Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Exposure of Biofilms to Meiofaunal Copepods Affects the Larval Settlement of Hydroides Elegans (Polychaeta)
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
- Germany
doi 10.3354/meps297203
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract
Available in
full text
Categories
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Date
January 1, 2005
Authors
HU Dahms
PY Qian
Publisher
Inter-Research Science Center
Related search
Induction of Larval Settlement in the Polychaete Hydroides Elegans by Extracellular Polymers of Benthic Diatoms
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Phlorotannins and Related Compounds as Larval Settlement Inhibitors of the Tube-Building Polychaete Hydroides Elegans
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Characterization of Cues From Natural Multi-Species Biofilms That Induce Larval Attachment of the Polychaete Hydroides Elegans
Aquatic Biology
Evolution
Ecology
Oceanography
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Effect of Biofilm Formation by Pseudoalteromonas Spongiae on Induction of Larval Settlement of the Polychaete Hydroides Elegans
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied Microbiology
Biotechnology
Ecology
Food Science
Settlement of the Gregarious Tube Worm Hydroides Dianthus (Polychaeta: Serpulidae). II. Testing the Desperate Larva Hypothesis
Marine Ecology - Progress Series
Evolution
Ecology
Systematics
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Ultrastructural Investigation of the Nuchal Organs ofPygospio Elegans (Polychaeta). I. Larval Nuchal Organs
Helgoländer Meeresuntersuchungen
The Inhibitory Effect of Biofilms Produced by Wild Bacterial Isolates to the Larval Settlement of the Fouling Ascidia Ciona Intestinalis and Pyura Praeputialis
Electronic Journal of Biotechnology
Applied Microbiology
Biotechnology
A Classic Hydrodynamic Analysis of Larval Settlement
Journal of Experimental Biology
Evolution
Ecology
Insect Science
Molecular Biology
Systematics
Animal Science
Medicine
Aquatic Science
Behavior
Zoology
Physiology
Larval Settlement in Barnacles-Advances in Studies on Settlement Pheromones-
Sessile Organisms