Bugula neritina is a sessile marine bryozoan with a pelagic larval stage. Larvae frequently settle on boat hulls, facilitating the introduction of B. neritina to bays and estuaries worldwide. Adrenergic agonists, such as the vertebrate hormone noradrenaline, inhibit larval settlement in a variety of marine invertebrate species, including B. neritina. Light also inhibits B. neritina larval settlement, yet the underlying mechanisms by which light and adrenergic compounds exert their effects on larvae are not well understood. Octopamine is considered the invertebrate analog of noradrenaline, and may be an endogenous hormone involved in larval settlement pathways. I observed the effects of the adrenergic agonist noradrenaline and the adrenergic...
Increased settlement on bacterial biofilms has been demonstrated for a number of marine invertebrate...
Vibrio harveyi is one of the major pathogens of aquatic organisms, affecting both vertebrates and in...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...
Bugula neritina is a sessile marine bryozoan with a pelagic larval stage. Larvae frequently settle o...
The bryozoan Bugula neritina L. is an important fouling organism worldwide and has been the focus of...
Observations on phototropic responses of the larvae of Bugula neritina and of B. flabellata in the p...
Geographical differences in selective pressure may shift the relationship outcome in mutualistic sym...
This dissertation investigates the identity and function of a bacterial symbiont described in the ma...
Abstract: Settlement responses were investigated for mussel (Perna canaliculus) larvae after exposur...
The colonial marine bryozoan, Bugula neritina, harbors an uncultured endosymbiont, “Candidatus Endob...
Green tides are vast accumulations of green macroalgae that, in the last decade, have become a commo...
first_pagesettingsOrder Article Reprints Open AccessArticle Catecholamine Involvement in the Biolumi...
Larvae of the sessile marine invertebrate Bugula neritina (Bryozoa) are protected by an effective ch...
The clade lophotrochozoa, the third major branch of bilaterians, is emerging as a model to study the...
The free swimming larvae of many marine invertebrates actively respond to light. Light cues can be u...
Increased settlement on bacterial biofilms has been demonstrated for a number of marine invertebrate...
Vibrio harveyi is one of the major pathogens of aquatic organisms, affecting both vertebrates and in...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...
Bugula neritina is a sessile marine bryozoan with a pelagic larval stage. Larvae frequently settle o...
The bryozoan Bugula neritina L. is an important fouling organism worldwide and has been the focus of...
Observations on phototropic responses of the larvae of Bugula neritina and of B. flabellata in the p...
Geographical differences in selective pressure may shift the relationship outcome in mutualistic sym...
This dissertation investigates the identity and function of a bacterial symbiont described in the ma...
Abstract: Settlement responses were investigated for mussel (Perna canaliculus) larvae after exposur...
The colonial marine bryozoan, Bugula neritina, harbors an uncultured endosymbiont, “Candidatus Endob...
Green tides are vast accumulations of green macroalgae that, in the last decade, have become a commo...
first_pagesettingsOrder Article Reprints Open AccessArticle Catecholamine Involvement in the Biolumi...
Larvae of the sessile marine invertebrate Bugula neritina (Bryozoa) are protected by an effective ch...
The clade lophotrochozoa, the third major branch of bilaterians, is emerging as a model to study the...
The free swimming larvae of many marine invertebrates actively respond to light. Light cues can be u...
Increased settlement on bacterial biofilms has been demonstrated for a number of marine invertebrate...
Vibrio harveyi is one of the major pathogens of aquatic organisms, affecting both vertebrates and in...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this recor...