The marine bivalve Lucinoma aequizonata (Lucinidae) maintains a population of sulfide-oxidizing chemoautotrophic bacteria in its gill tissue. These are housed in large numbers intracellularly in specialized host cells, termed bacteriocytes. In a natural population of L. aequizonata, striking variations of the gill colors occur, ranging from yellow to grey, brown and black. The aim of the present study was to investigate how this phenomenon relates to the physiology and numbers of the symbiont population. Our results show that in aquarium-maintained animals, black gills contained fewer numbers of bacteria as well as lower concentrations of sulfur and total protein. Nitrate respiration was stimulated by sulfide (but not by thiosulfate) 33-fol...
International audienceThe shallow-water bivalve Codakia orbiculata which harbors gill-endosymbiotic ...
Chemosynthetic symbioses evolved multiple times in a wide diversity of host species and from many di...
Background: The lucinid clam Loripes orbiculatus lives in a nutritional symbiosis with sulphur-oxidi...
International audienceUntil now, the culture of sulphur-oxidizing bacterial symbionts associated wit...
The large tropical lucinid clam Codakia orbicularis has a symbiotic relationship with intracellular,...
We investigated the characteristics of the sulfur-oxidizing symbiont hosted in the gills of Codakia ...
The bivalve Codakia orbicularis, hosting sulfur-oxidizing gill endosymbionts, was starved (in artifi...
International audienceStable associations between marine invertebrates and their chemosynthetic bact...
Chemosynthetic symbioses between marine invertebrates and their bacterial symbionts are highly diver...
International audienceThe Caribbean bivalves Codakia orbicularis (Linnée, 1758) and C. orbiculata (M...
The physiological and biochemical studies of some animals from sulfide-rich habitats, such as deep s...
In marine invertebrates that acquire their symbionts from the environment, these are generally only ...
Four tropical lucinids, Codakia orbiculata, C. pectinella, Linga pensylvanica, which inhabit sea-gra...
International audienceThe lucinid Codakia orbicularis (Mollusca: Bivalvia) is found in the shallow w...
Symbioses between lucinid clams (Bivalvia: Lucinidae) and autotrophic sulphide-oxidizing bacteria ha...
International audienceThe shallow-water bivalve Codakia orbiculata which harbors gill-endosymbiotic ...
Chemosynthetic symbioses evolved multiple times in a wide diversity of host species and from many di...
Background: The lucinid clam Loripes orbiculatus lives in a nutritional symbiosis with sulphur-oxidi...
International audienceUntil now, the culture of sulphur-oxidizing bacterial symbionts associated wit...
The large tropical lucinid clam Codakia orbicularis has a symbiotic relationship with intracellular,...
We investigated the characteristics of the sulfur-oxidizing symbiont hosted in the gills of Codakia ...
The bivalve Codakia orbicularis, hosting sulfur-oxidizing gill endosymbionts, was starved (in artifi...
International audienceStable associations between marine invertebrates and their chemosynthetic bact...
Chemosynthetic symbioses between marine invertebrates and their bacterial symbionts are highly diver...
International audienceThe Caribbean bivalves Codakia orbicularis (Linnée, 1758) and C. orbiculata (M...
The physiological and biochemical studies of some animals from sulfide-rich habitats, such as deep s...
In marine invertebrates that acquire their symbionts from the environment, these are generally only ...
Four tropical lucinids, Codakia orbiculata, C. pectinella, Linga pensylvanica, which inhabit sea-gra...
International audienceThe lucinid Codakia orbicularis (Mollusca: Bivalvia) is found in the shallow w...
Symbioses between lucinid clams (Bivalvia: Lucinidae) and autotrophic sulphide-oxidizing bacteria ha...
International audienceThe shallow-water bivalve Codakia orbiculata which harbors gill-endosymbiotic ...
Chemosynthetic symbioses evolved multiple times in a wide diversity of host species and from many di...
Background: The lucinid clam Loripes orbiculatus lives in a nutritional symbiosis with sulphur-oxidi...