Reproductive isolation and ecological niche partition among larvae of the morphologically cryptic sister species Chironomus riparius and C. piger. (57/233)

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The importance of excretion by Chironomus larvae on the internal loads of nitrogen and phosphorus in a small eutrophic urban reservoir. (58/233)

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Prevalence of Harpellales from Chironomidae larvae in phytotelmata from punta Lara Forest, Argentina. (59/233)

Harpellales (Zygomycota: Trichomycetes) fungi are cosmopolitan obligate inhabitants of the gut of immature insects. A biweekly survey of gut fungi associated with chironomid (Chironomidae: Diptera) larvae living in the impounded water from Eryngium cabrerae (Apiaceae) phytotelmata from Punta Lara forest, Argentina, was done Jan 2003-Dec 2004. Two species of Harpellales were associated with chironomid larvae, Smittium phytotelmatum in the hindgut of Polypedilum sp. and Stachylina lentica in the midgut of both Polypedilum sp. and Metriocnemus eryngiotelmatus. No statistically significant differences were recorded in the prevalence of these Harpellales between seasons. Environmental variables (temperature, rainfall and relative humidity), impounded water volume, pH and chironomid larval density did not have an effect on the prevalence of the Trichomycetes.  (+info)

Reflected polarization guides chironomid females to oviposition sites. (60/233)

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Sponge-dwelling chironomids in the upper Parana river (Brazil): little known but potentially threatened species. (61/233)

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Discontinuous movement of mRNP particles in nucleoplasmic regions devoid of chromatin. (62/233)

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Interactions between background matching and motion during visual detection can explain why cryptic animals keep still. (63/233)

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Specific combinations of SR proteins associate with single pre-messenger RNAs in vivo and contribute different functions. (64/233)

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