نتایج جستجو برای: herbivorous snail

تعداد نتایج: 10376  

2017
Kostantinos A. Stamoulis Alan M. Friedlander Carl G. Meyer Iria Fernandez-Silva Robert J. Toonen

Blooms of alien invasive marine algae have become common, greatly altering the health and stability of nearshore marine ecosystems. Concurrently, herbivorous fishes have been severely overfished in many locations worldwide, contributing to increases in macroalgal cover. We used a multi-pronged, interdisciplinary approach to test if higher biomass of herbivorous fishes inside a no-take marine re...

2005
Zhibo Yang Suresh Rayala Diep Nguyen Ratna K. Vadlamudi Shiuan Chen Rakesh Kumar

The process of epithelial-mesenchymal transition plays a pivotal role in the conversion of early stage tumors into invasive malignancies, and has been shown to be regulated by the zinc finger phosphoprotein, Snail; however, no upstream signaling kinases have been shown to modulate Snail functions. Since the invasiveness of breast cancer cells is also influenced by p21-activated kinase 1 (Pak1) ...

2012
Martin Rempt Florian Weinberger Katharina Grosser Georg Pohnert

Chemical defense of the invasive red alga Gracilaria vermiculophylla has been studied and compared to that of the noninvasive but related Gracilaria chilensis. Both species rely on a wound-activated chemical defense that makes them less attractive to the herbivorous sea snail Echinolittorina peruviana. The chemical stress response of both species was monitored by LC-ESIMS-based metabolic profil...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2009
Andrew H. Altieri Geoffrey C. Trussell Patrick J. Ewanchuk Genevieve Bernatchez Matthew E. S. Bracken

BACKGROUND Our understanding of the functional consequences of changes in biodiversity has been hampered by several limitations of previous work, including limited attention to trophic interactions, a focus on species richness rather than evenness, and the use of artificially assembled communities. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS In this study, we manipulated the density of an herbivorous ...

2002
Geoffrey C. Trussell Patrick J. Ewanchuk Mark D. Bertness

Geoffrey C. Trussell,* Patrick J. Ewanchuk and Mark D. Bertness Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, U.S.A. *Correspondence and present address: Department of Biology, College of the Holy Cross, 1 College Street, Worcester, MA 01610-2395, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract Studies on the implications of food web interactions to comm...

Journal: :Environmental toxicology and chemistry 2012
Konrad J Kulacki Bradley J Cardinale Arturo A Keller Raven Bier Helen Dickson

The biologically active properties of many nanomaterials, coupled with their rapidly expanding production and use, has generated concern that certain types of nanoparticles could have unintended impacts when released into natural ecosystems. In the present study, the authors report the results of an experiment in which they grew three common species of stream algae as monocultures and together ...

2013
Mareike Hammann Gaoge Wang Esther Rickert Sung Min Boo Florian Weinberger

Differences with respect to anti-herbivore defense were investigated in invasive and native populations of the seaweed Gracilaria vermiculophylla. Specimens from 6 native populations in East Asia and from 8 populations invasive in Europe and the Mexican Pacific coast were maintained under identical conditions and offered to herbivorous snails from both the native range (Littorina brevicula) and...

Journal: :Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America 2006
Robert O Hall Mark F Dybdahl Maria C VanderLoop

The functional importance of invasive animals may be measured as the degree to which they dominate secondary production, relative to native animals. We used this approach to examine dominance of invertebrate secondary production by invasive New Zealand mudsnails (Potamopyrgus antipodarum) in rivers. We measured secondary production of mudsnails and native invertebrates in three rivers in the Gr...

2017
Hai Wei Bo Yan Julien Gagneur Barbara Conradt

Snail-like transcription factors affect stem cell function through mechanisms that are incompletely understood. In the Caenorhabditis elegans neurosecretory motor neuron (NSM) neuroblast lineage, CES-1 Snail coordinates cell cycle progression and cell polarity to ensure the asymmetric division of the NSM neuroblast and the generation of two daughter cells of different sizes and fates. We have p...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2003
Hector Peinado Miguel Quintanilla Amparo Cano

The Snail transcription factor has been described recently as a strong repressor of E-cadherin in epithelial cell lines, where its stable expression leads to the loss of E-cadherin expression and induces epithelial-mesenchymal transitions and an invasive phenotype. The mechanisms regulating Snail expression in development and tumor progression are not yet known. We show here that transforming g...

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