Search results for "Helix pomatia"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

CAN HELICICULTURE ACT AS A TOOL FOR EDIBLE LAND SNAILS’ NATURAL POPULATIONS’ MANAGEMENT IN ROMANIA?

2013

ABSTRACT Edible land snails are intensively exploited and the management of natural populations is a complex issue due the variety of factors involved. Two species of the genus Helix are present in our country, Helix pomatia and Helix lucorum, both of them collected since 1956. Although current legislation regulates the exploited amount and the dimension of collected snails, the exploitable amount is not assessed using appropriate ecological studies. The farming of edible snails has evolved in Romania especially during the period 2004-2008, the first farms being financed by the SAPARD Project. The inappropriate documentation on the matter of snail farming had lead to a quick failure of this…

Agroforestrybusiness.industryEcologyHelix (gastropod)Helix pomatiaSnailBiologybiology.organism_classificationHelix lucorumNatural (archaeology)Medium termAgricultureHeliciculturebiology.animalbusinessManagement of Sustainable Development
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A new metallothionein gene from the giant keyhole limpet Megathura crenulata.

2003

Abstract Metallothioneins (MTs) are small soluble proteins ubiquitously expressed in animals and plants. Different isoforms are present in deuterostomes and protostomes. They do not differ greatly in primary structure, but are clearly distinguishable. Here, I present the gene and the complete cDNA of a novel MT from the mollusk Megathura crenulata . This protein is closely related to the Cu-inducible MTs of the vineyard snail Helix pomatia , but has also some minor sequence features typical of Cd-inducible isoforms of H . pomatia and other molluscs. Overall, the deduced primary structure is similar to the known molluscan MTs, but in addition possesses an insertion of 5 amino acids not found…

Gene isoformDNA ComplementaryPhysiologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMolecular Sequence DataSnailMegathura crenulataToxicologyBiochemistryPentapeptide repeatPolymerase Chain ReactionSpecies Specificitybiology.animalComplementary DNAMetallothioneinAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceGenomebiologyBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidProtein primary structureCell BiologyGeneral MedicineHelix pomatiaSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyBiochemistryMolluscaMetallothioneinCarrier ProteinsComparative biochemistry and physiology. Toxicologypharmacology : CBP
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Novel triplet of flexor muscles in the posterior tentacles of the snail, Helix pomatia.

2012

The anatomy of three novel flexor muscles in the posterior tentacles of Helix pomatia is described. The muscles originate from the ventral side of the sensory pad and are anchored at different sites in the base of the tentacle stem. The muscles span the tentacle and always take the length of the stem which depends on the rate of tentacle protrusion indicating that the muscles are both contractile and extremely stretchable. The three anchoring points at the base of the stem determine three space axes along which the contraction of a muscle or the synchronous contraction of the muscles can move the tentacle in space.

TentaclebiologyHelix SnailsMovementMusclesVentral sideSnailHelix pomatiaAnatomyFlexor musclesbiology.organism_classificationGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEyestalkNeurologybiology.animalAnimalsGeneral Environmental ScienceActa biologica Hungarica
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Food-attraction conditioning in the snail, Helix pomatia

1995

Adult pulmonate snails (Helix pomatia) were released equidistant between two types of food, carrot and potato, respectively. Naive snails moved in different directions and did not locate either food above chance, although both foods were readily eaten upon direct contact. After a single carrot feeding episode, 75% of the carrot-fed snails moved directly towards the carrot and ate it. Conversely, potato-fed snails located the potato in 67% of the cases. Snails that were fed apple or lettuce behaved like naive animals, with the majority of animals (75% in both cases) locating neither the carrot nor the potato. The ability of snails to locate this particular food after a single feeding episode…

biologyPhysiologyHelix (gastropod)fungidigestive oral and skin physiologyForagingOlfactory cuesfood and beveragesZoologyHelix pomatiaSnailbiology.organism_classificationAttractionBehavioral NeuroscienceOdorbiology.animalparasitic diseasesBotanyConditioningAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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Abalone (Haliotis tuberculata) hemocyanin type 1 (HtH1) . Organization of the = 400 kDa subunit, and amino acid sequence of its functional units f, g…

1999

We have identified two separate hemocyanin types (HtH1 and HtH2) in the European abalone Haliotis tuberculata. HtH1/HtH2 hybrid molecules were not found. By selective dissociation of HtH2 we isolated HtH1 which, as revealed by electron microscopy and SDS/PAGE, is present as didecamers of a approximately 400 kDa subunit. Immunologically, HtH1 and HtH2 correspond to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH)1 and KLH2, respectively, the two well-studied hemocyanin types of the closely related marine gastropod Megathura crenulata. On the basis of limited proteolytic cleavage, two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis, SDS/PAGE and N-terminal sequencing, we identified eight different 40-60 kDa functional unit…

DNA Complementaryfood.ingredientmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataMegathura crenulataBiochemistryfoodmedicineAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceHaliotisCloning MolecularPeptide sequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologycDNA libraryHemocyaninAnatomyHelix pomatiabiology.organism_classificationCephalopodMicroscopy ElectronBiochemistryMolluscaHemocyaninsbiology.proteinRabbitsKeyhole limpet hemocyaninEuropean Journal of Biochemistry
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Consequences of food-attraction conditioning in Helix: a behavioral and electrophysiological study

1996

Food-attraction conditioning is a learning phenomenon by which adult Helix pomatia acquire the ability to locate food through exposure to that particular food. Food-conditioned snails can be distinguished from ‘naive’ snails during their approach to food. ‘Naive’ snails keep their tentacles upright — whereas ‘food-conditioned’ animals bend the tentacles down-ward, in a horizontal orientation, pointed in the direction of the food.

CommunicationbiologyPhysiologybusiness.industryHelix (gastropod)fungidigestive oral and skin physiologyHorizontal orientationSnailHelix pomatiabiology.organism_classificationAttractionBehavioral NeuroscienceElectrophysiologybiology.animalparasitic diseasesConditioningAnimal Science and ZoologyPsychologybusinessNeuroscienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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A comparative genetic study on exploited vs. Unperturbed wild populations of Helix Pomatia (L., 1758): preliminary results

2021

Helix pomatia is one of the most well known species of land snails across Europe and it presents economical importance due to its consumption as food. The preliminary results of the genetic comparison between two populations, one of them under the pressure of exploitation, are presented here. As expected, most indices revealed a disequilibrium in the exploited population, with the exeption of the allelic pattern which was similar among the two studied populations.

Helix pomatiaBiologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologySustainable use and protection of animal world in the context of climate change
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