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Lobster Caribbean spiny

American lobster, Homarus americanus serum Marine crustaceans Muscle, 10 species Whole, various species Aesop shrimp, Pandalus montagu r, soft parts Scotland reference site vs. waste dump site Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus soft parts Puerto Rico Anasco Bay West coast... [Pg.475]

Horner, A. J., M. J. Weissburg, and C. D. Derby. Dual antennular chemosensory pathways can mediate orientation by Caribbean spiny lobsters in naturalistic flow conditions. J. Exp. Biol. 207(21), 3785-3796 (2004). [Pg.107]

Burgess, M. F. and Derby, C. D., Two novel types of L-glutamate receptors with affinities for NMDA and L-cysteine in the olfactory organ of the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus, Brain Res., 111, 292, 1997. [Pg.475]

There are two species of spiny lobsters in North America. The West Coast spiny lobster Panulirus inter-ruptus) occurs on the Pacific coast, and the Caribbean spiny lobster (P. argus) occurs in the Caribbean Sea, off the Horida Coast, and in the Gulf of Mexico. These warm-water species do not have the huge, crushing, and tearing claws of the Homarus typical lobsters, but they have a needle-sharp, spiny carapace, and very long antennae. [Pg.147]

Homer AJ, Weissburg MJ, Derby CD (2008) The olfactory pathway mediates sheltering behavior of Caribbean spiny lobsters, Panulirus argus, to conspecific urine signals. J Comp Physiol A 194 243-253... [Pg.37]

Ziegler TA, Forward RB (2007) Larval release behaviors in the Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus role of peptide pheromones. J Chem Ecol 33 1795-1805... [Pg.62]

Cate HS, Derby CD (2001) Morphology and distrbution of setae on the antennules of the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus reveal new types of bimodal chemo-mechanosensilla. Cell Tissue Res 304 439-454... [Pg.119]

Derby CD, Cate HS, Gentilcore LR (1997) Perireception in olfaction Molecular mass sieving by aesthetasc sensillar cuticle determines odorant access to receptor sites in the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus. J Exp Biol 200 2073-2081... [Pg.119]

Derby CD, Cate HS, Steullet P, Harrison PJH (2003) Comparison of turnover in the olfactory organ of early juvenile stage and adult Caribbean spiny lobsters. Arthr Struct Dev 31 297-311... [Pg.119]

Steullet P, Dudar O, Flavus T, Zhou M, Derby CD (2001) Selective ablation of antennular sensilla on the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus suggests that dual antennular chemosensory pathways mediate odorant activation of searching and localization of food. J Exp Biol 204 4259 1269... [Pg.146]

Steullet P, Kriitzfeldt DR, Hamidani G, Flavus T, Ngo V, Derby CD (2002) Dual antennular chemosensory pathways mediate odor-associative learning and odor discrimination in the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus. J Exp Biol 205 851-867... [Pg.146]

Fig. 12.4 Artist s drawing of a pair of Caribbean spiny lobsters engaged in agonistic interaction. The dominant animal (right) releases more urine, which in this in drawing is depicted as a white plume, than the subordinate animal (left), whose urine is indicated as a smaller black plume. Urine from dominants reduces the level of aggression in subordinates. Drawing by Jorge A. Varela Ramos... Fig. 12.4 Artist s drawing of a pair of Caribbean spiny lobsters engaged in agonistic interaction. The dominant animal (right) releases more urine, which in this in drawing is depicted as a white plume, than the subordinate animal (left), whose urine is indicated as a smaller black plume. Urine from dominants reduces the level of aggression in subordinates. Drawing by Jorge A. Varela Ramos...
Fig. 12.5 Social interactions and urine release in Caribbean spiny lobster. Dominant animals are more likely to release urine than subordinates (a), and dominants release more urine than subordinates (b). Adapted from Shabani et al. (2009) with permission from The Journal of Experimental Biology... Fig. 12.5 Social interactions and urine release in Caribbean spiny lobster. Dominant animals are more likely to release urine than subordinates (a), and dominants release more urine than subordinates (b). Adapted from Shabani et al. (2009) with permission from The Journal of Experimental Biology...
Fig. 12.6 Aggregation and shelter sharing in spiny lobsters, (a) California spiny lobsters in a shelter, using their second antennae to protect the entrance to the shelter from predators. From C. White and used with permission, (b) Caribbean spiny lobsters are attracted to shelters emanating conspecific urine but only if their aesthetascs are intact. Adapted from Homer et al. (2008) with permission from Springer... Fig. 12.6 Aggregation and shelter sharing in spiny lobsters, (a) California spiny lobsters in a shelter, using their second antennae to protect the entrance to the shelter from predators. From C. White and used with permission, (b) Caribbean spiny lobsters are attracted to shelters emanating conspecific urine but only if their aesthetascs are intact. Adapted from Homer et al. (2008) with permission from Springer...
Behringer DC, Butler MJ, Shields JD (2008) Ecological and physiological effects of Pavl infection on the Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus Latreille). J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 359 26-33... [Pg.254]

Childress MJ, Hermkind WF (1996) The ontogeny of social behaviour among juvenile Caribbean spiny lobsters. Anim Behav 51 675-687... [Pg.254]

Eggleston DB, Lipcius RN, Miller DL, Coba-Cetina L (1990) Shelter scaling regulates survival of juvenile Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 62 79-88... [Pg.255]

Mintz JD, Lipcius RN, Eggleston DB, Seebo MS (1994) Survival of juvenile Caribbean spiny lobster effects of shelter size, geographic location and conspecific abundance. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 112 255-266... [Pg.255]

Weiss HM, Lozano-Alvarez E, Briones-Fourzan P (2008) Circadian shelter occupancy patterns and predator-prey interactions of juvenile Caribbean spiny lobsters in a reef lagoon. Mar Biol 153 953-963... [Pg.256]

BUTLER M J, BEHRINGER D c and SHIELDS J D (2008) Transmission of Panulirus argus virus 1 (PaVl) and its effect on the survival of juvenile Caribbean spiny lobster , Dis Aquat Org, 79,173-182. [Pg.319]

GOLDSTEIN J s, MATSUDA H, TAKENOUCHi T and BUTLER M J (2008) The Complete development of larval Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus (LatreUle, 1804) in culture , / Crustacean Biol, 28, 306-327. [Pg.321]

KIRYU M Y, BEHRINGER D C, LANDSBERG J H and PETTY B D (2009) Microspoiidiosis in the Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus from southeast Florida, USA , Dis Aquat Org, 84, 237-242. [Pg.323]

BEHRINGER D c, BUTLER M J and SHIELDS J D (2009) A rcvicw of the lethal spiny lobster virus PaVl - Ten years after its discxivery . Proceedings of the 62nd Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute, 62,370-375. [Pg.319]


See other pages where Lobster Caribbean spiny is mentioned: [Pg.49]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.47 , Pg.247 , Pg.248 ]




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