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1 ucture in Bestiolina similis, a paracalanoid copepod.
2 olic processes during development in Calanus copepods.
3 be useful for metatranscriptomic analysis of copepods.
4 liced leader (SL) trans-splicing in calanoid copepods.
5 ost permanent diazotroph associations in the copepods.
6 in the size range of mesozooplankton such as copepods.
7 flagellates to greater than millimeter-sized copepods.
8 ed almost exclusively of lipid-rich calanoid copepods.
9 plastic detritus on algal ingestion rates in copepods.
10 compared with the more widely studied larger copepods.
11 ine fungi and the first occurrence of marine copepods.
12 s, penaeid and caridean shrimp, and calanoid copepods.
13 nt impact upon the viability of these hybrid copepods.
14 of bacterial communities in the presence of copepods.
15 ropods, indicating lower oxidative stress in copepods.
16 iapause and diapause termination in calanoid copepods.
17 t sharing the shallow water benthos with the copepods.
20 and coastal waters along with its host, the copepod, a significant member of the zooplankton communi
21 holera, is commensal to zooplankton, notably copepods, a simple filtration procedure was developed wh
24 ock biomass, Calanus spp. abundance, overall copepod abundance and phytoplankton bloom magnitude.
25 time-series of temperature, fish larval and copepod abundance from a Scottish coastal monitoring sit
26 ed to the widespread, ~50% decline in summer copepod abundance we observe over the last 60 years.
30 e (EPR)) of the numerically dominant neritic copepod Acartia tonsa, in a year-round upwelling system
31 ction in natural populations of the calanoid copepods Acartia tonsa (Dana) and Labidocera aestiva (Wh
34 sed the positive phototactic behavior of the copepods after 24 h exposure and a similar significant e
35 ducing sharply contrasting bioturbation--the copepod Amphiascus tenuiremis and amphipod Leptocheirus
37 . polyedra cells flash upon contact with the copepod and are subsequently rejected, seemingly unharme
39 s of higher trophic levels including (small) copepods and a standardized index of fish recruitment, a
40 ericrustacea (malacostracans, thecostracans, copepods and branchiopods) and Xenocarida (cephalocarids
41 originally found in cnidarians, and later in copepods and cephalochordates (amphioxus) (Branchiostoma
44 or inherited it from the common ancestor of copepods and deuterostomes, i.e. the ancestral bilateria
45 ted, P. globosa exposed to grazing cues from copepods and dinoflagellates had significantly decreased
46 rates comparable to sophisticated predatory copepods and fish, and they are capable of altering the
49 for crown-group branchiopods and total-group copepods and ostracods, extending the respective ranges
51 he trajectories of flow tracers and calanoid copepods and we quantify their ability to find mates whe
52 ith the directions of sensory antennae (e.g. copepods); and this is certain to influence optimal pred
53 dicting presence was low, peaking at 0.5 for copepods, and model skill typically did not outperform a
55 agnitude and duration of the temperature and copepod anomalies were strongly and positively related t
56 esources derived from its natural habitats - copepods (Apocyclops royi) and brown algae (Fucus vesicu
58 luding microplankton (approximately 50 mum), copepods (approximately 1 mm), and fish larvae (>3 mm).
63 noid copepods, but bioassays have shown that copepods are also sensitive to a broad range of contamin
67 is largely resistant to chemical degradation copepods are exceedingly scarce in the geological record
73 owards smaller phytoplankton and carnivorous copepods, associated with the seasonal impact of the EAC
78 rt were primarily associated with changes in copepod biomass, driven by shifting distributions of abu
80 row specific groups of bacteria in or on the copepod body, particularly Flavobacteriaceae and Pseudoa
82 patial and temporal distribution of calanoid copepods, but bioassays have shown that copepods are als
84 oil on phototactic behavior of the calanoid copepod Calanus finmarchicus (Gunnerus) copepodite stage
85 effects of dispersed crude oil in the marine copepod Calanus finmarchicus (Gunnerus) was isolated by
86 ace patches (>1000 km(2)) of the red colored copepod Calanus finmarchicus can be identified from sate
91 pecific warming reduced the abundance of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus, a key food item of cod, an
95 prey ( approximately 1650 algae mL(-1)) the copepod Calanus helgolandicus egested faecal pellets wit
97 re physiological responses of the crustacean copepod Calanus pacificus and pelagic pteropod mollusk L
98 lastics in three species of zooplankton, the copepods Calanus helgolandicus and Acartia tonsa and lar
99 tes in three dominant species of herbivorous copepods (Calanus finmarchicus, Calanus glacialis, Calan
100 t brain, antennules, and cord in five marine copepods: Calanus finmarchicus, Gaussia princeps, Bestio
101 ir pivotal position in the food web, pelagic copepods can provide crucial intermediary transferring o
102 ntial evidence shows that some grazers (e.g. copepods) can bypass this size constraint by breaking do
105 oplastics, encapsulated within egests of the copepod Centropages typicus, could be transferred to C.
106 cultures were exposed to chemical cues from copepods, ciliates and heterotrophic dinoflagellates, re
107 viruses in each species, named Acartia tonsa copepod circo-like virus (AtCopCV) and Labidocera aestiv
111 different reflected colors and also that the copepod color strongly depends on the angular orientatio
112 ess factors are obviously at play in natural copepod communities, most studies consider only one or t
113 fected downward carbon transport by altering copepod community structure and demonstrate how carbon f
114 omalously warm water and the response of the copepod community was rapid (lag of zero to 2 months) fo
118 that viruses were actively proliferating in copepod connective tissue as opposed to infecting gut co
119 simple predator-prey model parameterized for copepods consuming protists generates cycle periods for
121 cale changes in the biogeography of calanoid copepod crustaceans in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean
122 es, the top-down control of phytoplankton by copepods decreased over the same time period in the west
126 0 representative plankton species, including copepods, diatoms, and dinoflagellates, all found in the
130 millimeter-scale aquatic crustaceans such as copepods, ensuring reproductive success is a challenge a
132 d grasses) may affect survival of a calanoid copepod (Eurytemora affinis) common in the San Francisco
136 rey selectivity was significantly altered in copepods exposed to nylon fibers (ANOVA, P < 0.01) resul
137 algal ingestion rates (ANOVA, P = 0.07), and copepods exposed to nylon granules showed nonsignificant
138 , a response that should be adaptive because copepods feed four times more on colonies versus solitar
142 We have examined nine species of wild-caught copepods from Jiaozhou Bay, China that represent the maj
143 ibe abundant crustacean fragments, including copepods, from a single bitumen clast in a glacial diami
144 r set, we selectively enriched and sequenced copepod full-length cDNAs, which led to the characteriza
147 ation, which slightly attenuated levels of a copepod GFP mutant protein, significantly enhanced its f
148 to copepodamides [5], polar lipids exuded by copepod grazers, allowing for a brighter flash when biol
149 erioplankton shifts in the water column, and copepod grazing on these picoplanktonic cyanobacteria.
150 diatom species evolved in response to heavy copepod grazing pressure in the presence of an abundant
153 e from those in the seawater, suggesting the copepod gut hosts long-term, specialized communities.
156 detes and Actinobacteria were present in the copepod guts throughout the year, and showed synchronous
157 but divergent responses in the same habitat; copepods had higher oxygen-reactive absorbance capacity,
158 Thus, the antioxidant defence system of the copepods has a greater capacity to respond to oxidative
160 ion and abundance measurements indicate that copepods have the potential to influence the microbial c
161 vertebrates, including some superfamilies of copepod, have functionally and structurally similar myel
162 e found that dominant taxa, such as calanoid copepods, have conserved their thermal niches and tracke
164 up the food web (bottom-up control) through copepod herbivores to zooplankton carnivores because of
165 se resemblance to Recent mangrove-associated copepods highlights the antiquity of the specialized har
166 d beagles to varying densities of uninfected copepods in 2 liters of water to evaluate the number of
167 Late developmental stages of the marine copepods in the genus Calanus can spend extended periods
169 decrease in holoplankton (dominated by small copepods), indicating a changing balance of benthic and
171 s via drinking water that contains cyclopoid copepods infected with third stage larvae of D. medinens
181 tinct mechanisms provide a new view into how copepods may shape microbial communities in the open oce
183 isolating a new infectious EhV strain from a copepod microbiome that these viruses are infectious.
184 ere, we test for a TMII in which a parasitic copepod modifies the predator-prey interaction between a
185 d across different life stages of a calanoid copepod, monitoring for lethal and sublethal responses.
186 of copepod mortality, and up to 35% of total copepod mortality cannot be accounted for by predation a
187 ods, little is known regarding the causes of copepod mortality, and up to 35% of total copepod mortal
189 m to identify the structural organization of copepod myelin and the likely mechanism for its formatio
191 ults from Arctic under-ice investigations of copepod natural distributions associated with late-winte
193 stine counterparts on the development of the copepod nauplii (Tisbe battagliai) were investigated.
195 data suggest that the tissues investing the copepod nervous system possess an organization that is a
196 thin sections through different parts of the copepod nervous system to identify the structural organi
197 icle) to surround inner substructures of the copepod nervous systems, and electron-lucent networks pe
201 crustaceans and hexapods), and indicate that copepods occupy an important phylogenetic position relat
202 and abundant members of the ocean plankton (copepods of the genus Calanus) that play a key trophic r
203 ological taxonomy, and (5) the nonindigenous copepod Oithona davisae, not reported before in the Ches
204 al (mt) genome to infer phylogenies, but for copepods, only seven complete mt genomes have been publi
205 d GFP by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from copepods or cnidarians or inherited it from the common a
206 e first to be noted across the boundaries of copepod orders and support the possibility that mt-gene
208 ationships between representatives of all 10 copepod orders have been investigated using 28S and 18S
209 s of our species with those known from other copepod orders revealed the arrangement of mt genes of o
214 , amphibians, birds, bryophytes, arthropods, copepods, plants and several microorganism taxa and sequ
215 mbers of marine mesozooplankton communities, copepods play critical roles in oceanic food webs and bi
216 port on genetic diversity within the pelagic copepod Pleuromamma abdominalis in the poorly known Sout
217 protein fused to Turbo-GFP derived from the copepod Pontellina plumata was generated as an EV report
228 oorganisms (diazotrophs) was investigated in copepods (primarily Acartia spp.) in parallel to that of
229 ddition enhanced copepod growth, with larger copepods produced at each pH compared to the impact of p
232 ssues by exposing a keystone tropical marine copepod, Pseudodiaptomus annandalei, to copper (Cu) for
235 Despite high predation pressure, planktonic copepods remain one of the most abundant groups on the p
236 st discovery of amber-preserved harpacticoid copepods, represented by ten putative species belonging
238 ation factors (BAFs) to investigate how this copepod responds to the change in exposure to alpha-HCH.
239 dation of the protist Paramecium bursaria by copepods resulted in a >100-fold increase in the number
240 f the electron transport system in F2 hybrid copepods resulting from crosses of a pair of divergent p
244 ositive temperature anomalies and changes in copepod species composition in the northern California C
247 DNA is evolving at a very rapid rate in this copepod species, and this could increase the likelihood
248 geographic distribution of a crucial endemic copepod species, Calanus glacialis, may respond to both
249 dence for active viral infection in dominant copepod species, indicating that viruses may significant
250 OA and highlight that the globally important copepod species, Oithona spp., may be more sensitive to
251 e investigate the mating behavior of two key copepod species, Temora longicornis and Eurytemora affin
254 YN-A was detected from seawater and full-gut copepods, suggesting that the new N contributed by UCYN-
255 d in > 1 mum seawater particles and full-gut copepods, suggesting that they associate with copepods p
258 ns the motion of flow tracers and planktonic copepods swimming freely at several intensities of quasi
261 educed to oxidised glutathione was higher in copepods than in pteropods, indicating lower oxidative s
262 characterized by an abundance of lipid-rich copepods that support rapid growth and survival of ecolo
263 key biota-large diatoms, dinoflagellates and copepods-that traditionally fuel higher tropic levels su
264 how distributional and abundance changes of copepods, the dominant group of zooplankton, have affect
266 a group of eight small molecules released by copepods, the most abundant zooplankton in the sea, whic
267 tes are low; considering the small size of a copepod, these mesozooplanktonic crustaceans may serve a
268 ess in interpopulation hybrids of the marine copepod Tigriopus californicus has been traced to intera
273 dy, we crossed populations of the intertidal copepod Tigriopus californicus to disrupt putatively coe
275 that an abundant intertidal crustacean, the copepod Tigriopus californicus, has lost major genetic c
276 ation and hybrid breakdown in the intertidal copepod Tigriopus californicus, we have characterized th
277 d quantified environmental preference of the copepod Tigriopus californicus, which inhabits rocky-sho
280 s on gonad and egg development, variation in copepod timing mostly responded to February temperature.
284 ve the potential to influence the ability of copepods to survive starvation and other environmental s
285 epodSL was a sensitive and specific tool for copepod transcriptomic studies at both the individual an
286 cDNAs, which led to the characterization of copepod transcripts and the cataloging of the complete s
288 are slow swimmers yet capture evasive prey (copepods) using a technique known as the 'pivot' feeding
289 ens by three native and widespread cyclopoid copepods, using functional response and prey switching e
290 a high prevalence of sea lice (ectoparasitic copepods) was first reported on juvenile wild pink salmo
294 ember of the zooplankton community (calanoid copepods) were reduced 27% more than it would be predict
295 ingle cells are consumed by ciliates but not copepods, whereas colonies are consumed by copepods but
296 onclude that microplastics impede feeding in copepods, which over time could lead to sustained reduct
298 residues were best explained by representing copepods with two toxicokinetic compartments: separating