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                                       Details for article 13 of 19 found articles
 
 
  Sensory ecology of salps (Tunicata, thaliacea): More questions than answers
 
 
Title: Sensory ecology of salps (Tunicata, thaliacea): More questions than answers
Author: Madin, L. P.
Appeared in: Marine & freshwater behaviour & physiology
Paging: Volume 26 (1995) nr. 2-4 pages 175-195
Year: 1995-09
Contents: There is still relatively little known about the natural history of gelatinous animals in the plankton, and their sensory ecology remains largely a matter of surmise, based on limited morphological, physiological and behavioral data. Pelagic tunicates are among the most widely distributed and abundant of the gelatinous zooplank-ton, and display a range of behavior that is apparently cued by aspects of their environment. Different kinds of information may be important for different scales of behavior. Feeding and predator avoidance are likely to be affected by near-field stimuli from visual, chemical or mechanical sources, while far-field information such as gravity, light, temperature, or pressure are likely to cue behavior spanning larger time and space scales, such as vertical or ontogenetic migration, aggregation and reproductive cycles. A variety of sensory structures have been described in pelagic tunicates, including photoreceptors of varying complexity, and several structures that have been suggested to be mechano- or chemoreceptors. Focussing on salps, this paper describes behavior that depends on sensory information, reviews the known structure and function of sensory receptors, and suggests some hypotheses on mechanisms defining the sensory ecology of these planktonic organisms.
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 13 of 19 found articles
 
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