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Pycnogonum litorale, adult male feeding on a sea anemone. C: Georg Brenneis The first high-quality pycnogonid genome provides ...
We know that some animals are bilaterian—meaning they display bilateral symmetry—while others are not, but nature is rarely ...
An international collaboration featuring the University of Vienna and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (USA) has led to ...
Deep below the surface of the ocean, bacteria and critters that feed off nutrients spouting from hydrothermal vents met with ...
Abstract This study provides an in-depth examination of the ecological interaction between the non-native Diadumene lineata (Verrill, 1869) sea anemone, and the Polysyncraton amethysteum Van Name, ...
new video loaded: ‘How to Train Your Dragon’ | Anatomy of a Scene transcript “Hi, My name is Dean DeBlois. I’m the writer, director and one of the executive producers of “How to Train ...
So while the sea anemone's genome, gene repertoire, and gene regulation on the DNA level is surprisingly similar to vertebrates, its post-transcriptional regulation is undeniably plant-like -- and ...
Sea Anemones Sea anemones can reproduce and regenerate through a process known as pedal laceration, where fragments of their pedal disc detach and develop into new individuals.
A study from the University of Vienna reveals that sea anemones use a molecular mechanism known from bilaterian animals to form their back-to-belly body axis. This mechanism ("BMP shuttling ...
Sea anemones may hold the key to the ancient origins of body symmetry. A study from the University of Vienna shows they use a molecular mechanism known as BMP shuttling, once thought unique to ...
To test whether sea anemones use Chordin as a local inhibitor or as a shuttle, the researchers first blocked Chordin production in the embryos of the model sea anemone Nematostella vectensis. In ...