The sexual differentiation in the colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri was considered with respect to colony sexualization and sexualization of the single zooids of the same blastogenic generation. The colony sexualization was investigated histologically in a series of young colonies reared in the laboratory and fixed periodically throughout a sequence of blastogenic generations. The newly set colonies lack gonad blastemata; next, germ cells appear and several generations are involved in various phases of hyposexuality prior to the appearance of generations in which mature both eggs and sperm. The sexual contribution of the zooids of the same generation was found to vary according to an intrinsic bilateral asymmetry (the gonadogenic poten...
BackgroundGonad differentiation is an essential function for all sexually reproducing species, and m...
Oogenesis and oocyte envelope differentiation were examined in the viviparous Botrylloides violaceus...
SummaryStem cells are highly conserved biological units of development and regeneration. Here we for...
The colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri is a widespread filter-feeding ascidian that lives in sha...
Botryllus schlosseri, a colonial ascidian reproducing both sexually and asexually, is an excellent m...
Botryllus schlosseri, a cosmopolitan colonial ascidian reared in the laboratory for more than 50 yea...
The colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri is a cosmopolitan organism, easy to find in the field and...
The morphology of ascidian gonad is very similar among species. The testis consists of variable numb...
Different lines of research on inland cultures of B. schlosseri have been pursued in our laboratory...
The ultrastructural events of ovulation and differentiation of the brood pouch are studied in the co...
The three types of intraspecific histocompatibility in ascidians fusibility, allograft rejection or ...
Appearance and differentiating of test cells were followed in the ascidian Botryllus schlosseri, usi...
On the basis of ultrastructural observations, Botryllus schlosseri oogenesis is divided into five st...
In the second half of the eighteenth century, Schlosser and Ellis described the colonial ascidian Bo...
In the colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri, a cyclical generation change guarantees the recurrent...
BackgroundGonad differentiation is an essential function for all sexually reproducing species, and m...
Oogenesis and oocyte envelope differentiation were examined in the viviparous Botrylloides violaceus...
SummaryStem cells are highly conserved biological units of development and regeneration. Here we for...
The colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri is a widespread filter-feeding ascidian that lives in sha...
Botryllus schlosseri, a colonial ascidian reproducing both sexually and asexually, is an excellent m...
Botryllus schlosseri, a cosmopolitan colonial ascidian reared in the laboratory for more than 50 yea...
The colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri is a cosmopolitan organism, easy to find in the field and...
The morphology of ascidian gonad is very similar among species. The testis consists of variable numb...
Different lines of research on inland cultures of B. schlosseri have been pursued in our laboratory...
The ultrastructural events of ovulation and differentiation of the brood pouch are studied in the co...
The three types of intraspecific histocompatibility in ascidians fusibility, allograft rejection or ...
Appearance and differentiating of test cells were followed in the ascidian Botryllus schlosseri, usi...
On the basis of ultrastructural observations, Botryllus schlosseri oogenesis is divided into five st...
In the second half of the eighteenth century, Schlosser and Ellis described the colonial ascidian Bo...
In the colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri, a cyclical generation change guarantees the recurrent...
BackgroundGonad differentiation is an essential function for all sexually reproducing species, and m...
Oogenesis and oocyte envelope differentiation were examined in the viviparous Botrylloides violaceus...
SummaryStem cells are highly conserved biological units of development and regeneration. Here we for...