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Topic: Ctenophora


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  Ctenophora
Planktonic feeding and evolutionary significance of the lobate body plan within the ctenophora.
Harbison, G. On the classification and evolution of the Ctenophora.
Mills, C.E. Revised classification of the genus Euplokamis Chun, 1880 (Ctenophora: Cydippida: Euplokamidae n.
tolweb.org /tree?group=Ctenophora&contgroup=Animals   (667 words)

  
  Ctenophora - Encyclopedia.com
Ctenophora, a small phylum of exclusively marine, invertebrate animals, commonly known as sea walnuts or comb jellies.
the woodwasp soldierfly (Xylomya maculata), the cranefly (Ctenophora ornata) and the stag beetle (Lucanus cerusis).
Homeobox genes in the Ctenophora: identification of paired-type and Hox homologues in the atentaculate...
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-Ctenopho.html   (1253 words)

  
 Nearctica - Natural History - Cnidaria and Ctenophora
The Ctenophora (comb jellies or sea walnuts) look very much like jelly fish and share many of their morphological features such as radially symmetry, a sack-like body with a wall consisting of three layers.
A key to the Ctenophora of the Woods Hole region of Massachusetts with an annotated list of species.
Classification of the Ctenophora with a nice photograph.
www.nearctica.com /nathist/miscanim/cnidaria.htm   (790 words)

  
 Russian Science News
Ctenophora beroe, invertebrate jelly-fish of prey, has appeared in the Black Sea.
Researchers from the Institute of Oceanology and its South Department in Gelendgik have observed Ctenophora beroe in the north-eastern part of the Black Sea.
By the way any Ctenophora, including beroe and mnemiopsis, look like big soap-bubble, sometimes oval, sometimes flattened, with two long tentacles near oral hole and meridional lines of cilia on the surface of the bubble.
www.informnauka.ru /eng/2000/2000-09-01-022_e.htm   (516 words)

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