Ed Barker
Echinoderms 2000
Ed Barker
Echinoderms 2000
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book focuses on the role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration taking into account the neurotrophic control of regeneration and the specific involvement of neurally derived factors in regulating cellular phenomena such as proliferation, migration and differentiation.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Echinoderms659,99 €
- John M. LawrenceEchinoderms467,99 €
- Prabhanshu KumarGATE 2022 Life sciences - Solved Papers 2000-2021 by Dr. Prabhanshu Kumar, Er. Preeti T. Kumar57,99 €
- NaBiV Heft 172 Band 2.2: Das europäische Schutzgebietssystem Natura 2000 Band 2.2 Lebensraumtypen64,00 €
- Fish Oil Replacement and Alternative Lipid Sources in Aquaculture Feeds268,99 €
- T. J. PandianReproduction and Development in Platyhelminthes72,99 €
- H. ReinerstenFish Farming Technology385,99 €
-
-
-
This book focuses on the role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration taking into account the neurotrophic control of regeneration and the specific involvement of neurally derived factors in regulating cellular phenomena such as proliferation, migration and differentiation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 620
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1344g
- ISBN-13: 9789026518683
- ISBN-10: 9026518684
- Artikelnr.: 23150607
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 620
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1344g
- ISBN-13: 9789026518683
- ISBN-10: 9026518684
- Artikelnr.: 23150607
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Ed Barker
General 1. Cidaroid-crinoid interactions as observed from a submersible 2.
Role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration 3. New Mesozoic
echinoderms (Serpianotiaris: Euechinoidea; Cottreauaster. Asteroidea) from
New Zealand 4. Maintaining fluid balance in echinoderms 5. Depth/substrate
relationships of echinoderms, off NW Hokkaido Island, Japan Sea 6. Stress
and deviant reproduction in echinoderms 7. Different echinoderm classes
have different Hox gene clusters 8. Implications of a proposed
anterior-posterior bilateral body axis in echinoderms 9. Quantitative
biogeography in the Southern Ocean: Deriving processes from pattern 10.
Bathyal echinoderms of the Galapagos Islands 11. Genic patterning of the
radial echinoderm central nervous system and evolution of the echinoderm
body plan 12. Strategies to identify differentially expressed genes during
regeneration 13. Echinoderm eggs: Biochemistry and larval biology 14.
Growing a stalked echinoderm within the Extraxial-Axial Theory 15. Species
of echinoderms described 16. Evolution of development rates 17. Fluxes and
impact of anthropogenic contaminants (metals and PCBs) in echinoderms 18.
Evolution of a gene network in echinoderms 19. Crisp's Rule, epidemic
spawning, and pheromones: What we still don't know about the control of
reproduction in deep-sea echinoderms Extinct classes 20. Attachment
strategies in Diploporita inhabiting soft-substratum communities 21.
Stylophoran morphology in the light of a new system of skeletal homologies
for echinoderms 22. Holothurians from the Late Cretaceous of the Isle of
Rügen (Baltic Sea) 23. Ordovician holothurians from the Baltic Sea area 24.
Ophiocistioids and holothurians from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden 25. A
new Sphaeronitid-like Aristocystitid (Diploporita) from the Ordovician of
Spain Crinoids Crinoids 26. Light stable isotope geochemistry of the
crinoid skeleton and its use in biology and paleobiology 27. Morphology of
the stalked crinoid aboral nervous system (Echinodermata) and its possible
phylogenetic implications 28. Distribution, morphology, and possible
phylogeny of Triassic Crinoidea from New Zealand and New Caledonia 29. A
comparison of current and previous surveys of comatulid crinoid populations
at Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles 30. Antarctic comatulid crinoids
(Echinodermata) 31. Just what is Atelecrinusl: Unique morphology in a
living bathyal feather star 32. Stalk growth rates of Isocrinidae
(Echinodermata: Crinoidea): A summary of a decade of in situ experiments
33. Life and death of the crinoid Uintacrinus (Late Cretaceous) 34.
Microstructure preservation and microbial sealing in Uintacrinus
Lagerstatten 35. The Seamount crinoid fauna off southern Tasmania
(preliminary results) 36. Occurrence and expression of a novel Transforming
Growth Factor-beta homologue in crinoids 37. Initial phylogeny of the
Comasteridae (Crinoidea) from mtDNA sequences 38. Symbiosis in crinoids
from the Wenlock of Britain 39. Quantification of the current regimes
experienced by crinoids and ophiacanthids on the Bahamian Slope: Taller is
not always better Asteroids 40. The use of lectins, particularly
concanavalin - the development of primary cell cultures from echinoderms
41. Evolution of neurogenesis in the sea star genus Patiriella 42. Clade
specific cleavage alteration in the genus Patiriella 43. Serotonin
depletion by para-chlorophenylalanine (L-PCPA) on the larvae of Patiriella
regularis (Asteroidea): Effects on feeding and swimming behavior 44. The
asteroid family Goniasteridae 45. Differential expression during
regeneration 46. Asterina at the millennium; Revelations from a Pembroke
tide-pool 47. Coscinasterias acutispina: Distribution and ecology in Toyama
Bay 48. Why is asteroid phylogeny so difficult? 49. Larval development and
asexual development of the sea star, Distolasterias nipon (Doderlein) 50.
Molecular data and phylogeny of the Asteroidea 51. Larval development of
the sea-star, Archaster typicus Muller et Troschell, with a note on the
structure of the attachment organs 52. Ampullary systems in asteroids 53.
Maternal control of development in five Patiriella species 54. The haemal
sinus - A possible conduit for migratory cells involved in repair and
regeneration of the radial nerve cord of Coscinasterias muricata following
autotomy 55. Fertilization success in the tropical sea star Oreaster
reticulatus 56. Phosphorylation of 64-kDa and 96-kDa proteins by the
signaling pathway induced by 1-methyladenine in starfish oocytes 57.
Behavioural responses to salinity and light affects dispersal of larvae of
the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, in the Derwent Estuary 58.
Impact of the northern Pacific seastar Asterias amurensis on natural
communities in south east Tasmania 59. High concentration of
maturation-inducing hormone accelerate the activation of maturation
promoting factor but not germinal vesicle breakdown in starfish oocytes 60.
Of size and space: An evolutionary trade-off in fertilization strategy
among oreasterid sea stars 61. Population characteristics of the sea star
Oreaster reticulatus in the Bahamas and across the Caribbean 62. Surplus
energy in starfish eggs 63. Parasitism of sea stars from Puget Sound,
Washington by Orchitophrya stellarum 64. Feeding niche breadth and feeding
niche overlap of paxillosid starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from a
midshelf upwelling region, Cabo Frio, Brazil 65. Expression of the Xlox
gene in a starfish Ophiuroids 66. Localisation of the neuropeptide S1 in an
ophiuroid larva 67. Respiration and excretion of a dense Ophiothrix
fragilis population in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France) 68.
Luminescence control of the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis: Preliminary
results 69. Does luminous capabilities and polychromatism reflect the
genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata? ?? 70. Arm
regeneration in the luminous ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata: A functional
approach 71. Morphological, physiological and genetic variability of the
ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata from the lagoon system of Oliveri-Tindari
(Sicily) 72. Submersible observations on the euryaline brittle star,
Asteronyx loveni (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea), living in association with a
gorgonacean coral 73. Zooplanktivory by the burrowing brittlestar
Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1985) 74. Digestion of biofilm carbohydrates by
the deposit-feeding brittlestar Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson)
(Ophiuroidea: Amphiuridae) 75. Assimilation of microbial exopolymers by a
deposit-feeding brittlestar, Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) 76. Suture
line of ophiuroid vertebral ossicles and its taxonomic significance 77.
Escape behavior of epibenthic ophiuroids buried in the sediment:
Observations of extant and fossil Ophiura sarsii sarsii 78. Horizontal
distribution of Ophiothrix fragilis planktonic larvae associated with a
tidal front in an open coastal sea 79. Effects of variable water motion on
regeneration of the infaunal brittlestar, Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1825)
(Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) 81. Functional approach to regeneration in the
brittlestar Amphiura filiformis 82. Bioluminescence and regeneration in the
ophiuroid Amphiura filiformis 83. The recent evolutionary history of
Ophiactis savignyi (Echinodermata; Ophiuroidea) 84. Lecithotrophic
development of Ophionereis schayeri: With an overview of evolution of
development within the Ophionereididae 85. Evolutionary genetics of
Amphipholis squamata 86. Amphipholis linopneusti n.sp., a sexually
dimorphic amphiurid brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea), epizoic on a
spatangoid sea urchin 87. Cellular and molecular bases of arm regeneration
in Brittlestars 88. The early development of the brittle star, Ophiodaphne
formata Koehler Holothuroids 90. Brood-protection by the New Zealand
cucumariid Squamocnus niveus (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) 91.
Reproduction and development of sea cucumbers in the Solomon Islands:
Implications for Beche-de-mer broodstock availability 94. A ganglionated
plexus in the podial connective tissue of a sea cucumber 95. Overview of
sea cucumbers fisheries over the last decade - What possibilities for a
durable management? 96. Extracellular matrix remodeling during intestinal
regeneration in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima 97. Circadian
rhythms in Chiridota rotifera (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) 98. Movement,
recruitment and size-related distribution of sea cucumbers Holothuria
scabra in Solomon Islands 99. Cuvierian tubules in tropical holothurians:
Usefulness and efficiency as a defence mechanism 100. A rearing method for
Chiridota rotifera (Holothuroidea, Apoda) 101. Identification of Hox gene
sequences in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima Selenka (Holothuroidea:
Echinodermata) 102. Settlement preferences and early migration of the sea
cucumber Holothuria scabra 103. The potential role of the holothurian
Pseudomelia sykion as a bioindicator species of heavy metals, based on
energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX) 104. Dynamic mechanical properties
of holothurian body-wall catch connective tissue 105. The occurrence and
role of a digitate genital papilla in holothurian reproduction 106. Larval
development in the tropical sea cucumber Holothuria scabra 107. Correlation
between the calcareous rings and zoogeographic distributions of Thyone
species (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) with a proposed management of the
genus 108. Holothurians from the Brazilian coast: A historical survey 109.
Population genetics of a commercially fished holothurian (Holothuria
scabra, Sandfish) on the Queensland coast 110. Confusion on the morphotypes
of Stichopus variegatus in the South China Sea 111. Reproductive cycle of
Stichopus chloronotus (Brandt, 1835) in the Straits of Malacca Echinoids
112. An epibenthic mode of life in spatangoid echinoids 113. Cell and
matrix control of echinoderm biomineralization 114. Interactions between
abalone and sea urchins on temperate rocky reefs in New South Wales,
Australia 115. The black Echinometra distributed in the Indo-West Pacific:
A species complex 116. Functions of the sea urchin fertilization envelope
117. Geographic divergence of gamete recognition systems in two sea urchins
(Strongylocentrotus spp.) 118. Effects of organic and inorganic phosphates
on feeding, absorption efficiency, nutrient allocation and righting
responses of the echinoid Lytechinus varie gatus 120. Enhancing gonad
quality in Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) collected from Doubtful Sound, New
Zealand 121. Dietary preferences of Evechinus chloroticus 122. Biology of a
poorly known echinoid, Colobocentrotus atratus, inhabiting wave swept
intertidal basaltic rocks 123. Antarctic echinoids: An interactive database
on CDROM 124. Natural enhancement of Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) in Otago
Harbour, Dunedin, 125. New Zealand using macroalgae and artificial diets
126. The occurrence of polyspermy in situ in New Zealand's endemic urchin
Evechinus chloroticus 127. Declining sea urchin recruitment in the Gulf of
Maine: Is overharvesting to blame? 128. A refuge of association for algae
faced with intensive grazing on sea urchin barrens 129. Thyroxine and the
evolution of lecithotrophic development in echinoids 130. The many "facies"
of Encope emarginata (Leske) 131. Behavior of the sea urchins,
Strongylocentrotus nudus and S. intermedius, observed in the laboratory:
Individual interference on their movement 132. Relationship between
occurrence of dense stands of the introduced Japanese kelp 133. Undaria
pinnatifida and abundance of sea urchins (Heliocidaris ery thro gramma) on
the east coast of Tasmania 134. Environmental parameters controlling
gametogenesis in the echinoid Psammechinus miliaris 135. Effects of
exogastrulation-inducing factors on development of a direct developing
echinoid, Peronella japonica 136. The effect of ultraviolet radiation on
development and time to cleavage for embryos of the sea urchin Evechinus
chloroticus 137. Palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of Lower Miocene
echinoids from the Eastern Desert, Egypt 138. Palaeontological implications
of skeletal modification by predation - using 139. Paracentrotus lividus
(Echinoidea) from the Mediterranean sea as an example 140. Carotenoid and
Mycosporine-like Amino Acid concentrations in eggs and larvae of 141.
Strongylocentrotus and Dendraster genera; Correlations with UV-radiation
sensitivity 142. Asymmetry of the Aristotle's lantern of the scutellid
sand-dollar Dendraster excentricus 143. Laboratory and field studies on sea
urchin gametogenesis and their relevance to aquaculture 144. Molecular
phylogeny of Diadema: Systematic implications 145. Food preferences of
Tripneustes gratilla (L.) (Echinodermata: Echinoidea) in an oligotrophic
and a eutrophic site on a coral reef at La Reunion, (Indian Ocean) 146.
Biomineralisation in echinoderms: Identification of occluded proteins 147.
Morphological variability within the echinoid species Abatus cordatus
(Spatangoida, Schizasteridae) from the Kerguelen Archipelago 148. What cues
do echinoid larvae use to detect their food environment: Implications for
the evolution of plasticity 149. Evolutionary history of the tooth
advancement mechanism in echinoids 150. Predation and preservation of
echinoids 151. Gimme Shelter: Factors influencing juvenile sheltering in
the red sea urchin Strongylocentrotus franciscanus 152. Variation in gonad
production in the sea urchin Loxechinus albus with size and diet 153.
Genetic differentiation of the sea urchin Evechinus chloroticus
(Echinodermata: Echinoidea) of New Zealand's fiords: Identification of
microsatellite loci 154. Developing suitable colour in the roe of cultured
green sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) 155. Evaluating
stocking as an enhancement strategy for the red sea urchin,
Strongylocentrotus franciscanus: Depth-specific recoveries 156. Spatial and
temporal variation in growth of the green sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus
droebachiensis, in the Gulf of Maine, USA 157. Effect of ultra-violet light
on gastrulation in the Antarctic sea urchin Sterechinus neumayeri 158.
Development and evolution of the echinoderm nervous system 159. Podial
coverage and test size of regular echinoids 160. Transport of fluid and
particles through the echinoid madreporite 161. Comparative studies of
normal development of the sea urchins, Colobocentrotus mertensii and
Anthocidaris crassispina 162. Cellular organization of the spine muscle of
Anthocidaris crassispina and its functional implications 163. Expression of
the vitellogenin gene in red sea urchin, Pseudocentrotus depressus 164.
Ontogenetic and morphological evolution of the ambulacral pores in
Heteraster (early spatangoids) 165. Population structure of sea urchins
(Evechinus chloroticus) along gradients in benthic productivity in the New
Zealand fjords 166. Studies on the body skeleton formation of echinometrid
larvae, using sea urchins from the Bonin Islands 167. Registered
participants
Role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration 3. New Mesozoic
echinoderms (Serpianotiaris: Euechinoidea; Cottreauaster. Asteroidea) from
New Zealand 4. Maintaining fluid balance in echinoderms 5. Depth/substrate
relationships of echinoderms, off NW Hokkaido Island, Japan Sea 6. Stress
and deviant reproduction in echinoderms 7. Different echinoderm classes
have different Hox gene clusters 8. Implications of a proposed
anterior-posterior bilateral body axis in echinoderms 9. Quantitative
biogeography in the Southern Ocean: Deriving processes from pattern 10.
Bathyal echinoderms of the Galapagos Islands 11. Genic patterning of the
radial echinoderm central nervous system and evolution of the echinoderm
body plan 12. Strategies to identify differentially expressed genes during
regeneration 13. Echinoderm eggs: Biochemistry and larval biology 14.
Growing a stalked echinoderm within the Extraxial-Axial Theory 15. Species
of echinoderms described 16. Evolution of development rates 17. Fluxes and
impact of anthropogenic contaminants (metals and PCBs) in echinoderms 18.
Evolution of a gene network in echinoderms 19. Crisp's Rule, epidemic
spawning, and pheromones: What we still don't know about the control of
reproduction in deep-sea echinoderms Extinct classes 20. Attachment
strategies in Diploporita inhabiting soft-substratum communities 21.
Stylophoran morphology in the light of a new system of skeletal homologies
for echinoderms 22. Holothurians from the Late Cretaceous of the Isle of
Rügen (Baltic Sea) 23. Ordovician holothurians from the Baltic Sea area 24.
Ophiocistioids and holothurians from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden 25. A
new Sphaeronitid-like Aristocystitid (Diploporita) from the Ordovician of
Spain Crinoids Crinoids 26. Light stable isotope geochemistry of the
crinoid skeleton and its use in biology and paleobiology 27. Morphology of
the stalked crinoid aboral nervous system (Echinodermata) and its possible
phylogenetic implications 28. Distribution, morphology, and possible
phylogeny of Triassic Crinoidea from New Zealand and New Caledonia 29. A
comparison of current and previous surveys of comatulid crinoid populations
at Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles 30. Antarctic comatulid crinoids
(Echinodermata) 31. Just what is Atelecrinusl: Unique morphology in a
living bathyal feather star 32. Stalk growth rates of Isocrinidae
(Echinodermata: Crinoidea): A summary of a decade of in situ experiments
33. Life and death of the crinoid Uintacrinus (Late Cretaceous) 34.
Microstructure preservation and microbial sealing in Uintacrinus
Lagerstatten 35. The Seamount crinoid fauna off southern Tasmania
(preliminary results) 36. Occurrence and expression of a novel Transforming
Growth Factor-beta homologue in crinoids 37. Initial phylogeny of the
Comasteridae (Crinoidea) from mtDNA sequences 38. Symbiosis in crinoids
from the Wenlock of Britain 39. Quantification of the current regimes
experienced by crinoids and ophiacanthids on the Bahamian Slope: Taller is
not always better Asteroids 40. The use of lectins, particularly
concanavalin - the development of primary cell cultures from echinoderms
41. Evolution of neurogenesis in the sea star genus Patiriella 42. Clade
specific cleavage alteration in the genus Patiriella 43. Serotonin
depletion by para-chlorophenylalanine (L-PCPA) on the larvae of Patiriella
regularis (Asteroidea): Effects on feeding and swimming behavior 44. The
asteroid family Goniasteridae 45. Differential expression during
regeneration 46. Asterina at the millennium; Revelations from a Pembroke
tide-pool 47. Coscinasterias acutispina: Distribution and ecology in Toyama
Bay 48. Why is asteroid phylogeny so difficult? 49. Larval development and
asexual development of the sea star, Distolasterias nipon (Doderlein) 50.
Molecular data and phylogeny of the Asteroidea 51. Larval development of
the sea-star, Archaster typicus Muller et Troschell, with a note on the
structure of the attachment organs 52. Ampullary systems in asteroids 53.
Maternal control of development in five Patiriella species 54. The haemal
sinus - A possible conduit for migratory cells involved in repair and
regeneration of the radial nerve cord of Coscinasterias muricata following
autotomy 55. Fertilization success in the tropical sea star Oreaster
reticulatus 56. Phosphorylation of 64-kDa and 96-kDa proteins by the
signaling pathway induced by 1-methyladenine in starfish oocytes 57.
Behavioural responses to salinity and light affects dispersal of larvae of
the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, in the Derwent Estuary 58.
Impact of the northern Pacific seastar Asterias amurensis on natural
communities in south east Tasmania 59. High concentration of
maturation-inducing hormone accelerate the activation of maturation
promoting factor but not germinal vesicle breakdown in starfish oocytes 60.
Of size and space: An evolutionary trade-off in fertilization strategy
among oreasterid sea stars 61. Population characteristics of the sea star
Oreaster reticulatus in the Bahamas and across the Caribbean 62. Surplus
energy in starfish eggs 63. Parasitism of sea stars from Puget Sound,
Washington by Orchitophrya stellarum 64. Feeding niche breadth and feeding
niche overlap of paxillosid starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from a
midshelf upwelling region, Cabo Frio, Brazil 65. Expression of the Xlox
gene in a starfish Ophiuroids 66. Localisation of the neuropeptide S1 in an
ophiuroid larva 67. Respiration and excretion of a dense Ophiothrix
fragilis population in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France) 68.
Luminescence control of the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis: Preliminary
results 69. Does luminous capabilities and polychromatism reflect the
genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata? ?? 70. Arm
regeneration in the luminous ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata: A functional
approach 71. Morphological, physiological and genetic variability of the
ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata from the lagoon system of Oliveri-Tindari
(Sicily) 72. Submersible observations on the euryaline brittle star,
Asteronyx loveni (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea), living in association with a
gorgonacean coral 73. Zooplanktivory by the burrowing brittlestar
Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1985) 74. Digestion of biofilm carbohydrates by
the deposit-feeding brittlestar Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson)
(Ophiuroidea: Amphiuridae) 75. Assimilation of microbial exopolymers by a
deposit-feeding brittlestar, Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) 76. Suture
line of ophiuroid vertebral ossicles and its taxonomic significance 77.
Escape behavior of epibenthic ophiuroids buried in the sediment:
Observations of extant and fossil Ophiura sarsii sarsii 78. Horizontal
distribution of Ophiothrix fragilis planktonic larvae associated with a
tidal front in an open coastal sea 79. Effects of variable water motion on
regeneration of the infaunal brittlestar, Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1825)
(Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) 81. Functional approach to regeneration in the
brittlestar Amphiura filiformis 82. Bioluminescence and regeneration in the
ophiuroid Amphiura filiformis 83. The recent evolutionary history of
Ophiactis savignyi (Echinodermata; Ophiuroidea) 84. Lecithotrophic
development of Ophionereis schayeri: With an overview of evolution of
development within the Ophionereididae 85. Evolutionary genetics of
Amphipholis squamata 86. Amphipholis linopneusti n.sp., a sexually
dimorphic amphiurid brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea), epizoic on a
spatangoid sea urchin 87. Cellular and molecular bases of arm regeneration
in Brittlestars 88. The early development of the brittle star, Ophiodaphne
formata Koehler Holothuroids 90. Brood-protection by the New Zealand
cucumariid Squamocnus niveus (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) 91.
Reproduction and development of sea cucumbers in the Solomon Islands:
Implications for Beche-de-mer broodstock availability 94. A ganglionated
plexus in the podial connective tissue of a sea cucumber 95. Overview of
sea cucumbers fisheries over the last decade - What possibilities for a
durable management? 96. Extracellular matrix remodeling during intestinal
regeneration in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima 97. Circadian
rhythms in Chiridota rotifera (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) 98. Movement,
recruitment and size-related distribution of sea cucumbers Holothuria
scabra in Solomon Islands 99. Cuvierian tubules in tropical holothurians:
Usefulness and efficiency as a defence mechanism 100. A rearing method for
Chiridota rotifera (Holothuroidea, Apoda) 101. Identification of Hox gene
sequences in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima Selenka (Holothuroidea:
Echinodermata) 102. Settlement preferences and early migration of the sea
cucumber Holothuria scabra 103. The potential role of the holothurian
Pseudomelia sykion as a bioindicator species of heavy metals, based on
energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX) 104. Dynamic mechanical properties
of holothurian body-wall catch connective tissue 105. The occurrence and
role of a digitate genital papilla in holothurian reproduction 106. Larval
development in the tropical sea cucumber Holothuria scabra 107. Correlation
between the calcareous rings and zoogeographic distributions of Thyone
species (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) with a proposed management of the
genus 108. Holothurians from the Brazilian coast: A historical survey 109.
Population genetics of a commercially fished holothurian (Holothuria
scabra, Sandfish) on the Queensland coast 110. Confusion on the morphotypes
of Stichopus variegatus in the South China Sea 111. Reproductive cycle of
Stichopus chloronotus (Brandt, 1835) in the Straits of Malacca Echinoids
112. An epibenthic mode of life in spatangoid echinoids 113. Cell and
matrix control of echinoderm biomineralization 114. Interactions between
abalone and sea urchins on temperate rocky reefs in New South Wales,
Australia 115. The black Echinometra distributed in the Indo-West Pacific:
A species complex 116. Functions of the sea urchin fertilization envelope
117. Geographic divergence of gamete recognition systems in two sea urchins
(Strongylocentrotus spp.) 118. Effects of organic and inorganic phosphates
on feeding, absorption efficiency, nutrient allocation and righting
responses of the echinoid Lytechinus varie gatus 120. Enhancing gonad
quality in Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) collected from Doubtful Sound, New
Zealand 121. Dietary preferences of Evechinus chloroticus 122. Biology of a
poorly known echinoid, Colobocentrotus atratus, inhabiting wave swept
intertidal basaltic rocks 123. Antarctic echinoids: An interactive database
on CDROM 124. Natural enhancement of Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) in Otago
Harbour, Dunedin, 125. New Zealand using macroalgae and artificial diets
126. The occurrence of polyspermy in situ in New Zealand's endemic urchin
Evechinus chloroticus 127. Declining sea urchin recruitment in the Gulf of
Maine: Is overharvesting to blame? 128. A refuge of association for algae
faced with intensive grazing on sea urchin barrens 129. Thyroxine and the
evolution of lecithotrophic development in echinoids 130. The many "facies"
of Encope emarginata (Leske) 131. Behavior of the sea urchins,
Strongylocentrotus nudus and S. intermedius, observed in the laboratory:
Individual interference on their movement 132. Relationship between
occurrence of dense stands of the introduced Japanese kelp 133. Undaria
pinnatifida and abundance of sea urchins (Heliocidaris ery thro gramma) on
the east coast of Tasmania 134. Environmental parameters controlling
gametogenesis in the echinoid Psammechinus miliaris 135. Effects of
exogastrulation-inducing factors on development of a direct developing
echinoid, Peronella japonica 136. The effect of ultraviolet radiation on
development and time to cleavage for embryos of the sea urchin Evechinus
chloroticus 137. Palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of Lower Miocene
echinoids from the Eastern Desert, Egypt 138. Palaeontological implications
of skeletal modification by predation - using 139. Paracentrotus lividus
(Echinoidea) from the Mediterranean sea as an example 140. Carotenoid and
Mycosporine-like Amino Acid concentrations in eggs and larvae of 141.
Strongylocentrotus and Dendraster genera; Correlations with UV-radiation
sensitivity 142. Asymmetry of the Aristotle's lantern of the scutellid
sand-dollar Dendraster excentricus 143. Laboratory and field studies on sea
urchin gametogenesis and their relevance to aquaculture 144. Molecular
phylogeny of Diadema: Systematic implications 145. Food preferences of
Tripneustes gratilla (L.) (Echinodermata: Echinoidea) in an oligotrophic
and a eutrophic site on a coral reef at La Reunion, (Indian Ocean) 146.
Biomineralisation in echinoderms: Identification of occluded proteins 147.
Morphological variability within the echinoid species Abatus cordatus
(Spatangoida, Schizasteridae) from the Kerguelen Archipelago 148. What cues
do echinoid larvae use to detect their food environment: Implications for
the evolution of plasticity 149. Evolutionary history of the tooth
advancement mechanism in echinoids 150. Predation and preservation of
echinoids 151. Gimme Shelter: Factors influencing juvenile sheltering in
the red sea urchin Strongylocentrotus franciscanus 152. Variation in gonad
production in the sea urchin Loxechinus albus with size and diet 153.
Genetic differentiation of the sea urchin Evechinus chloroticus
(Echinodermata: Echinoidea) of New Zealand's fiords: Identification of
microsatellite loci 154. Developing suitable colour in the roe of cultured
green sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) 155. Evaluating
stocking as an enhancement strategy for the red sea urchin,
Strongylocentrotus franciscanus: Depth-specific recoveries 156. Spatial and
temporal variation in growth of the green sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus
droebachiensis, in the Gulf of Maine, USA 157. Effect of ultra-violet light
on gastrulation in the Antarctic sea urchin Sterechinus neumayeri 158.
Development and evolution of the echinoderm nervous system 159. Podial
coverage and test size of regular echinoids 160. Transport of fluid and
particles through the echinoid madreporite 161. Comparative studies of
normal development of the sea urchins, Colobocentrotus mertensii and
Anthocidaris crassispina 162. Cellular organization of the spine muscle of
Anthocidaris crassispina and its functional implications 163. Expression of
the vitellogenin gene in red sea urchin, Pseudocentrotus depressus 164.
Ontogenetic and morphological evolution of the ambulacral pores in
Heteraster (early spatangoids) 165. Population structure of sea urchins
(Evechinus chloroticus) along gradients in benthic productivity in the New
Zealand fjords 166. Studies on the body skeleton formation of echinometrid
larvae, using sea urchins from the Bonin Islands 167. Registered
participants
General 1. Cidaroid-crinoid interactions as observed from a submersible 2.
Role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration 3. New Mesozoic
echinoderms (Serpianotiaris: Euechinoidea; Cottreauaster. Asteroidea) from
New Zealand 4. Maintaining fluid balance in echinoderms 5. Depth/substrate
relationships of echinoderms, off NW Hokkaido Island, Japan Sea 6. Stress
and deviant reproduction in echinoderms 7. Different echinoderm classes
have different Hox gene clusters 8. Implications of a proposed
anterior-posterior bilateral body axis in echinoderms 9. Quantitative
biogeography in the Southern Ocean: Deriving processes from pattern 10.
Bathyal echinoderms of the Galapagos Islands 11. Genic patterning of the
radial echinoderm central nervous system and evolution of the echinoderm
body plan 12. Strategies to identify differentially expressed genes during
regeneration 13. Echinoderm eggs: Biochemistry and larval biology 14.
Growing a stalked echinoderm within the Extraxial-Axial Theory 15. Species
of echinoderms described 16. Evolution of development rates 17. Fluxes and
impact of anthropogenic contaminants (metals and PCBs) in echinoderms 18.
Evolution of a gene network in echinoderms 19. Crisp's Rule, epidemic
spawning, and pheromones: What we still don't know about the control of
reproduction in deep-sea echinoderms Extinct classes 20. Attachment
strategies in Diploporita inhabiting soft-substratum communities 21.
Stylophoran morphology in the light of a new system of skeletal homologies
for echinoderms 22. Holothurians from the Late Cretaceous of the Isle of
Rügen (Baltic Sea) 23. Ordovician holothurians from the Baltic Sea area 24.
Ophiocistioids and holothurians from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden 25. A
new Sphaeronitid-like Aristocystitid (Diploporita) from the Ordovician of
Spain Crinoids Crinoids 26. Light stable isotope geochemistry of the
crinoid skeleton and its use in biology and paleobiology 27. Morphology of
the stalked crinoid aboral nervous system (Echinodermata) and its possible
phylogenetic implications 28. Distribution, morphology, and possible
phylogeny of Triassic Crinoidea from New Zealand and New Caledonia 29. A
comparison of current and previous surveys of comatulid crinoid populations
at Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles 30. Antarctic comatulid crinoids
(Echinodermata) 31. Just what is Atelecrinusl: Unique morphology in a
living bathyal feather star 32. Stalk growth rates of Isocrinidae
(Echinodermata: Crinoidea): A summary of a decade of in situ experiments
33. Life and death of the crinoid Uintacrinus (Late Cretaceous) 34.
Microstructure preservation and microbial sealing in Uintacrinus
Lagerstatten 35. The Seamount crinoid fauna off southern Tasmania
(preliminary results) 36. Occurrence and expression of a novel Transforming
Growth Factor-beta homologue in crinoids 37. Initial phylogeny of the
Comasteridae (Crinoidea) from mtDNA sequences 38. Symbiosis in crinoids
from the Wenlock of Britain 39. Quantification of the current regimes
experienced by crinoids and ophiacanthids on the Bahamian Slope: Taller is
not always better Asteroids 40. The use of lectins, particularly
concanavalin - the development of primary cell cultures from echinoderms
41. Evolution of neurogenesis in the sea star genus Patiriella 42. Clade
specific cleavage alteration in the genus Patiriella 43. Serotonin
depletion by para-chlorophenylalanine (L-PCPA) on the larvae of Patiriella
regularis (Asteroidea): Effects on feeding and swimming behavior 44. The
asteroid family Goniasteridae 45. Differential expression during
regeneration 46. Asterina at the millennium; Revelations from a Pembroke
tide-pool 47. Coscinasterias acutispina: Distribution and ecology in Toyama
Bay 48. Why is asteroid phylogeny so difficult? 49. Larval development and
asexual development of the sea star, Distolasterias nipon (Doderlein) 50.
Molecular data and phylogeny of the Asteroidea 51. Larval development of
the sea-star, Archaster typicus Muller et Troschell, with a note on the
structure of the attachment organs 52. Ampullary systems in asteroids 53.
Maternal control of development in five Patiriella species 54. The haemal
sinus - A possible conduit for migratory cells involved in repair and
regeneration of the radial nerve cord of Coscinasterias muricata following
autotomy 55. Fertilization success in the tropical sea star Oreaster
reticulatus 56. Phosphorylation of 64-kDa and 96-kDa proteins by the
signaling pathway induced by 1-methyladenine in starfish oocytes 57.
Behavioural responses to salinity and light affects dispersal of larvae of
the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, in the Derwent Estuary 58.
Impact of the northern Pacific seastar Asterias amurensis on natural
communities in south east Tasmania 59. High concentration of
maturation-inducing hormone accelerate the activation of maturation
promoting factor but not germinal vesicle breakdown in starfish oocytes 60.
Of size and space: An evolutionary trade-off in fertilization strategy
among oreasterid sea stars 61. Population characteristics of the sea star
Oreaster reticulatus in the Bahamas and across the Caribbean 62. Surplus
energy in starfish eggs 63. Parasitism of sea stars from Puget Sound,
Washington by Orchitophrya stellarum 64. Feeding niche breadth and feeding
niche overlap of paxillosid starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from a
midshelf upwelling region, Cabo Frio, Brazil 65. Expression of the Xlox
gene in a starfish Ophiuroids 66. Localisation of the neuropeptide S1 in an
ophiuroid larva 67. Respiration and excretion of a dense Ophiothrix
fragilis population in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France) 68.
Luminescence control of the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis: Preliminary
results 69. Does luminous capabilities and polychromatism reflect the
genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata? ?? 70. Arm
regeneration in the luminous ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata: A functional
approach 71. Morphological, physiological and genetic variability of the
ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata from the lagoon system of Oliveri-Tindari
(Sicily) 72. Submersible observations on the euryaline brittle star,
Asteronyx loveni (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea), living in association with a
gorgonacean coral 73. Zooplanktivory by the burrowing brittlestar
Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1985) 74. Digestion of biofilm carbohydrates by
the deposit-feeding brittlestar Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson)
(Ophiuroidea: Amphiuridae) 75. Assimilation of microbial exopolymers by a
deposit-feeding brittlestar, Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) 76. Suture
line of ophiuroid vertebral ossicles and its taxonomic significance 77.
Escape behavior of epibenthic ophiuroids buried in the sediment:
Observations of extant and fossil Ophiura sarsii sarsii 78. Horizontal
distribution of Ophiothrix fragilis planktonic larvae associated with a
tidal front in an open coastal sea 79. Effects of variable water motion on
regeneration of the infaunal brittlestar, Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1825)
(Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) 81. Functional approach to regeneration in the
brittlestar Amphiura filiformis 82. Bioluminescence and regeneration in the
ophiuroid Amphiura filiformis 83. The recent evolutionary history of
Ophiactis savignyi (Echinodermata; Ophiuroidea) 84. Lecithotrophic
development of Ophionereis schayeri: With an overview of evolution of
development within the Ophionereididae 85. Evolutionary genetics of
Amphipholis squamata 86. Amphipholis linopneusti n.sp., a sexually
dimorphic amphiurid brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea), epizoic on a
spatangoid sea urchin 87. Cellular and molecular bases of arm regeneration
in Brittlestars 88. The early development of the brittle star, Ophiodaphne
formata Koehler Holothuroids 90. Brood-protection by the New Zealand
cucumariid Squamocnus niveus (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) 91.
Reproduction and development of sea cucumbers in the Solomon Islands:
Implications for Beche-de-mer broodstock availability 94. A ganglionated
plexus in the podial connective tissue of a sea cucumber 95. Overview of
sea cucumbers fisheries over the last decade - What possibilities for a
durable management? 96. Extracellular matrix remodeling during intestinal
regeneration in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima 97. Circadian
rhythms in Chiridota rotifera (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) 98. Movement,
recruitment and size-related distribution of sea cucumbers Holothuria
scabra in Solomon Islands 99. Cuvierian tubules in tropical holothurians:
Usefulness and efficiency as a defence mechanism 100. A rearing method for
Chiridota rotifera (Holothuroidea, Apoda) 101. Identification of Hox gene
sequences in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima Selenka (Holothuroidea:
Echinodermata) 102. Settlement preferences and early migration of the sea
cucumber Holothuria scabra 103. The potential role of the holothurian
Pseudomelia sykion as a bioindicator species of heavy metals, based on
energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX) 104. Dynamic mechanical properties
of holothurian body-wall catch connective tissue 105. The occurrence and
role of a digitate genital papilla in holothurian reproduction 106. Larval
development in the tropical sea cucumber Holothuria scabra 107. Correlation
between the calcareous rings and zoogeographic distributions of Thyone
species (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) with a proposed management of the
genus 108. Holothurians from the Brazilian coast: A historical survey 109.
Population genetics of a commercially fished holothurian (Holothuria
scabra, Sandfish) on the Queensland coast 110. Confusion on the morphotypes
of Stichopus variegatus in the South China Sea 111. Reproductive cycle of
Stichopus chloronotus (Brandt, 1835) in the Straits of Malacca Echinoids
112. An epibenthic mode of life in spatangoid echinoids 113. Cell and
matrix control of echinoderm biomineralization 114. Interactions between
abalone and sea urchins on temperate rocky reefs in New South Wales,
Australia 115. The black Echinometra distributed in the Indo-West Pacific:
A species complex 116. Functions of the sea urchin fertilization envelope
117. Geographic divergence of gamete recognition systems in two sea urchins
(Strongylocentrotus spp.) 118. Effects of organic and inorganic phosphates
on feeding, absorption efficiency, nutrient allocation and righting
responses of the echinoid Lytechinus varie gatus 120. Enhancing gonad
quality in Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) collected from Doubtful Sound, New
Zealand 121. Dietary preferences of Evechinus chloroticus 122. Biology of a
poorly known echinoid, Colobocentrotus atratus, inhabiting wave swept
intertidal basaltic rocks 123. Antarctic echinoids: An interactive database
on CDROM 124. Natural enhancement of Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) in Otago
Harbour, Dunedin, 125. New Zealand using macroalgae and artificial diets
126. The occurrence of polyspermy in situ in New Zealand's endemic urchin
Evechinus chloroticus 127. Declining sea urchin recruitment in the Gulf of
Maine: Is overharvesting to blame? 128. A refuge of association for algae
faced with intensive grazing on sea urchin barrens 129. Thyroxine and the
evolution of lecithotrophic development in echinoids 130. The many "facies"
of Encope emarginata (Leske) 131. Behavior of the sea urchins,
Strongylocentrotus nudus and S. intermedius, observed in the laboratory:
Individual interference on their movement 132. Relationship between
occurrence of dense stands of the introduced Japanese kelp 133. Undaria
pinnatifida and abundance of sea urchins (Heliocidaris ery thro gramma) on
the east coast of Tasmania 134. Environmental parameters controlling
gametogenesis in the echinoid Psammechinus miliaris 135. Effects of
exogastrulation-inducing factors on development of a direct developing
echinoid, Peronella japonica 136. The effect of ultraviolet radiation on
development and time to cleavage for embryos of the sea urchin Evechinus
chloroticus 137. Palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of Lower Miocene
echinoids from the Eastern Desert, Egypt 138. Palaeontological implications
of skeletal modification by predation - using 139. Paracentrotus lividus
(Echinoidea) from the Mediterranean sea as an example 140. Carotenoid and
Mycosporine-like Amino Acid concentrations in eggs and larvae of 141.
Strongylocentrotus and Dendraster genera; Correlations with UV-radiation
sensitivity 142. Asymmetry of the Aristotle's lantern of the scutellid
sand-dollar Dendraster excentricus 143. Laboratory and field studies on sea
urchin gametogenesis and their relevance to aquaculture 144. Molecular
phylogeny of Diadema: Systematic implications 145. Food preferences of
Tripneustes gratilla (L.) (Echinodermata: Echinoidea) in an oligotrophic
and a eutrophic site on a coral reef at La Reunion, (Indian Ocean) 146.
Biomineralisation in echinoderms: Identification of occluded proteins 147.
Morphological variability within the echinoid species Abatus cordatus
(Spatangoida, Schizasteridae) from the Kerguelen Archipelago 148. What cues
do echinoid larvae use to detect their food environment: Implications for
the evolution of plasticity 149. Evolutionary history of the tooth
advancement mechanism in echinoids 150. Predation and preservation of
echinoids 151. Gimme Shelter: Factors influencing juvenile sheltering in
the red sea urchin Strongylocentrotus franciscanus 152. Variation in gonad
production in the sea urchin Loxechinus albus with size and diet 153.
Genetic differentiation of the sea urchin Evechinus chloroticus
(Echinodermata: Echinoidea) of New Zealand's fiords: Identification of
microsatellite loci 154. Developing suitable colour in the roe of cultured
green sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) 155. Evaluating
stocking as an enhancement strategy for the red sea urchin,
Strongylocentrotus franciscanus: Depth-specific recoveries 156. Spatial and
temporal variation in growth of the green sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus
droebachiensis, in the Gulf of Maine, USA 157. Effect of ultra-violet light
on gastrulation in the Antarctic sea urchin Sterechinus neumayeri 158.
Development and evolution of the echinoderm nervous system 159. Podial
coverage and test size of regular echinoids 160. Transport of fluid and
particles through the echinoid madreporite 161. Comparative studies of
normal development of the sea urchins, Colobocentrotus mertensii and
Anthocidaris crassispina 162. Cellular organization of the spine muscle of
Anthocidaris crassispina and its functional implications 163. Expression of
the vitellogenin gene in red sea urchin, Pseudocentrotus depressus 164.
Ontogenetic and morphological evolution of the ambulacral pores in
Heteraster (early spatangoids) 165. Population structure of sea urchins
(Evechinus chloroticus) along gradients in benthic productivity in the New
Zealand fjords 166. Studies on the body skeleton formation of echinometrid
larvae, using sea urchins from the Bonin Islands 167. Registered
participants
Role of the nervous system in echinoderm regeneration 3. New Mesozoic
echinoderms (Serpianotiaris: Euechinoidea; Cottreauaster. Asteroidea) from
New Zealand 4. Maintaining fluid balance in echinoderms 5. Depth/substrate
relationships of echinoderms, off NW Hokkaido Island, Japan Sea 6. Stress
and deviant reproduction in echinoderms 7. Different echinoderm classes
have different Hox gene clusters 8. Implications of a proposed
anterior-posterior bilateral body axis in echinoderms 9. Quantitative
biogeography in the Southern Ocean: Deriving processes from pattern 10.
Bathyal echinoderms of the Galapagos Islands 11. Genic patterning of the
radial echinoderm central nervous system and evolution of the echinoderm
body plan 12. Strategies to identify differentially expressed genes during
regeneration 13. Echinoderm eggs: Biochemistry and larval biology 14.
Growing a stalked echinoderm within the Extraxial-Axial Theory 15. Species
of echinoderms described 16. Evolution of development rates 17. Fluxes and
impact of anthropogenic contaminants (metals and PCBs) in echinoderms 18.
Evolution of a gene network in echinoderms 19. Crisp's Rule, epidemic
spawning, and pheromones: What we still don't know about the control of
reproduction in deep-sea echinoderms Extinct classes 20. Attachment
strategies in Diploporita inhabiting soft-substratum communities 21.
Stylophoran morphology in the light of a new system of skeletal homologies
for echinoderms 22. Holothurians from the Late Cretaceous of the Isle of
Rügen (Baltic Sea) 23. Ordovician holothurians from the Baltic Sea area 24.
Ophiocistioids and holothurians from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden 25. A
new Sphaeronitid-like Aristocystitid (Diploporita) from the Ordovician of
Spain Crinoids Crinoids 26. Light stable isotope geochemistry of the
crinoid skeleton and its use in biology and paleobiology 27. Morphology of
the stalked crinoid aboral nervous system (Echinodermata) and its possible
phylogenetic implications 28. Distribution, morphology, and possible
phylogeny of Triassic Crinoidea from New Zealand and New Caledonia 29. A
comparison of current and previous surveys of comatulid crinoid populations
at Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles 30. Antarctic comatulid crinoids
(Echinodermata) 31. Just what is Atelecrinusl: Unique morphology in a
living bathyal feather star 32. Stalk growth rates of Isocrinidae
(Echinodermata: Crinoidea): A summary of a decade of in situ experiments
33. Life and death of the crinoid Uintacrinus (Late Cretaceous) 34.
Microstructure preservation and microbial sealing in Uintacrinus
Lagerstatten 35. The Seamount crinoid fauna off southern Tasmania
(preliminary results) 36. Occurrence and expression of a novel Transforming
Growth Factor-beta homologue in crinoids 37. Initial phylogeny of the
Comasteridae (Crinoidea) from mtDNA sequences 38. Symbiosis in crinoids
from the Wenlock of Britain 39. Quantification of the current regimes
experienced by crinoids and ophiacanthids on the Bahamian Slope: Taller is
not always better Asteroids 40. The use of lectins, particularly
concanavalin - the development of primary cell cultures from echinoderms
41. Evolution of neurogenesis in the sea star genus Patiriella 42. Clade
specific cleavage alteration in the genus Patiriella 43. Serotonin
depletion by para-chlorophenylalanine (L-PCPA) on the larvae of Patiriella
regularis (Asteroidea): Effects on feeding and swimming behavior 44. The
asteroid family Goniasteridae 45. Differential expression during
regeneration 46. Asterina at the millennium; Revelations from a Pembroke
tide-pool 47. Coscinasterias acutispina: Distribution and ecology in Toyama
Bay 48. Why is asteroid phylogeny so difficult? 49. Larval development and
asexual development of the sea star, Distolasterias nipon (Doderlein) 50.
Molecular data and phylogeny of the Asteroidea 51. Larval development of
the sea-star, Archaster typicus Muller et Troschell, with a note on the
structure of the attachment organs 52. Ampullary systems in asteroids 53.
Maternal control of development in five Patiriella species 54. The haemal
sinus - A possible conduit for migratory cells involved in repair and
regeneration of the radial nerve cord of Coscinasterias muricata following
autotomy 55. Fertilization success in the tropical sea star Oreaster
reticulatus 56. Phosphorylation of 64-kDa and 96-kDa proteins by the
signaling pathway induced by 1-methyladenine in starfish oocytes 57.
Behavioural responses to salinity and light affects dispersal of larvae of
the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, in the Derwent Estuary 58.
Impact of the northern Pacific seastar Asterias amurensis on natural
communities in south east Tasmania 59. High concentration of
maturation-inducing hormone accelerate the activation of maturation
promoting factor but not germinal vesicle breakdown in starfish oocytes 60.
Of size and space: An evolutionary trade-off in fertilization strategy
among oreasterid sea stars 61. Population characteristics of the sea star
Oreaster reticulatus in the Bahamas and across the Caribbean 62. Surplus
energy in starfish eggs 63. Parasitism of sea stars from Puget Sound,
Washington by Orchitophrya stellarum 64. Feeding niche breadth and feeding
niche overlap of paxillosid starfishes (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from a
midshelf upwelling region, Cabo Frio, Brazil 65. Expression of the Xlox
gene in a starfish Ophiuroids 66. Localisation of the neuropeptide S1 in an
ophiuroid larva 67. Respiration and excretion of a dense Ophiothrix
fragilis population in the Bay of Seine (English Channel, France) 68.
Luminescence control of the brittlestar Amphiura filiformis: Preliminary
results 69. Does luminous capabilities and polychromatism reflect the
genetic variability of the ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata? ?? 70. Arm
regeneration in the luminous ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata: A functional
approach 71. Morphological, physiological and genetic variability of the
ophiuroid Amphipholis squamata from the lagoon system of Oliveri-Tindari
(Sicily) 72. Submersible observations on the euryaline brittle star,
Asteronyx loveni (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea), living in association with a
gorgonacean coral 73. Zooplanktivory by the burrowing brittlestar
Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1985) 74. Digestion of biofilm carbohydrates by
the deposit-feeding brittlestar Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson)
(Ophiuroidea: Amphiuridae) 75. Assimilation of microbial exopolymers by a
deposit-feeding brittlestar, Amphipholis gracillima (Stimpson) 76. Suture
line of ophiuroid vertebral ossicles and its taxonomic significance 77.
Escape behavior of epibenthic ophiuroids buried in the sediment:
Observations of extant and fossil Ophiura sarsii sarsii 78. Horizontal
distribution of Ophiothrix fragilis planktonic larvae associated with a
tidal front in an open coastal sea 79. Effects of variable water motion on
regeneration of the infaunal brittlestar, Hemipholis elongata (Say, 1825)
(Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) 81. Functional approach to regeneration in the
brittlestar Amphiura filiformis 82. Bioluminescence and regeneration in the
ophiuroid Amphiura filiformis 83. The recent evolutionary history of
Ophiactis savignyi (Echinodermata; Ophiuroidea) 84. Lecithotrophic
development of Ophionereis schayeri: With an overview of evolution of
development within the Ophionereididae 85. Evolutionary genetics of
Amphipholis squamata 86. Amphipholis linopneusti n.sp., a sexually
dimorphic amphiurid brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea), epizoic on a
spatangoid sea urchin 87. Cellular and molecular bases of arm regeneration
in Brittlestars 88. The early development of the brittle star, Ophiodaphne
formata Koehler Holothuroids 90. Brood-protection by the New Zealand
cucumariid Squamocnus niveus (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea) 91.
Reproduction and development of sea cucumbers in the Solomon Islands:
Implications for Beche-de-mer broodstock availability 94. A ganglionated
plexus in the podial connective tissue of a sea cucumber 95. Overview of
sea cucumbers fisheries over the last decade - What possibilities for a
durable management? 96. Extracellular matrix remodeling during intestinal
regeneration in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima 97. Circadian
rhythms in Chiridota rotifera (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) 98. Movement,
recruitment and size-related distribution of sea cucumbers Holothuria
scabra in Solomon Islands 99. Cuvierian tubules in tropical holothurians:
Usefulness and efficiency as a defence mechanism 100. A rearing method for
Chiridota rotifera (Holothuroidea, Apoda) 101. Identification of Hox gene
sequences in the sea cucumber Holothuria glaberrima Selenka (Holothuroidea:
Echinodermata) 102. Settlement preferences and early migration of the sea
cucumber Holothuria scabra 103. The potential role of the holothurian
Pseudomelia sykion as a bioindicator species of heavy metals, based on
energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX) 104. Dynamic mechanical properties
of holothurian body-wall catch connective tissue 105. The occurrence and
role of a digitate genital papilla in holothurian reproduction 106. Larval
development in the tropical sea cucumber Holothuria scabra 107. Correlation
between the calcareous rings and zoogeographic distributions of Thyone
species (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea) with a proposed management of the
genus 108. Holothurians from the Brazilian coast: A historical survey 109.
Population genetics of a commercially fished holothurian (Holothuria
scabra, Sandfish) on the Queensland coast 110. Confusion on the morphotypes
of Stichopus variegatus in the South China Sea 111. Reproductive cycle of
Stichopus chloronotus (Brandt, 1835) in the Straits of Malacca Echinoids
112. An epibenthic mode of life in spatangoid echinoids 113. Cell and
matrix control of echinoderm biomineralization 114. Interactions between
abalone and sea urchins on temperate rocky reefs in New South Wales,
Australia 115. The black Echinometra distributed in the Indo-West Pacific:
A species complex 116. Functions of the sea urchin fertilization envelope
117. Geographic divergence of gamete recognition systems in two sea urchins
(Strongylocentrotus spp.) 118. Effects of organic and inorganic phosphates
on feeding, absorption efficiency, nutrient allocation and righting
responses of the echinoid Lytechinus varie gatus 120. Enhancing gonad
quality in Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) collected from Doubtful Sound, New
Zealand 121. Dietary preferences of Evechinus chloroticus 122. Biology of a
poorly known echinoid, Colobocentrotus atratus, inhabiting wave swept
intertidal basaltic rocks 123. Antarctic echinoids: An interactive database
on CDROM 124. Natural enhancement of Evechinus chloroticus (Val.) in Otago
Harbour, Dunedin, 125. New Zealand using macroalgae and artificial diets
126. The occurrence of polyspermy in situ in New Zealand's endemic urchin
Evechinus chloroticus 127. Declining sea urchin recruitment in the Gulf of
Maine: Is overharvesting to blame? 128. A refuge of association for algae
faced with intensive grazing on sea urchin barrens 129. Thyroxine and the
evolution of lecithotrophic development in echinoids 130. The many "facies"
of Encope emarginata (Leske) 131. Behavior of the sea urchins,
Strongylocentrotus nudus and S. intermedius, observed in the laboratory:
Individual interference on their movement 132. Relationship between
occurrence of dense stands of the introduced Japanese kelp 133. Undaria
pinnatifida and abundance of sea urchins (Heliocidaris ery thro gramma) on
the east coast of Tasmania 134. Environmental parameters controlling
gametogenesis in the echinoid Psammechinus miliaris 135. Effects of
exogastrulation-inducing factors on development of a direct developing
echinoid, Peronella japonica 136. The effect of ultraviolet radiation on
development and time to cleavage for embryos of the sea urchin Evechinus
chloroticus 137. Palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of Lower Miocene
echinoids from the Eastern Desert, Egypt 138. Palaeontological implications
of skeletal modification by predation - using 139. Paracentrotus lividus
(Echinoidea) from the Mediterranean sea as an example 140. Carotenoid and
Mycosporine-like Amino Acid concentrations in eggs and larvae of 141.
Strongylocentrotus and Dendraster genera; Correlations with UV-radiation
sensitivity 142. Asymmetry of the Aristotle's lantern of the scutellid
sand-dollar Dendraster excentricus 143. Laboratory and field studies on sea
urchin gametogenesis and their relevance to aquaculture 144. Molecular
phylogeny of Diadema: Systematic implications 145. Food preferences of
Tripneustes gratilla (L.) (Echinodermata: Echinoidea) in an oligotrophic
and a eutrophic site on a coral reef at La Reunion, (Indian Ocean) 146.
Biomineralisation in echinoderms: Identification of occluded proteins 147.
Morphological variability within the echinoid species Abatus cordatus
(Spatangoida, Schizasteridae) from the Kerguelen Archipelago 148. What cues
do echinoid larvae use to detect their food environment: Implications for
the evolution of plasticity 149. Evolutionary history of the tooth
advancement mechanism in echinoids 150. Predation and preservation of
echinoids 151. Gimme Shelter: Factors influencing juvenile sheltering in
the red sea urchin Strongylocentrotus franciscanus 152. Variation in gonad
production in the sea urchin Loxechinus albus with size and diet 153.
Genetic differentiation of the sea urchin Evechinus chloroticus
(Echinodermata: Echinoidea) of New Zealand's fiords: Identification of
microsatellite loci 154. Developing suitable colour in the roe of cultured
green sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) 155. Evaluating
stocking as an enhancement strategy for the red sea urchin,
Strongylocentrotus franciscanus: Depth-specific recoveries 156. Spatial and
temporal variation in growth of the green sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus
droebachiensis, in the Gulf of Maine, USA 157. Effect of ultra-violet light
on gastrulation in the Antarctic sea urchin Sterechinus neumayeri 158.
Development and evolution of the echinoderm nervous system 159. Podial
coverage and test size of regular echinoids 160. Transport of fluid and
particles through the echinoid madreporite 161. Comparative studies of
normal development of the sea urchins, Colobocentrotus mertensii and
Anthocidaris crassispina 162. Cellular organization of the spine muscle of
Anthocidaris crassispina and its functional implications 163. Expression of
the vitellogenin gene in red sea urchin, Pseudocentrotus depressus 164.
Ontogenetic and morphological evolution of the ambulacral pores in
Heteraster (early spatangoids) 165. Population structure of sea urchins
(Evechinus chloroticus) along gradients in benthic productivity in the New
Zealand fjords 166. Studies on the body skeleton formation of echinometrid
larvae, using sea urchins from the Bonin Islands 167. Registered
participants