203 results on '"Bayne, B. L."'
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2. Use of Dual-Labeled Microcapsules to Discern the Physiological Fates of Assimilated Carbohydrate, Protein Carbon, and Protein Nitrogen in Suspension-Feeding Organisms
3. Physiology and Grazing Working Groups Joint Report
4. Comparisons of measurements of clearance rates in bivalve molluscs
5. A physiological comparison between Pacific oysters Crassostrea gigas and Sydney Rock oysters Saccostrea glomerata : food, feeding and growth in a shared estuarine habitat
6. Physiological Components of Growth Differences between Individual Oysters ( Crassostrea gigas ) and a Comparison with Saccostrea commercialis
7. Protein Turnover, Physiological Energetics and Heterozygosity in the Blue Mussel, Mytilus edulis: The Basis of Variable Age-Specific Growth
8. Influence of Temperature and Food Availability on the Ecological Energetics of the Giant Scallop Placopecten magellanicus. IV. Reproductive Effort, Value and Cost
9. Aspects of Feeding, including Estimates of Gut Residence Time, in Three Mytilid Species (Bivalvia, Mollusca) at Two Contrasting Sites in the Cape Peninsula, South Africa
10. Reproductive Effort and Value in Different Populations of the Marine Mussel, Mytilus edulis L.
11. The Physiological Ecology of Two Populations of Mytilus edulis L.
12. The Physiological Ecology of Mytilus californianus Conrad. 1. Metabolism and Energy Balance
13. The Physiological Ecology of Mytilus californianus Conrad. 2. Adaptations to Low Oxygen Tension and Air Exposure
14. Measurement of the Responses of Individuals to Environmental Stress and Pollution: Studies with Bivalve Molluscs [and Discussion]
15. Some Ecological Consequences of the Physiological and Biochemical Effects of Petroleum Compounds on Marine Molluscs [and Discussion]
16. Feeding and Digestion in Suspension-Feeding Bivalve Molluscs: The Relevance of Physiological Compensations
17. Thermal Responses Reflect Protein Turnover in Mytilus edulis L.
18. Food Availability and Resource Allocation in Senescent Placopecten magellanicus: Evidence From Field Populations
19. The Responses of the Larvae of Mytilus edulis L. to Light and to Gravity
20. Primary and Secondary Settlement in Mytilus edulis L. (Mollusca)
21. Novel observations underlying the fast growth of suspension-feeding shellfish in turbid environments: Mytilus edulis
22. Cell characteristics and biochemical composition ofDunaliella primolecta Butcher conditioned at different concentrations of dissolved nitrogen
23. The Proposed Dropping of the Genus Crassostrea for All Pacific Cupped Oysters and Its Replacement by a New Genus Magallana: A Dissenting View
24. Seasonal variation in the relative utilization of dietary protein for energy and biosynthesis by the mussel Mytilus edulis
25. Seasonal variation in the relative utilization of carbon and nitrogen by the mussel Mytilus edulis: budgets, conversion efficiencies and maintenance requirements
26. Feeding and resource allocation in the mussel Mytilus edulis: evidence for time-averaged optimization
27. Growth and Production of Mussels Mytilus edulis from Two Populations
28. An overview of the GEEP Workshop
29. Background and rationale to a practical workshop on biological effects of pollutants
30. Physiological measurements on Nucula tenuis and on isolated gills of Mytilus edulis and Carcinus maenas
31. Effects of seston concentration on feeding, digestion and growth in the mussel Mytilus edulis
32. Activity and Metabolism in the Mussel Mytilus edulis L. during Intertidal Hypoxia and Aerobic Recovery
33. The Relevance of Whole-Body Protein Metabolism to Measured Costs of Maintenance and Growth in Mytilus edulis
34. The Proposed Dropping of the Genus Crassostrea for All Pacific Cupped Oysters and Its Replacement by a New Genus Magallana: A Dissenting View
35. Measuring the Effects of Pollution at the Cellular and Organism Level
36. The Respiratory Response of Mytilus perna L. (Mollusca: Lamellibranchia) to Reduced Environmental Oxygen
37. Some Effects of Temperature and Food on the Rate of Oxygen Consumption by Mytilus edulis L
38. Mixed function oxygenases and xenobiotic detoxication/toxication systems in bivalve molluscs
39. Responses ofMytilus edulis L. to low oxygen tension: Anaerobic metabolism of the posterior adductor muscle and mantle tissues
40. On the role of strombine formation in the energy metabolism of adductor muscle of a sessile bivalve
41. Some relationships between growth, metabolism and food in the mussel Mytilus edulis
42. Co-ordinated rhythms of digestion, absorption and excretion in Mytilus edulis (Bivalvia: Mollusca)
43. Responses ofMytilus edulis L. to low oxygen tension: Acclimation of the rate of oxygen consumption
44. Seasonal variation in the balance between physiological mechanisms of feeding and digestion in Mytilus edulis (Bivalvia: Mollusca)
45. Seasonal changes in the physiology, reproductive condition and carbohydrate content of the cockle Cardium (=Cerastoderma) edule (Bivalvia: Cardiidae)
46. Responses of Mytilus edulis on exposure to the water-accommodated fraction of North Sea oil
47. Allozyme variation in populations of the dog-whelkNucella lapillus (Prosobranchia: Muricacea) from the South West peninsula of England
48. Some physiological consequences of keepingMytilus edulis in the laboratory
49. LYSOSOMES IN THE RESPONSE TO SALINITY BY MYTILUS EDULIS L.
50. Phenotypic Flexibility and Physiological Tradeoffs in the Feeding and Growth of Marine Bivalve Molluscs
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