Q. Bone, Skin impulses and locomotion in an ascidian tadpole.
J. Mar. Biol. Assoc. U.K. 56: 751-768 (1976). 48. Q. Bone, Evolutionary patterns of
axial muscle systems in some invertebrates and fish. Am. Zool. 29: 5-18 (1989) ...
Edward F. Rossomando, Stephen Alexander, 1992
Wnte short notes on — (i) Molecular events in the development of ascidian, (ii)
Ascidian tadpole larva, (iii) Retrogressive metamorphosis, (iv) Significance of
ascidian embryology, (v) Fate map of fertilized egg. \. In Ascidians fertilization
occurs ...
5
Intertidal Invertebrates of California
The fine structure of the connections between muscle cells in ascidian tadpole
larva. J. Cell Biol. 23: 664-69. Bertrand, G. A. 1971. The ecology of the nest-
building bivalve Mu- sculus lateralis commensal with the ascidian Molgula
occidentalis.
6
Cell Commitment and Differentiation
Examples of both are discussed, both for animals with mosaic development (
molluscs, the ascidian tadpole of tunicates, nematodes, annelids, and
ctenophores) and for those with regulative development (echino- derms,
amphibians, and ...
Norman Maclean, Brian Keith Hall, 1987
7
Modern Text Book of Zoology: Vertebrates
Significance of ascidian tadpole The presence of a tadpole larva in the life history
of Herdmania and other ascidians is significant in the following ways : 1.
Taxonomic significance. The larva possesses true chordate characters, such as ...
8
Neural Crest Cells: Evolution, Development and Disease
[67] Meinertzhagen IA, Lemaire P, Okamura Y. The neuro- biology of the ascidian
tadpole larva: recent developments in an ancient chordate. Annu Rev Neurosci
2004;27:453À85. [68] Dilly PN. Studies on the receptors in the cerebral vesicle ...
9
Cell Lineage and Fate Determination
An advantage is that the ascidian tadpole consists of a very small number of
distinct types of tissues, and the cell lineage is completely described up to the
gastrula stage. We are able to identify every blastomere in early embryos, and
thus are ...
10
The Origin and Fate of Somites
The ascidian tadpole is in many ways similar to the mitrate form. The craniate
form, with a new trunk and posterior head, likely evolved from the mitrate form by
overlapping of the head and tail fields during the signaling period of the
pregastrula ...
Esmond J. Sanders, James W. Lash, Charles P. Ordahl, 2001