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         Animal Biology:     more books (102)
  1. Plant and Animal Biology - Volume 2 by N. Rees A.E. Vines, 1968
  2. Parallels in Cell to Cell Junctions in Plants and Animals (NATO ASI Series / Cell Biology)
  3. A Biology of Man: Man the Animal v. 2 by Margaret E. Hogg, 1966-01-03
  4. Animal Watch: Behavior, Biology, and Beauty by Greg Dimijian, Mary Beth Dimijian, 1996-09
  5. Principles of Animal Biology by Aaron Franklin Shull, 2010-03-21
  6. The Biology of Estuarine Animals by James Green, 1968-06
  7. Laboratory directions in principles of animal biology by Aaron Franklin Shull, 2010-08-30
  8. ANIMAL BIOLOGY by J.B.S. HALDANE, 1934
  9. Acid Toxicity and Aquatic Animals (Society for Experimental Biology Seminar Series)
  10. Gene Expression at the Beginning of Animal Development, Volume 12 (Advances in Developmental Biology and Biochemistry, V. 12)
  11. Animal Biology by J B S & Huxley, Julian Haldane, 1945
  12. The science of meat and biology of food animals by E. C Line, 1931
  13. This Side Up: Spatial Determination in the Early Development of Animals (Developmental and Cell Biology Series) by Robert Wall, 2005-07-07
  14. Mammalian Neuroendocrinology (European animal biology series) by Bernard Thomas Donovan, 1970-11

121. Biotech Center
Researches plant biology, animal science, microbiology, and environmental science through facilities, professional training and undergraduate and graduate programs.
http://www.cook.rutgers.edu/~biotech/

122. Journal Home - Nature Cell Biology
Articles and research papers on cell division, cell structure, animal and plant cell biology and cell cycles.
http://www.nature.com/ncb/
@import "/ncb/style.css"; NATURE.COM NATUREJOBS NATUREEVENTS Help USERNAME: PASSWORD: Save password Forgotten password? SEARCH JOURNAL Advanced search Journal home Advance online publication Current issue ... For librarians NPG Resources Nature Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology AfCS-Nature Signaling Gateway Nature Encyclopedia of Life Sciences ... Browse all publications May 2004 - Vol 6 No 5 Egalitarian binding to dynein p53 Baks up death A FAPP track out of the Golgi Current issue table of contents ... Advance online publication ADVANCE ONLINE PUBLICATION ADVANCE ONLINE PUBLICATION Migrating with Memo Letter by Marone et al.
A novel mediator of ErbB2-dependent cell motility has been identified by Nancy Hynes and colleagues. Memo, which interacts with ErbB2 via the adaptor protein Shc, seems to be specifically required for microtubule outgrowth during migration of breast carcinoma cells.
Integrins stick with Myosin-X Letter by Zhang et al.
ADVANCE ONLINE PUBLICATION Notch-STAT talk Article by Kamakura et al.
The Notch and JAK-STAT signalling pathways have overlapping roles in the regulation of cell fate. Gotoh and colleagues now show that the Notch effector protein Hes also facilitates JAK-STAT complex formation, and that this crosstalk between the pathways is important for glial-cell differentiation.
The one-stop free resource for cell signaling researchers.

123. Www.otago.ac.nz/zoology/
Teaches and researches in several interrelated areas animal evolution, aquatic ecology, behavioural ecology, conservation biology, environmental physiology, neurobiology, population genetics and wildlife management. Information on undergraduate and postgraduate study, staff, research, publications, facilities and Te Roopu.
http://www.otago.ac.nz/zoology/

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124. Animal & Plant Cells
GCSE biology Revision Science Search Blood The Kidney Leaf Section A Balanced Diet Muscles Genetics animal Plant Cells
http://www.purchon.com/biology/cells.htm
More about Animal Cells
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Chloroplasts

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125. Cell And Organism Biology: Home Page
Describes ongoing animal and plant physiology research and education, with additional information in Swedish.
http://www.biol.lu.se/cellorgbiol/engindex.html
MAIN PAGES Home Page Research Education
Undergraduate

Postgraduate
Popular Swe Internal Swe Lund University Faculty of Science Eng Swe Biology in Lund ... Seminars

Welcome to the Department of Cell and Organism Biology at Lund University in Sweden, formed in 2002 by the joining together of five departments. - Click on each image above for a descriptive caption.
You are all welcome to our "Biology Seminars" and to "Lund Life Science Symposia" . Coming defence of a dissertation Site contents in pop-up menu HOME PAGE English > THIS PAGE Address with map Eng Staff of Department Eng Search our site Eng Adress med karta Swe Institutionens personal Swe POSTGRADUATE STUDIES Eng UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES Eng GRUNDUTBILDNING Swe PUBLIC SEMINARS Eng RESEARCH PAGE Eng Genetics Eng Molecular systematics Eng Adaptive traits in plants Eng Telomere function En Integrative zoology Eng Animal vision Eng Arthropod chemoreception Eng Fish neurobiology Eng Insect biodiversity Eng Microbiology Eng Bacterial cytochromes Eng Fish virology Eng Plant biology Eng Cytoskeletal functions Eng Effects of ultraviolet radiation Eng NAD(P)H dehydrogenases Eng Plant-microbe relations Eng Zoological cell biology Eng Cardiorespiratory control Eng Cell proliferation Eng Dissertations 2002-2004 Eng
Top of page
Address: Department of Cell and Organism Biology

126. Anthony P. Farrell
Professor of animal physiology and environmental toxicology. Current research program, publications, pictures, Portable Swim Tunnel Research and seminars.
http://www.sfu.ca/biology/faculty/farrell/
Anthony P. Farrell, Professor ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY and ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY
Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
B.Sc. (1st) Bath University
Ph.D. University of British Columbia
Room SSB6151
farrell@sfu.ca
Current Research Program Integrative and comparative animal physiology.
My research group is interested in the cardiorespiratory system from the perspective of its evolutionary design, its control and how it responds to environmental perturbations. The primary focus is with the fish cardiorespiratory system, along with occasional amphibian and reptilian studies. Work with salmonids represents the main, but by no means the exclusive, thrust of the research. Fishes are an especially valuable and interesting research organisms. Foremost, they are diverse, with over 20,000 species, and so collectively they display a phenomenal range of form and function, no doubt because of the very diverse niches they occupy. Some fish live in Antarctic seas at -1.9 o C, while tropical intertidal fish experience temperatures approaching 40 o C. Most fish breathe water, but some breathe air as well. Some fish are extremely sensitive to aquatic pollutants, and yet others are more tolerant. Discovering the mechanisms that underlie these differences is the fascinating challenge for my research group. Currently there are a number of research emphases.

127. New Page 2
Promotes research, education, and the spread of information related to animal behavior. In English and Dutch.
http://www.gedragsbiologie.org/
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128. Animal Info - Wild Bactrian Camel
biology, ecology, habitat, status, information on their native countries biodiversity, ecosystems, population, and land use.
http://www.animalinfo.org/species/artiperi/camebact.htm
Animal Info - Wild Bactrian Camel
Camelus bactrianus Camelus bactrianus ferus
Status Critically Endangered
Contents
Profile Picture
Tidbits

Status and Trends
...
References
Profile
Pictures: Wild Bactrian Camel (50 Kb JPEG) (John Hare/ IUCN Domestic Bactrian Camel (28 Kb JPEG) San Diego Zoo The wild Bactrian (two-humped) camel is adapted to arid plains and hills where water sources are few and vegetation is sparse. Shrubs constitute its main source of food. Herds of these wild camels move widely, their distribution being linked to water. The animals tend to concentrate in and around mountains, because most springs are there and snow on the slopes may provide the only moisture in winter. Concentrations of up to 100 camels occur near the mountains, but most herds contain 2 - 15 members. The small average herd size in the past 100 years reflects not just the aridity of the environment but also heavy hunting pressure. The range of the wild Bactrian camel in historic times extended from the great bend of the Yellow River at 110 deg E westward across the deserts of southern Mongolia and northwestern China to central Kazakhstan . It was already heavily hunted for its meat and hide in the 1800's, and by the 1850's it persisted only in remote areas of the Gobi and Taklimakan Deserts in

129. ADW: Camelidae: Information
biology and taxonomy of the camel family from the animal Diversity Web.
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/chordata/mammalia/artiodactyla/camelidae.h
Overview News Conditions of Use ADW Staff ...
Home
Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Mammalia Order Artiodactyla Family Camelidae
Family Camelidae
(camels, llamas, and relatives)

editLink('skunkworks/.accounts/200310302052') 2004/05/18 13:28:21.411 GMT-4 By Phil Myers Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Order: Artiodactyla Family: Camelidae Members of this Family There are two groups of living camels. One, found in northern Africa and central Asia, consists of the dromedary (one-humped camel) and bactrian camels (two-humped camel). Dromedaries and most bactrian camels exist today only in domestication. The other group, the South American camelids, includes 2 to 4 species. Llamas and alpacas, sometimes considered to be the same species, may both have been derived from the guanaco through a thousand years or more of domestication. Guanacos and vicugnas still exist in the wild, although wild populations of both are depleted and threatened. Camelids are all large. The South American forms range in weight from 35 kg to almost 100 kg. Old World camels, however, are much larger, weighing 450 to 650 kg. Camelids vary in body shape from slender to stocky, but all have long, gracile necks; a small head; and long, slender legs. The upper lip is deeply and distinctively cleft. Their toes are splayed, and camelids are the only

130. Center For Medical Mycology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland
Unique resource combining clinical and basic science research in fungal biology, dermatophytes, candida albicans, fungal biofilms, fungal virulence factors, susceptibility testing, and animal models. Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, U.S.
http://www.medicalmycology.org
"From the Test-Tube to the Patient" University Hospitals of Cleveland and Case Western Reserve University
New Additions
Fungal Biofilms
NEW Kuwait Prize for Prof. Ghannoum Slideshows added CMM Publications
CMM is accredited by CLIA and College of American Pathologists (CAP) Top 10 Visited Pages There is no usage data for this web. Center for Medical Mycology (CMM) is a unique institutional resource for the study of fungal diseases from the test tube to the patient, which serves as a mycology reference center providing services to clinicians and the pharmaceutical industry. We also perform basic science research as well as clinically relevant studies in fungal biology. The faculty and staff possess high ethical standards and are committed to being effective, responsible and accountable.
Our Mission To provide reliable patient oriented services which will support University Hospitals' long standing commitment to provide quality patient management and innovative research and to strengthen Case Western Reserve University as a major biomedical research university by making important scholarly contributions to the fund of mycological center of excellence, recognized as having innovative research, educational and clinical programs.
Overview
Research at the CMM is devoted to the following main areas:
  • A basic science area focusing on the biology of fungal biofilms , determination of virulence factors responsible for the pathogenesis of fungi including dermatophytes
  • 131. Institute Of Genetics And Biophysics Adriano Buzzati Traverso
    Research in animal genetics, biophysics, human genetics, molecular biology and molecular genetics . Seminars and meetings, job opportunities, education and library .
    http://www.iigb.na.cnr.it/
    Our current web site is: http://www.igb.cnr.it Please update your bookmarks.
    Thank you webmaster

    132. ADW: Condylura Cristata: Information
    animal Diversity Web article about the biology of the starnosed mole, by Anna Bess Sorin. Also two anatomical images of the teeth.
    http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Condylura_crista
    Overview News Conditions of Use ADW Staff ...
    Home
    Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Mammalia Order Insectivora Family Talpidae Subfamily Talpinae Species Condylura cristata
    Condylura cristata
    (star-nosed mole)

    editLink('skunkworks/.accounts/74a3521f-9651-4e6f-a580-d54e20d8088a') 2004/05/18 13:55:34.309 GMT-4 By Anna Bess Sorin Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Order: Insectivora Family: Talpidae Subfamily: Talpinae Genus: Condylura Species: Condylura cristata
    Geographic Range
    Manitoba to Labrador in Canada, and south into Minnesota,the great lakes region, across to the north east as far south as Georgia. Biogeographic Regions: nearctic native
    Habitat
    Damp or muddy soil in which a network of shallow tunnels is constructed. Some of these tunnels open directly into bodies of water. Terrestrial Biomes: savanna or grassland forest
    Physical Description
    Mass
    40 to 85 g
    (1.41 to 2.99 oz)
    Named for the destinctive fleshy appendages (22) that occur on the muzzle in a ringlike arrangement. The animal is blackish with dense, coarse, waterproof fur. Head and body length is 100 to 127 mm, and the tail is 56 to 84 mm. The tail is scaled, annulated, sparsly haired, and in the winter/early spring may swell due to fat storage that presumably serves as a reserve energy supply. Eyes are small but visible. The ears are hardly externally evident. Some key physical features: endothermic bilateral symmetry
    Reproduction
    A single litter of two to seven young is born in a dry nest of vegetation between mid-April and mid-June. Young stay only until about three weeks of age, at which time they are two- thirds grown. Sexual maturity is reached at ten months for both sexes.

    133. ADW: Scalopus Aquaticus: Information
    Antonia Gorog's article about the biology of the eastern mole, plus lots of anatomical images. Longer than the usual animal Diversity Web article.
    http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Scalopus_aquatic
    Overview News Conditions of Use ADW Staff ...
    Home
    Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Mammalia Order Insectivora Family Talpidae Subfamily Talpinae Species Scalopus aquaticus
    Scalopus aquaticus
    (eastern mole)

    editLink('skunkworks/.accounts/6b0925be-ed4d-4e8d-a2b6-acb943d2bc0d') 2004/05/18 13:52:43.793 GMT-4 By Antonia Gorog Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Order: Insectivora Family: Talpidae Subfamily: Talpinae Genus: Scalopus Species: Scalopus aquaticus
    Geographic Range
    Scalopus aquaticus is found from southeastern Wyoming, South Dakota, and central Texas east to Michigan, Massachusetts, and New England, south to the tip of Florida, and north to Ontario. Small relict populations are found in southwestern Texas and in northwestern Mexico. Biogeographic Regions: nearctic native
    Habitat
    The eastern mole prefers fields, meadows, pastures, and open woodland. It is not found in stony or gravelly soils or in clay but frequents moist, sandy, and loamy soils. These animals are found in the following types of habitat: temperate terrestrial Terrestrial Biomes: forest
    Physical Description
    Mass
    32 to 140 g
    (1.13 to 4.93 oz)

    134. Molecular Biology Today
    Primary research papers, short communications, and review articles, including plant and animal systems, human genetics, molecular microbiology, virology, and biotechnology. Contents and abstracts available back to 2000, but subscription required for full text, from Horizon Press.
    http://molbio.net/
    Molecular Biology Today (MBT) publishes original research papers, short communications, and high quality critical review articles, in English, in all areas of molecular biology, including plant and animal systems, biomedical science, human genetics, molecular microbiology, genomics, health science, and biotechnology. In addition MBT publishes articles describing innovative technology of general interest to molecular biologists and biomedical scientists, and publishes a correspondence section as a forum for comment and opinion on any published topic. MBT is published in both print and online format. Original research articles are selected on the basis of validity of experimental data, importance of the results and conclusions, originality of the research, and the overall contribution to molecular biology and biomedical science. Reviews are selected on the basis of topicality, originality, objectivity, and relevance to a broad readership encompassing research scientists, biomedical scientists, and health professionals. All manuscripts undergo a strict peer-review process and are reviewed by a member of the editorial board and at least one other appropriate individual.

    135. CIMB Online Journal
    Review papers, since 1999, in all areas of molecular biology, including plant and animal systems, human genetics, molecular microbiology, virology, and biotechnology. Free access to contents and abstracts, but full text is for subscribers in US$ or UK£ to Horizon Scientific Press.
    http://www.horizonpress.com/cimb/online.html
    CIMB Online Journal
    Free access to the Table of Contents and Abstracts. Access to the full text document is also available . For details click here Table of Contents for Volume 1 (1999) Table of Contents for Volume 2 (2000) Table of Contents for Volume 3 (2001) Table of Contents for Volume 4 (2002) Table of Contents for Volume 5 (2003) Table of Contents for Volume 6 (2004) Home Page

    136. UC Irvine Biotechnology Program
    Special laboratory courses in Biochemistry, Molecular biology, and Genetics train students to manufacture recombinant gene products using bacterial, fungal, and animal expression systems.
    http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/~bio/biotechnology/index.html
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    137. Welcome To In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Animal
    Current Issue April 2003. HIGHLIGHTS. Mammalian Gene Expression in Suspension Cells; Porcine Liver Cell Line Establishment; Murine ES
    http://inva.allenpress.com/invaonline/?request=index-html

    138. Journal Of Heredity
    Articles discuss gene action, regulation, and transmission in both plant and animal species, including the genetic aspects of botany, cytogenetics and evolution, zoology, and molecular and developmental biology.
    http://jhered.oupjournals.org/
    Register here for your FREE custom alerts View Current Issue
    March 2004
    Search for Articles
    Browse the Archive Email notification of TOCs ABOUT THE JOURNAL ... RELATED LINKS Other Oxford University Press journals that may be of interest:
    Behavioral Ecology
    Journal of Experimental Botany Journal of Plankton Research Mutagenesis ... Human Molecular Genetics
    For faster access from selected countries outside of North America use this URL: Journal of Heredity is published for the American Genetic Association by Oxford University Press assisted by Stanford University Libraries' HighWire Press
    Online ISSN: 1471-8505

    139. Immunology & Infectious Disease At UMass, Amherst
    Graduate work under several programs in biological, veterinary and animal sciences, including microbiology, molecular and cell biology. Undergraduate training also in major programs, or independent study research projects.
    http://www.bio.umass.edu/immunology/
    p53, a tumor suppressor molecule studied in Barbara Osborne's lab at UMass.
    (From 1tup.pdb by Cho et al.
    at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst
    Graduate work in immunology and infectious disease can be done under the auspices of any of several graduate programs in the biological sciences, including Microbiology Molecular and Cell Biology , and Veterinary and Animal Sciences Undergraduate training is available in several biological science major programs, including as independent study research projects. For more information on graduate programs and majors, see Biological Sciences and the UMass Course Catalog . Most of the courses concerning immunology or infectous disease are in the Departments of Microbiology or Veterinary and Animal Sciences Kuby Immunology is one of the leading textbooks of immunology. Two of its three authors are in Amherst MA (Goldsby and Osborne).
    • In Veterinary and Animal Sciences
      • Baldwin, Cynthia L. ( Brucella gd T cells)
      • Black, Samuel J. (Innate defenses to Trypanosoma , parasitology)
      • Goldsby, Richard A. (Somatic Hypermutation of Immunoglobulin Genes; Immunoglobulin Diversification in Cattle)

    140. Mr. Lockwood 2001
    AP biology and laboratories, with emphasis on genetics, evolutionary biochemistry, animal physiology, and unique Amphioxus model system.
    http://www.angelfire.com/bc2/dfl/
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    With special concentration on the activity with amphioxus! Higher Order Thinking
    In
    Teaching Senior science
    By: Don F. Lockwood
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