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dogfish muscular system: Comparative Anatomy Dale W. Fishbeck, Aurora Sebastiani, 2015-03-01 This full-color manual is a unique guide for students conducting the comparative study of representative vertebrate animals. It is appropriate for courses in comparative anatomy, vertebrate zoology, or any course in which the featured vertebrates are studied. |
dogfish muscular system: Hyman's Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy Libbie Henrietta Hyman, 1992-09-15 The purpose of this book, now in its third edition, is to introduce the morphology of vertebrates in a context that emphasizes a comparison of structire and of the function of structural units. The comparative method involves the analysis of the history of structure in both developmental and evolutionary frameworks. The nature of adaptation is the key to this analysis. Adaptation of a species to its environment, as revealed by its structure, function, and reproductive success, is the product of mutation and natural selection–the process of evolution. The evolution of structure and function, then, is the theme of this book which presents, system by system, the evolution of structure and function of vertebrates. Each chapter presents the major evolutionary trends of an organ system, with instructions for laboratory exploration of these trends included so the student can integrate concept with example. |
dogfish muscular system: A Laboratory Manual for Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy Libbie Henrietta Hyman, 1922 |
dogfish muscular system: Atlas and Dissection Guide for Comparative Anatomy Saul Wischnitzer, 1967 |
dogfish muscular system: Vertebrates Norman K. Wessels, Elizabeth M. Center, 1992-05 |
dogfish muscular system: Sharks, Skates, and Rays William C. Hamlett, 1999-05-21 Successor to the classic work in shark studies, The Elasmobranch Fishes by John Franklin Daniel (first published 1922, revised 1928 and 1934), Sharks, Skates, and Rays provides a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of elasmobranch morphology. Coverage has been expanded from anatomy to include modern information on physiology and biochemistry. The new volume also provides equal treatment for skates and rays. The authors present general introductory material for the relative novice but also review the latest technical citations, making the book a valuable primary reference resource. More than 200 illustrations supplement the text. |
dogfish muscular system: Anatomy of the Dogfish Shark: Muscular System Saul Wischnitzer, 1995-01-01 |
dogfish muscular system: A Laboratory Manual of Comparative Anatomy Kenneth R. Barker, Osmond Philip Breland, 1980 |
dogfish muscular system: The Comparative Physiology of Muscular Tissue A. D. Ritchie, 2015-04-09 Originally published in 1928, this book examines whether all muscular contractions use essentially the same processes regardless of the type of muscle in question. Ritchie uses an isolated muscle from a frog to investigate whether the chemical and physical causes of a simple muscle twitch can be responsible for the movements of all muscles. |
dogfish muscular system: A Bibliography of Sharks and Related Species , 1987 |
dogfish muscular system: A Synopsis of Biology W. B. Crow, 2013-10-22 A Synopsis of Biology summarizes the entire field of biology using a telegraphic style. The discussions are organized around seven themes: form and structure (morphology); functions (physiology); organism and environment (ecology); evolution and heredity (genetics); plant classification (systematic botany); animal classification (systematic zoology); and applications of biology (applied biology). Comprised of seven sections, this book begins with a detailed account of the morphology of living and non-living things, followed by an assessment of the origin of life. The reader is then introduced to reproduction (vegetative, sexual, and asexual); plant and animal tissues; seeds and seedlings; and metameric segmentation. Subsequent chapters explore matter and energy; organic and inorganic compounds; dermal excretion and thermo-regulation; periodicity and seasonal phenomena; and the life of rivers and lakes. The book also examines parasitism; mating and courtship; natural, artificial, and sexual selection; cultivation of plants; and domestication of animals. This monograph will be useful to research workers, degree students, and others interested in biology. |
dogfish muscular system: Comparative Anatomy Laboratory Manual Lloyd Raymond Gribble, 1950 |
dogfish muscular system: A Text-book of Zoology Thomas Jeffery Parker, William Aitcheson Haswell, 1897 |
dogfish muscular system: Morphology of the Vertebrata. Dog-fish, Cod, Pigeon, and Rabbit D. Knight, 1883 |
dogfish muscular system: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London , 1893 |
dogfish muscular system: Locomotion , 1979-02-15 Locomotion |
dogfish muscular system: A Junior course of practical zoology Arthur Milnes Marshall, 1899 |
dogfish muscular system: The Dissection of Vertebrates Gerardo De Iuliis, Dino Pulerà, 2006-08-03 The Dissection of Vertebrates covers several vertebrates commonly used in providing a transitional sequence in morphology. With illustrations on seven vertebrates – lamprey, shark, perch, mudpuppy, frog, cat, pigeon – this is the first book of its kind to include high-quality, digitally rendered illustrations. This book received the Award of Excellence in an Illustrated Medical Book from the Association of Medical Illustrators. It is organized by individual organism to facilitate classroom presentation. This illustrated, full-color primary dissection manual is ideal for use by students or practitioners working with vertebrate anatomy. This book is also recommended for researchers in vertebrate and functional morphology and comparative anatomy. The result of this exceptional work offers the most comprehensive treatment than has ever before been available. - Received the Award of Excellence in an Illustrated Medical Book from the Association of Medical Illustrators - Expertly rendered award-winning illustrations accompany the detailed, clear dissection direction - Organized by individual organism to facilitate classroom presentation - Offers coverage of a wide range of vertebrates - Full-color, strong pedagogical aids in a convenient lay-flat presentation |
dogfish muscular system: Neurobiology of Motor Programme Selection J. Kien, C.R. McCrohan, W. Winlow, 2013-10-22 The traditional view of motor systems as a linear chain of elements switched on and off by command neurons has become increasingly difficult to maintain in the face of accumulating evidence against the existence of command elements. So far, however, the general formulation of an alternative approach has been lacking. This book, by summarising the evidence against the linear approach to motor systems, argues forcefully against it. Analyses are presented of motor systems ranging from the lobster stomatogastric system through molluscan systems, leech movement, insect singing and locomotion, fish and amphibian behaviour, to goal-directed a movements in primates and volitional movements in humans. Comparison of these motor systems reveal the existence of some general principles underlying motor control and behavioural choice such that motor systems appear generally to be parallel, distributed processing networks. By discussing the treatment of motor systems in terms of parallel distributed processing systems, this book presents in concentrated form an alternative to the earlier view of motor systems. As such, the book is a must for all neuroscientists interested in the organisation of motor systems and the neuronal substrates of behavioural choice. |
dogfish muscular system: The Mechanics and Physiology of Animal Swimming L. Maddock, Q. Bone, J. M. V. Rayner, Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, Society for Experimental Biology (Great Britain), 1994-09-15 This volume brings together current research on a wide range of swimming organisms, with an emphasis on the biomechanics, physiology and hydrodynamics of swimming in or on water. Several chapters deal with different aspects of fish swimming, from the use of different 'gaits' to the operation of the locomotor muscles. All chapters are by recognised authorities in their different fields, and all are accessible to biologists interested in aquatic locomotion. |
dogfish muscular system: A text-book of zoology Thomas J. Parker, William A. Haswell, 1897 |
dogfish muscular system: Intercellular Communication in the Nervous System Robert Malenka, 2010-05-22 Intercellular communication is part of a complex system of communication that governs basic cellular activities and coordinates cell actions. The ability of cells to perceive and correctly respond to their environment is the basis of growth and development, tissue repair, and immunity as well as normal tissue homeostasis. Errors in cellular information processing are responsible for diseases such as cancer, autoimmunity, diabetes, and neurological and psychiatric disorders. There is substantial drug development concentrating on this and intercellular communication is the basis of much of neuropharmacology. By understanding cell signaling, diseases may be treated effectively and, theoretically, artificial tissues may be yielded. Neurotransmitters/receptors, synaptic structure and organization, gap junctions, neurotrophic factors and neuropeptides are all explored in this volume, as are the ways in which signaling controls neuroendocrinology, neuroimmunology and neuropharmacology. Intercellular Communication in the Nervous System provides a valuable desk reference for all scientists who consider signaling. - Chapters offer impressive scope with topics addressing neurotransmitters/receptors, synaptic structure and organization, neuropeptides, gap junctions, neuropharmacology and more - Richly illustrated in full color with over 200 figures - Contributors represent the most outstanding scholarship in the field, with each chapter providing fully vetted and reliable expert knowledge |
dogfish muscular system: A Course in Vertebrate Zoology Henry Sherring Pratt, 1925 |
dogfish muscular system: The Electric Organ of the Skate James Cossar Ewart, 1892 |
dogfish muscular system: An Introduction to Zoology Charles Henry O'Donoghue, 1921 |
dogfish muscular system: Animal Diversity Diana R. Kershaw, 2012-12-06 This book has been written with two main purposes in mind, page. At the same time animals show immense variation the first being to give a general review of the entire animal and none is truly typical. Some idea of the immense variety kingdom, and the second to give more detailed functional of animals is given in the diversity sections, with a synopsis accounts of the anatomy of a representative of each major of the classification of each major phylum. animal group. It is intended to be used by those who are Zoology has a language of its own, which appears highly interested in animals and does not start with the assumption complicated but in most cases can, in fact, be derived simply of any great zoological knowledge. It is hoped that it will from either Latin or Greek. Translations and derivations prove particularly helpful to those studying biology or have been given of a selection of zoological terms; these zoology at 'A' level, or in the early stages of a university should be regarded as examples. The interested zoologist course. may find the use of a Greek and Latin dictionary rewarding. |
dogfish muscular system: Manual of Comparative Anatomy Osmond Philip Breland, 1953 |
dogfish muscular system: Laboratory Guide to Vertebrate Dissection for Students of Anatomy Arthur Beeny Appleton, 1929 As its title indicates, this is a book for use in a practical comparative anatomy course. It is intended for a somewhat unusual class of student, and consequently its contents, outlook, and method of treatment are unlike those of the standard texts in this subject. As stated in the preface, it is assumed that the student has already done a course in elementary zoology, including the usual verte-brate types, and has also examined in more detail a mammal. Unless this mammal were man, a number of comparisons in the book would be missed. To obtain full benefit from it the student should obviously have taken the preliminary medical studies, including a fair amount of human anatomy. This is not meant to imply that the student of advanced zoology cannot get many useful hints and fresh points of view from its pages; he undoubtedly can. The types, treated in a series of regional dissections, are the lamprey, the dogfish (Squalus), Necturus, the lizard, and the dog. As it is intended for assistance in dissection, information regarding osteology and the details of the central nervous system have been purposely omitted and, conversely, the muscles are treated somewhat more fully than is customary. |
dogfish muscular system: A Text-book of zoology v. 2 Thomas Jeffery Parker, 1897 |
dogfish muscular system: A course in vertebrate zoology; a guide to the dissection and the Henry Sherring Pratt, 1938 |
dogfish muscular system: Science Fair Project Index 1973-1980 Akron-Summit County Public Library. Science and Technology Division, 1983 'Helpful in selecting projects suitable to a given age level and manageable with a home's workshop and kitchen resources.'-WILSON LIBRARY BULLETIN |
dogfish muscular system: Laboratory Directions in College Zoology Henry Lane Bruner, 1928 |
dogfish muscular system: A Text-book of Zoology Thomas Jeffery Parker, William Aitcheson Haswell, 1921 |
dogfish muscular system: Principles of Animal Locomotion R. McNeill Alexander, 2013-10-31 How can geckoes walk on the ceiling and basilisk lizards run over water? What are the aerodynamic effects that enable small insects to fly? What are the relative merits of squids' jet-propelled swimming and fishes' tail-powered swimming? Why do horses change gait as they increase speed? What determines our own vertical leap? Recent technical advances have greatly increased researchers' ability to answer these questions with certainty and in detail. This text provides an up-to-date overview of how animals run, walk, jump, crawl, swim, soar, hover, and fly. Excluding only the tiny creatures that use cilia, it covers all animals that power their movements with muscle--from roundworms to whales, clams to elephants, and gnats to albatrosses. The introduction sets out the general rules governing all modes of animal locomotion and considers the performance criteria--such as speed, endurance, and economy--that have shaped their selection. It introduces energetics and optimality as basic principles. The text then tackles each of the major modes by which animals move on land, in water, and through air. It explains the mechanisms involved and the physical and biological forces shaping those mechanisms, paying particular attention to energy costs. Focusing on general principles but extensively discussing a wide variety of individual cases, this is a superb synthesis of current knowledge about animal locomotion. It will be enormously useful to advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and a range of professional biologists, physicists, and engineers. |
dogfish muscular system: The Cardiovascular System A. Kurt Gamperl, Todd E. Gillis, Anthony Farrell, Colin Brauner, 2017-08-22 The Cardiovascular System: Design, Control and Function, Volume 36A, a two- volume set, not only provides comprehensive coverage of the current knowledge in this very active and growing field of research, but also highlights the diversity in cardiovascular morphology and function and the anatomical and physiological plasticity shown by fish taxa that are faced with various abiotic and biotic challenges. Updated topics in this important work include chapters on Heart Morphology and Anatomy, Cardiomyocyte Morphology and Physiology, Electrical Excitability of the Fish Heart, Cardiac Energy Metabolism, Heart Physiology and Function, Hormonal and Intrinsic Biochemical Control of Cardiac Function, and Vascular Anatomy and Morphology. In addition, chapters integrate molecular and cellular data with the growing body of knowledge on heart and in vivo cardiovascular function, and as a result, provide insights into some of the most important questions that still need to be answered. - Presents a comprehensive overview of cardiovascular structure and function in fish - Covers topics in a way that is ideal for researchers in fish physiology and for audiences within the fields of comparative morphology, histology, aquaculture and ecophysiology - Provide insights into some of the most important questions that still need to be answered |
dogfish muscular system: Structure and Development of the Vertebrates Florence Moog, 1949 |
dogfish muscular system: Metabolic Interconversion of Enzymes 1973 E.H. Fischer, E.G. Krebs, H. Neurath, E.R. Stadtman, 2012-12-06 The First International Symposium on the Metabolic Interconversion of Enzymes was held in Santa Margherita Ligure, Italy, in May, 1970, under the direction of Professor G. Bonsignore. Because of rapid developments in this field, a second Symposium was organized a year and a half later in Rottach-Egern, Germany (October, 1971) by Professors E. He1mreich, H. Holzer and O. Wieland. At that time, so much new information had accumulated that it was decided to repeat such conferences approx imately every other year; the United States was chosen as the next site. This publi cation reports the Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on the Metabolic Interconversion of Enzymes held at the Battelle Seattle Research Center, Seattle, Washington, June 5 - 8, 1973. The conferences were originally designed to examine the control of metabolic reactions by covalent modification of certain key enzymes. Covalent, as opposed to allosteric or metabolic, regulation had first been recognized some fifteen years be fore. Initially thought to represent an added sophistication in regulatory processes possibly reserved to higher organisms, covalent regulation has now been found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Those early studies in covalent modification revealed for the first time the existence of special converter enzymes whose purpose in life is to switch other molecules from one state of activity to another. |
dogfish muscular system: A Junior Course of Practical Zoology Arthur Milnes Marshall, Charles Herbert Hurst, 1920 |
dogfish muscular system: A text-book of biology James Richard Ainsworth Davis, 1893 |
dogfish muscular system: Animal morphology and physiology James Richard Ainsworth Davis, 1893 |
Where to catch dogfish/bowfin? - ChicagoLand Fishing Forums
May 31, 2010 · Dogfish, according to the author, was the most vile fish he ever attempted to cook, and the only species that he was unable to make taste good. Sd the smell of it baking in his …
Bowfins - Good or Bad? - Michigan Sportsman Forum
Jun 27, 2007 · What is it about bowfins (dogfish)? They are looked down on by many anglers and are usually left out of the listings of fish species that hold in any given body of water. Bowfins …
Fish racism - dogfish (aka bowfin) | Michigan Sportsman Forum
Aug 31, 2006 · Fish racism - dogfish (aka bowfin) Jump to Latest 8.1K views 55 replies 29 participants last post by Lwapo Sep 6, 2006
Best Bowfin / Dogfish Lakes in Oakland County
Aug 26, 2018 · I want to get my friend on his first bowfin so I'm trying to plan a trip to target them soon. Does anyone know any good Oakland County lakes for bowfin? I've caught some at …
Two HUGE Bowfin/Dogfish - Michigan Sportsman Forum
Jun 15, 2010 · My neighbor was fishing my lake last night and he called me around 8:00 pm and wanted to know if Dogfish were a threat to our lake. I was not sure but because it was soo …
Bowfin/Dogfish | Michigan Sportsman Forum
Apr 6, 2008 · Anyone target them? Any Techniques? I got one a couple years back at Kent Lake and it put up a heck of a fight.
Burbot?? | Michigan Sportsman Forum
Jun 27, 2005 · Warm Water Species Fishing ... Burbot??
Carp fishing on Mille Lacs & wondering where to start?
Aug 11, 2010 · well after checking the DNR lake finder and going through all the lakes on the WFC there is nothing that would really get that big other than Northern or Lake Trout but …
Any tips for Tawas Bay? | Page 3 | Michigan Sportsman Forum
Jan 24, 2013 · Don't get me wrong, I try anything once. And if I don't like it I try it 3 or 4 more times just to be sure. I bet it's fantastic when you cook it. Hell, if I catch one I'll give it a shot. I …
Backus Flooding help | Michigan Sportsman Forum
Jul 12, 2007 · If it's the one off of M-18 near prudenville, I haven't fished it in about 8 years and then there was only access for small boats and canoes. The fishing wasn't very good …
Where to catch dogfish/bowfin? - C…
May 31, 2010 · Dogfish, according to the author, was the most vile fish he ever …
Bowfins - Good or Bad? - Michigan Sp…
Jun 27, 2007 · What is it about bowfins (dogfish)? They are looked down …
Fish racism - dogfish (aka bowfin) | Michi…
Aug 31, 2006 · Fish racism - dogfish (aka bowfin) Jump to Latest 8.1K views 55 …
Best Bowfin / Dogfish Lakes in Oakland C…
Aug 26, 2018 · I want to get my friend on his first bowfin so I'm trying to plan a …
Two HUGE Bowfin/Dogfish - Mi…
Jun 15, 2010 · My neighbor was fishing my lake last night and he called me …