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1 red in protostomian invertebrates (mollusks, arthropods).
2 e breakdown of osmoregulation of this marine arthropod.
3 te multilocus data from large collections of arthropods.
4 ity shared with gastropods, vertebrates, and arthropods.
5  annelids and chordates, but not mollusks or arthropods.
6 ion of optical systems in some other ancient arthropods.
7  for pollinator species and other beneficial arthropods.
8 he most common endosymbionts found infecting arthropods.
9 rtain fossil groups are stem- or crown-group arthropods.
10 oups of vertebrates, it is generally rare in arthropods.
11 isplaying values similar to rhabdoviruses of arthropods.
12  was much higher in the absence of fungi and arthropods.
13 variety of cave-adapted and surface-dwelling arthropods.
14 vity between A. aegypti and other allergenic arthropods.
15 essed, even across hyper-diverse taxa within arthropods.
16  by facilitating dispersal of spores by soil arthropods.
17 described in numerous species including many arthropods.
18 osols and particles, attacks by microbes and arthropods.
19 t than the sensory systems in vertebrates or arthropods.
20  sequences are also commonly associated with arthropods.
21 tropics and are voracious predators of other arthropods.
22 to mammals primarily occurs by hematophagous arthropods.
23 ndicated low level of risk to earthworms and arthropods.
24 inferences of the visual capacity of extinct arthropods(1-3).
25 cted were Annelida (66.4% reads) followed by arthropods (15.5% reads) and nematodes (8.9% reads).
26    However, invasion significantly increased arthropod abundance and caused biotic homogenization.
27                                  We measured arthropod abundance and diversity plus sward surface hei
28 , the biotic and abiotic drivers of arboreal arthropod abundance are still relatively poorly known.
29                                        Total arthropod abundance was higher in grazed plots (due to S
30 and higher in-field plant diversity enhanced arthropod abundance, particularly for rare taxa.
31 ind evidence for the bottom-up limitation of arthropod abundances via resources and abiotic factors,
32 gnaling networks that act in vertebrates and arthropods, although they evolved limbs independently.
33 t sense conditions within the vertebrate and arthropod and appropriately regulate expression of genes
34 osensation in the migration of larval worms, arthropod and mammalian infectious stage Brugia parasite
35                     Phylogenetic escape from arthropod and pathogen pests results in lower pesticides
36 s of neural development and function suggest arthropod and vertebrate brains may have an evolutionari
37  genome is the smallest yet reported for any arthropod and, reminiscent of microbial eukaryotes, exce
38  development are from segmented taxa, namely arthropods and chordates.
39 ntrol the formation of limbs in vertebrates, arthropods and cuttlefish.
40 amilies that arose early in the evolution of arthropods and during the diversification of insects int
41 iation in patterns of DNA methylation across arthropods and examples of gene family and protein domai
42 an intracellular endosymbiont infecting many arthropods and filarial nematodes.
43 her findings on the impact of desiccation on arthropods and fungal growth, suggest that drier conditi
44 penthes) host diverse communities of aquatic arthropods and microbes in nature.
45 sses (Insects and Myriapods) and even phyla (Arthropods and Platyhelminthes), that dampens the slow n
46 ors and the evolution of these strategies in arthropods and potentially other animals as well.
47 Maternally heritable symbionts are common in arthropods and represent important partners and antagoni
48 lds and other habitats in landscapes impacts arthropods and their functions is poorly known.
49 t axon architecture in animals as diverse as arthropods and vertebrates is dependent on loosely cross
50 PAE) and segmentation are tightly coupled in arthropods and vertebrates, making it challenging to dif
51  to pseudostratified neuroepithelia in other arthropods and vertebrates.
52 logical treasures, including animals (mostly arthropods) and microorganisms ranging from fungi, algae
53 ant tissues, the cuticles of crabs, beetles, arthropods, and beyond.
54 cence in some animals, including cnidarians, arthropods, and cartilaginous and ray-finned fishes.
55 Cambrian marine ecosystems were dominated by arthropods, and more specifically artiopods.
56 irst record of melanic screening pigments in arthropods, and reveals a fossilization mode in insect e
57 ms by which a human pathogen appropriates an arthropod antibacterial protein to alter the gut microbi
58                         These biomineralized arthropods appear abruptly in the fossil record with an
59 nteny between the Hox2 and Hox3 orthologs in Arthropods are consistent with a shared regulatory relat
60 ng life-history traits in minute herbivorous arthropods are hampered by the need to work with detache
61                                              Arthropods are ideal model organisms to study biomineral
62 tial phenotypes, many heritable symbionts of arthropods are notorious for manipulating host reproduct
63     It is now broadly recognized that extant arthropods are split into chelicerates and mandibulates,
64                                              Arthropods are the most diverse animal phylum, and their
65 quiterpenoid hormone production, typical for arthropods, are also now found in cnidarians.
66 systems in millipedes, not observed in other arthropods, are revealed.
67  of microorganisms in arthropods, the use of arthropods as epidemiological or diagnostic tools, entom
68 s of phytophagous, pollinators and predators arthropods, as well as the percentage of defoliation of
69 ularensis can persist in water, amoebae, and arthropods, as well as within mammalian macrophages.
70 the diverse and self-contained assemblage of arthropods associated with an abundant Brazilian shrub,
71 About half of the world's animal species are arthropods associated with plants, and the ability to co
72                      Research characterizing arthropod-associated microbiota has revealed that microb
73                                          One arthropod-associated partitivirus, galbut virus, is comm
74                            Plants respond to arthropod attack with the rearrangement of their transcr
75                              We (a) assessed arthropod availability, (b) investigated parental provis
76 of bacteria and fungi; influence protist and arthropod behavior; and impact plant and animal health.
77 the hypothesis that hell ants captured other arthropods between mandible and horn in a manner that co
78 ns blue dyes in addition to Nile red, ground arthropod biomass appeared blueish-purple, whereas diffe
79              Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an arthropod-borne alphavirus that causes acute and chronic
80                      Zika virus (ZIKV) is an arthropod-borne emerging pathogen causing febrile illnes
81            Filariases are diseases caused by arthropod-borne filaria nematodes.
82                      Zika virus (ZIKV) is an arthropod-borne flavivirus predominantly transmitted by
83 E Kunjin and West Nile viruses belong to the arthropod-borne flaviviruses, which can result in severe
84 es are vitally needed to address established arthropod-borne infectious diseases such as dengue and y
85                                  Interest in arthropod-borne pathogens focuses primarily on how they
86 western equine encephalitis virus (WEEV) are arthropod-borne positive-strand RNA viruses that are cap
87 sible for the most prevalent and significant arthropod-borne viral infection of humans.
88         The Amazon basin is home to numerous arthropod-borne viral pathogens that cause febrile disea
89  during infection with a medically important arthropod-borne virus (arbovirus).
90      Bluetongue virus serotype 8 (BTV-8), an arthropod-borne virus of ruminants, emerged in livestock
91                           Dengue virus is an arthropod-borne virus transmitted primarily by Aedes mos
92  Zika virus (ZIKV) has been recognized as an arthropod-borne virus with Aedes species mosquitoes as t
93                                     Domestic arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) are single-strande
94  epidemics highlight the explosive nature of arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) transmitted by Aed
95                              Since 2015, the arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) Zika and chikungun
96                                              Arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses), including those v
97                                              Arthropod-borne viruses represent a significant public h
98          Flaviviruses are a diverse group of arthropod-borne viruses responsible for numerous signifi
99 ity of mosquito species that spread emerging arthropod-borne viruses such as Zika has highlighted the
100        The Flavivirus genus contains several arthropod-borne viruses that pose global health threats,
101                              A region of the arthropod brain, known as the central complex (CX), simi
102 protocerebrum, the most anterior part of the arthropod brain.
103 vant symbioses are widespread in terrestrial arthropods but based on recent findings these specialize
104 noid-processing genes has been documented in arthropods, but introgression of BCO2 as demonstrated he
105 yme and suggests that a new pathway arose in arthropods by coopting ancient mechanisms common to proc
106                      Saliva of blood-feeding arthropods carries several antihemostatic compounds whos
107 anogenic animals are exclusively mandibulate arthropods (certain myriapods and insects) that store HC
108  after insects [1] and were one of the first arthropod clades to successfully invade land [2].
109 sed >5,300 time series for insects and other arthropods, collected over 4-36 years at monitoring site
110 ic proteins and represses factors needed for arthropod colonization.
111  keystone mutualism because they restructure arthropod communities and generate trophic cascades.
112 and the feeding guild composition of invaded arthropod communities was characterized by the exception
113                      Specifically, uninvaded arthropod communities were distinctly different in speci
114                                              Arthropod communities were more abundant and diverse in
115                                              Arthropod communities were similar across most room type
116 e, we analyze multilocus datasets of diverse arthropod communities, to evaluate whether amplification
117 treatments, and these supported more diverse arthropod communities.
118 ent and plant invasion on the composition of arthropod communities.
119 ownership showed no significant influence on arthropod community composition.
120                                           In arthropod community ecology, species richness studies te
121 ought may have greater impacts on the litter arthropod community.
122                                              Arthropods comprise the largest and most diverse phylum
123                         The vision system of arthropods consists of a dense array of individual photo
124                         While many predatory arthropods consume non-prey foods from lower trophic lev
125 specification of cephalic neural circuits in arthropods correspond to those in chordates, thereby imp
126  trophic levels and the relationship between arthropod dispersal capability and the spatial scale of
127 along with resident behavior, to explore how arthropod diversity and community composition are influe
128 of land cover types is purported to decrease arthropod diversity in agroecosystems and is dependent o
129                         We found that indoor arthropod diversity is strongly influenced by access to
130 only high microbial diversity, but also high arthropod diversity.
131 tions have occurred in this major lineage of arthropod diversity.
132 xpenditure of host lipid stores in the model arthropod Drosophila melanogaster.
133 ates of phenotypic and genomic evolution for arthropods during the early Cambrian, thereby shortening
134                      In Drosophila and other arthropods, eggs are activated by mechanical pressure in
135 litate the transition between vertebrate and arthropod environments.
136  future research to improve understanding of arthropod evolution, and animal evolutionary genomics mo
137 ders spanning more than 500 million years of arthropod evolution, we document changes in gene and pro
138 he polysaccharide chitin, a key component of arthropod exoskeletons and fungal cell walls, is endogen
139 ll increase or decline was consistent across arthropod feeding groups and was similar for heavily dis
140 pacts of sheep grazing and/or hay cutting on arthropod foliage communities and flora within Welsh upl
141 ly removing heterotrophs (large vertebrates, arthropods, foliar and soil fungi) from naturally and ex
142                    We experimentally removed arthropods, foliar fungi and soil fungi from the longest
143 ogen stable isotope analyses to characterize arthropod food webs across three biofuel crops represent
144 code sequences for several thousand Hawaiian arthropods from 14 orders, which were collected across t
145                     Specifically, we sampled arthropods from a single common street tree species acro
146 ed leaves laid atop it while also preventing arthropods from escaping the experimental arena.
147 ntal removal of foliar fungi, soil fungi and arthropods from experimental prairies planted with 1, 4
148               Analysis of the smallest known arthropod genome reveals a mechanism for genome reductio
149         We found that EVEs are widespread in arthropod genomes and primarily correspond to unclassifi
150           While the abundance of EVEs within arthropod genomes and the frequency with which EVEs give
151                                              Arthropod genomes contain sequences derived from integra
152 he repertoire and function of EVEs across 48 arthropod genomes.
153  number of MGOs deviating from the ancestral arthropod ground pattern and unevenly distributed among
154 ramework for relationships between the major arthropod groups, such as the clade Pancrustacea, which
155 f covariance among herbivorous and predatory arthropod guilds.
156                             Considering that arthropods harbor a rich microbiota, its potential egest
157  sample size, the raw moments of the SADs of arthropods have a power law pattern similar to that obse
158  environmental stresses, including attack by arthropod herbivores whose feeding activity is often sti
159        The spirochaete relies heavily on its arthropod host for basic metabolic functions and has dev
160 y produce a transmissible infection in their arthropod host is just as critical to their life cycle,
161 d antibody-blocking assays revealed that the arthropod HSP70-like molecule contributes to differentia
162 e our approaches to technical innovations in arthropod identification and the detection of microorgan
163  predict species richness and extinctions of arthropods immediately following 50% habitat loss.
164 of ticks for the elucidation of paradigms in arthropod immunology.
165                             We captured 6746 arthropods in 34 families from 111 sites that varied in
166 abitats) and configuration (edge density) on arthropods in fields and their margins, pest control, po
167  how changes in densities of large predatory arthropods in forest leaf-litter communities altered low
168                                              Arthropods in the leaf litter layer of forest soils infl
169 ated both Culicoides and other blood-feeding arthropods in this process.
170 ligate intracellular bacteria(1) that infect arthropods, including approximately two-thirds of insect
171 t displays a number of features ancestral to arthropods, including short germ embryogenesis.
172               This provides insight into how arthropod-infecting partitiviruses may be maintained in
173                               Vertebrate and arthropod insectivores constitute two co-dominant predat
174 man terminal ileum to cause cholera, and the arthropod intestine and exoskeleton to persist in the aq
175 al history, transforming small, obscure soil arthropods into a dominant terrestrial group that has pr
176 edical entomology is focused on the study of arthropods involved in human health.
177                         The piRNA pathway in arthropods is best understood in the ovary of Drosophila
178 ameras directly mimicking the eyes of common arthropods is complicated by their curved geometry.
179                  The evolutionary history of arthropods is illuminated by a rich record of fossils, o
180                 We found that the density of arthropod larvae was significantly reduced by the tricla
181 ses did not consistently affect abundance of arthropod larvae.
182 d that similar events might have occurred in arthropods, leading to another structural family of less
183  to their long and unique life cycles, these arthropods likely evolved robust epigenetic mechanisms t
184 lish dorsoventral polarity in vertebrate and arthropod limbs, are similarly polarized in cuttlefish.
185                         In the branch of the arthropod lineage that led to the insects and crustacean
186 bes, mammalian hosts and their hematophagous arthropods may result in cost-effective (mutualism) or e
187 ions that remain in fields within and beyond arthropod-microorganism associations.
188  models to decipher the interactions between arthropods, microorganisms, and humans.
189      We show that Su(H) from a wide array of arthropods, molluscs, and annelids includes motifs that
190   The break is common in protostome animals (arthropods, molluscs, annelids etc.), but a break has al
191 oda: Filarioidea) that cause LF require both arthropod (mosquito) intermediate hosts and mammalian de
192 imetabolous insect, is a more representative arthropod: most of its segments form sequentially after
193 , such as the vertebrate hippocampus and the arthropod mushroom bodies, are both structurally and fun
194 ting) is the defining character of Ecdysoza (arthropods, nematodes and related phyla).
195 ossil grade from which modern panarthropods (arthropods, onychophorans, and tardigrades) are derived.
196 egulatory light-chain phosphorylation (as in arthropods) or Ca(2+)-binding (in mollusks, lacking phos
197           Molluscan pedal peptides (PPs) and arthropod orcokinins (OKs) are prototypes of a family of
198 east 140 different putative mimics from four arthropod orders including ants, wasps, bugs, tree hoppe
199   There is now compelling evidence that many arthropods pattern their segments using a clock-and-wave
200 emus hampei, which is considered the primary arthropod pest of coffee worldwide.
201 biotic stress with larger and more voracious arthropod pest populations, our results suggest that ant
202 redatory mite used for biological control of arthropod pests.
203 ontain significant and diverse inclusions of arthropods, plants and fungi.
204 r dominant eukaryotic groups, the nematodes, arthropods, platyhelminthes, and the annelids; some of w
205 on interactions between plants, microbes and arthropods (PMA).
206 y interactions between plants, microbes, and arthropods (PMA): Impacts, mechanisms, and prospects for
207 y Interactions between Plants, Microbes, and Arthropods (PMA): Impacts, Mechanisms, and Prospects for
208 nal diversity (communities across fields) of arthropod pollinators, predators, herbivores, and detrit
209 ivestock can have detrimental effects on the arthropod populations in livestock faeces.
210                The apparent robustness of US arthropod populations is reassuring.
211 ntally manipulated abundances of the largest arthropod predators (apex predators) in field mesocosms
212                                              Arthropod predators and parasitoids attack crop pests, p
213                  Here we compared genes from arthropod predators encoding insect specific sodium, pot
214                                Blood-feeding arthropods produce antiinflammatory salivary proteins ca
215 lethora of novel pollen, bacteria, mould and arthropod proteins significant in the aetiology of sEA.
216  to the stem groups of the major terrestrial arthropod radiations is a longstanding challenge.
217 es (e.g. in Symphypleona or Cantharidae) and arthropod reductions after hay cut, when mostly Diptera
218 tropics, and some of them might be important arthropod-related proteins involved in cross-reactivity
219          Chelicerates are a diverse group of arthropods, represented by such forms as predatory spide
220  Intracellular Wolbachia bacteria manipulate arthropod reproduction to promote their own inheritance.
221 nisms that reside within or transmit through arthropod reproductive tissues have profound impacts on
222 inciples of the biology of microorganisms in arthropod reproductive tissues, including bacteria, viru
223 species of beetles, insects, and terrestrial arthropods, respectively.
224                                              Arthropod responses to warming within each city were cha
225                                           In arthropods, RNA interference (RNAi) is responsible for a
226 l as 14 species of invertebrate animals, all arthropods save for a single nematode population.
227 s self-medicate using a variety of plant and arthropod secondary metabolites by either ingesting them
228           In this Review, we discuss how the arthropod segmentation clock generates a repeating seque
229 may lead to new possibilities of "silencing" arthropod serpins with unknown functions for investigati
230           These findings suggest that indoor arthropods serve as a connection to the outdoors, and th
231 ve-sense RNA viruses that infect plants, the arthropod serves as a host as well by supporting virus r
232                     They can selfishly alter arthropod sex ratios and reproductive strategies to incr
233                    Remains of early Cambrian arthropods showed the external lattices of enormous comp
234 ces to the silks from other water-associated arthropods, shows that there is a diversity of strategie
235 reproduction, and (iii) important impacts on arthropod speciation.
236 e during infection with known viruses in the arthropod species analyzed.IMPORTANCE Our results greatl
237 s, 1-octen-3-ol, is a semiochemical for many arthropod species and also serves as a developmental hor
238 ure of attacked leaves in a community of six arthropod species feeding on apple leaves.
239 EVEs or serve an antiviral function in other arthropod species is unknown.
240    Additionally, DWV has been detected in 65 arthropod species spanning eight insect orders and three
241 he unusual abundance of opsins found in many arthropod species' visual systems.
242 teria inhabit the cells of about half of all arthropod species, an unparalleled success stemming in l
243 he piRNA pathway may be generalized to other arthropod species, speculation regarding the antiviral f
244 d function in an exceptionally wide range of arthropod species.
245 present in some parasitic nematodes and many arthropod species.
246 otic bacteria that infect nearly half of all arthropod species.
247                               Silk producing arthropods spin solid fibres from an aqueous protein fee
248                    Moreover, large predatory arthropods strongly impacted litter decomposition, and t
249                         The vision system of arthropods such as insects and crustaceans is based on t
250 ted with field observations, we evaluated 75 arthropod taxa commonly found on the primary host plant
251 few studies have focused on identifying what arthropod taxa contribute to these losses.
252 ifts in the biomass of four common grassland arthropod taxa-Auchenorrhyncha, sucking herbivores, Acri
253  from initial, pre-treatment densities of 39 arthropod taxa.
254 oors and carpeted rooms hosted more types of arthropods than non-carpeted rooms.
255 ases.IMPORTANCE Mites are important group of arthropods that are associated with a variety of human d
256 g in the Crustacea, the other major group of arthropods that commonly consume plants, to estimate how
257 erspecific interactions may exist with other arthropods that reproduce in avian and mammalian nests.
258 ed in hair-based flow sensors in terrestrial arthropods that stand out among the most sensitive biolo
259                                       In all arthropods the plesiomorphic (ancestral character state)
260                                           In arthropods, the body wall has served as a repeated sourc
261 ation and the detection of microorganisms in arthropods, the use of arthropods as epidemiological or
262 ibrated with fossils estimate the origins of arthropods to be in the Ediacaran, while most other deep
263  by providing warm habitats that may attract arthropods to colonise the nest structure.
264                         Here we used data on arthropods to test predictions obtained with computer si
265 grees C to 26 degrees C) temperatures of the arthropod transmission vector or external environment.
266 IMPORTANCE Dengue virus (DENV), an important arthropod-transmitted human pathogen that causes a spect
267  infection.IMPORTANCE Flaviviruses and other arthropod-transmitted viruses represent a widespread glo
268 ipelago and compare the utility of different arthropod trapping methods for biodiversity explorations
269 ently placing some key extinct clades on the arthropod tree of life may require less ambiguous interp
270 or disrupting the viral disease cycle in the arthropod vector and could be putative determinants of v
271 capabilities during its enzootic cycle in an arthropod vector and mammalian host.
272  interactions between B. burgdorferi and its arthropod vector and suggest additional targets to inter
273  viral attachment and possibly in entry into arthropod vector host cells.
274 s impacts B. burgdorferi colonization of its arthropod vector.
275  by a rickettsial pathogen to survive in its arthropod vector.
276  The defense responses of mosquito and other arthropod vectors against parasites are important for un
277 abolism influences biochemical networks, and arthropod vectors are endowed with an immune system that
278                                              Arthropod vectors of disease are particularly sensitive
279                                              Arthropod vectors serve as native reservoirs and transmi
280 tanding the sophisticated interactions among arthropod vectors, microbiota, and arboviruses may offer
281            Globally, diseases transmitted by arthropod vectors, such as mosquitoes, remain a major ca
282                                           In arthropod vectors, symbiotic microorganisms residing in
283                                        Among arthropod vectors, ticks transmit the most diverse human
284 f these microbes in both mammalian hosts and arthropod vectors.
285 r bacteria that are typically transmitted by arthropod vectors.
286 emerging flavivirus transmitted primarily by arthropod vectors.
287 etabolism beyond mammalian hosts and towards arthropod vectors.
288 istic or commensal organisms when colonizing arthropod vectors.
289 ble component of Rickettsia biology involves arthropod vectors: for instance, typhus group rickettsia
290                                     However, arthropod venoms are underexploited, although they are a
291  this effect disappeared when soil fungi and arthropods were also removed, demonstrating that both pl
292  With the advent of molecular phylogenetics, arthropods were found to be monophyletic and placed with
293                      The earliest stem-group arthropods were lobopodians, worm-like animals with annu
294        Abundances and community structure of arthropods were similar in REF and experimental plots, s
295 to acquired resistance against blood-feeding arthropods which, in turn, counteract these cells by mod
296 little is known about sleep in blood-feeding arthropods, which have a critical role in public health
297 roduction of chemical signals has focused on arthropods, while its study among vertebrates remains ne
298 ntracellular bacteria found in nematodes and arthropods worldwide, including insect vectors that tran
299 -transmitted bacteria to high frequencies in arthropods worldwide.
300 several broadly defined trophic groupings of arthropods would be lower under reduced rainfall.

 
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