Search results for "Crustacea"

showing 10 items of 244 documents

EFFECTS OF ACUSTIC STRESS ON BIOCHEMICAL AND MOBILITY PARAMETERS AND BEHAVIOUR IN THE CRAYFISH, CHERAX DESTRUCTOR

2022

acoustic effectbehavioural responseSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiacrustaceanSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E Citologia
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Multidimensionality and intra-individual variation in host manipulation by an acanthocephalan

2008

Parasitology, 135 (5)

altered host phenotype; plastic/flexible behaviour; repeatability; Asellus aquaticus; Acanthocephala; intermediate host; isopodZoologyColoraltered host phenotypeAcanthocephalaHost-Parasite InteractionsIsopodaAnimalsAsellus aquaticusrepeatabilitybiologyBehavior AnimalHost (biology)Acanthocephalus luciiEcologyisopodintermediate hostIntermediate hostbiology.organism_classificationIntra individualCrustaceanInfectious DiseasesPhenotypeAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyAcanthocephalaplastic/flexible behaviourIsopoda
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Long-lasting effect of stress on susceptibility of a freshwater clam to copepod parasitism.

2005

The question whether a stress event can have a long-lasting effect on susceptibility to parasites was studied using a freshwater bivalve clam and its crustacean parasite as a model system. Anodonta piscinalis clams were collected from 2 populations during August–September 2002. Clams were transported to the laboratory and marked. The stressed clams were subjected to low oxygen for 25 days, while the unstressed control clams were caged in their lakes of origin for the same period. Then the clams were transported to a third lake where they were exposed to natural infections by the ergasilid copepod, Paraergasilus rylovi , 11 months after the stress event. The stressed clams were more intensiv…

animal structuresAnodontaFreshwater bivalvebiologyEcologyHost (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectParasitismZoologybiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanBivalviaHost-Parasite InteractionsCopepodaInfectious DiseasesParasite hostingAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyFemaleReproductionCopepodmedia_commonParasitology
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Biomineralizations: insights and prospects from crustaceans.

2011

19 pages; International audience; For growing, crustaceans have to molt cyclically because of the presence of a rigid exoskeleton. Most of the crustaceans harden their cuticle not only by sclerotization, like all the arthropods, but also by calcification. All the physiology of crustaceans, including the calcification process, is then linked to molting cycles. This means for these animals to find regularly a source of calcium ions quickly available just after ecdysis. The sources of calcium used are diverse, ranging from the environment where the animals live to endogenous calcium deposits cyclically elaborated by some of them. As a result, crustaceans are submitted to an important and energ…

animal structureschemistry.chemical_elementZoologyCalciumMineralization (biology)Articlecalcificationchemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:ZoologyBotanylcsh:QL1-991calcium storageACCEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsorganic matrixbiologyfungibiology.organism_classificationbiomineralization[ SDV.IB.BIO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering/BiomaterialsCrustaceanAmorphous calcium carbonateCalcium carbonatechemistryEcdysisamorphous calcium carbonateAnimal Science and ZoologycuticleMoultingBiomineralization
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Shaping the antipredator strategy: flexibility, consistency, and behavioral correlations under varying predation threat

2014

9 pages; International audience; Recent ecological and evolutionary research emphasizes the importance of adaptive trait integration. For instance, antipredator defenses are built up of several morphological and behavioral components in many species, yet their functional relationships are still poorly documented. Using field-collected freshwater crustaceans Gammarus fossarum in a within-subject design, we investigated the flexibility and consistency of refuge use, photophobia, and exploration behavior as well as their associations, quantified both when predation risk was absent or artificially simulated. In agreement with the "threat-sensitivity" hypothesis, both refuge use and photophobia …

behavioral syndrome[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyPhotophobiaEcologyBoldnessmedia_common.quotation_subjectFlexibility (personality)Gammarus fossarumPhenotypic traitmultiple traitBiologyPredationBehavioral syndromeintraindividual variabilityConsistency (negotiation)personality[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosismedicinePersonalityAnimal Science and Zoologycrustaceanmedicine.symptomboldnessEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBehavioral Ecology
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Urate as effector for crustacean hemocyanins.

2004

biologyChemistryEffectormedicine.medical_treatmentAllosteric regulationGeneral Physics and AstronomyIsothermal titration calorimetryHemocyaninCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanUric Acidchemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistryStructural BiologyCrustaceaHemocyaninsmedicineUric acidAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceMicron (Oxford, England : 1993)
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Combining stable isotope and intestinal parasite information to evaluate dietary differences between individual ringed seals (Phoca hispida botnica)

2006

The diet and foraging behaviour of nine individual Baltic ringed seals ( Phoca hispida botnica Gmelin, 1785) in the Bothnian Bay were studied by combining results from stable isotope analyses (δ13C and δ15N) with data on intestinal parasites whose occurrence varied among the fish hosts. The patterns of infection with three acanthocephalan parasites, Corynosoma semerme (Forssell, 1904), Corynosoma magdaleni Montreuil, 1958, and Corynosoma strumosum (Rudolphi, 1802), and with a cestode larva, Schistocephalus solidus (Müller, 1776), were examined. The ringed seals become infected with these intestinal parasites by feeding on the fish hosts and hence have different parasite species and differe…

biologyEcologyCestodaIntestinal parasitebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causePhocaCrustaceanPredationSchistocephalus solidusmedicineParasite hostingAnimal Science and ZoologyAcanthocephalaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCanadian Journal of Zoology
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Can large branchiopods shape microcrustacean communities in Mediterranean temporary wetlands?

2011

It was recently suggested that large branchiopods may play a keystone role in temporary aquatic habitats. Using a microcosm experiment manipulating microcrustacean communities of Mediterranean temporary wetlands (Camargue, Southern France), we tested the following hypotheses: (i) large branchiopods (the notostracan Triops cancriformis and the anostracan Chirocephalus diaphanus) can limit microcrustacean densities through both competition and predation; (ii) notostracans create high suspended-matter concentrations through bioturbation, which can negatively impact microcrustaceans; and (iii) the outcome of these biotic interactions is more detrimental at high salinities. We found a strong pr…

biologyEcologyChirocephalus diaphanusmedia_common.quotation_subjectAquatic ScienceOceanographybiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanCompetition (biology)PredationTriops cancriformisTriopsAnostracaecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsApex predatormedia_common
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An updated checklist of Recent ostracods (Crustacea: Ostracoda) from inland waters of Sicily and adjacent small islands with notes on their distribut…

2020

Because of its position in the middle of the Mediterranea Sea and a complex geological history that has promoted repeated waves of biological colonization, Sicily (Southern Italy) is of particular interest from a biogeographical perspective. A number of previous investigations, dating back as far as the end of the 19th century, have contributed to gather information about the occurrence of Recent non-marine ostracods in Sicily, making this region one of the most intensively studied areas of the Central Mediterranean. Published data on ostracod distributions have been integrated through an extensive field survey on mainland Sicily and surrounding small islands and archipelagos. Altogether, 2…

biologyEcologybusiness.industryBiogeographyEcology (disciplines)Central Mediterranean SeaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaDistribution (economics)biology.organism_classificationNon-marine ostracodsCrustaceanChecklistGeographymental disorderslcsh:ZoologySEMAnimal Science and ZoologyColonizationlcsh:QL1-991ecologybusinessbiogeography
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The earliest evidence of host-parasite interactions in vertebrates

2009

Luk s evics, E., Lebedev, O. A., Mark-Kurik, E. and Karataj u te-Talimaa, V. 2009. The earliest evidence of host‐parasite interactions in vertebrates. — Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 90 (Suppl. 1): 335‐343 Traces of parasite action have been discovered in the Middle‐Upper Devonian fish from Estonia, Latvia and European Russia. Such traces are known in heterostracan Psammolepis venyukovi , antiarchs Asterolepis radiata and Bothriolepis ciecere , sarcopterygians Holoptychius sp., Ventalepis ketleriensis and Eusthenodon sp. nov. The traces include evidence of parasitic fixation and penetration as well as dwelling traces. Pathologies are developed as (1) round fossulae on the external surface of b…

biologyHoloptychiusCell BiologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanBothriolepisDevonianAsterolepisGallParasite hostingAnimal Science and ZoologyEusthenodonEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsActa Zoologica
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