Metabolites from symbiotic bacteria

J Piel - Natural product reports, 2009 - pubs.rsc.org
Metabolites from symbiotic bacteria - Natural Product Reports (RSC Publishing) DOI:10.1039/B703499G
Royal Society of Chemistry View PDF VersionPrevious ArticleNext Article DOI: 10.1039/B703499G …

Biofouling and antifouling

N Fusetani - Natural product reports, 2004 - pubs.rsc.org
Covering: up to June 2003Most benthic organisms produce planktonic larvae in their life
cycles; larval settlement and metamorphosis are influenced by many environmental factors …

Ecological interactions of marine sponges

JL Wulff - Canadian Journal of Zoology, 2006 - cdnsciencepub.com
Les éponges réagissent à la plupart des autres organismes des systèmes marins, en tant
que compétiteurs, symbiotes, hôtes de symbiotes, consommateurs et proies. L'étude et la …

[SÁCH][B] Marine chemical ecology

JB McClintock, BJ Baker - 2001 - taylorfrancis.com
The interdisciplinary field of marine chemical ecology is an expanding and dynamic science.
It is no surprise that the breadth of marine organisms studied expanded in concert with …

Producing drugs from marine sponges

EH Belarbi, AC Gómez, Y Chisti, FG Camacho… - Biotechnology …, 2003 - Elsevier
Marine sponges are potential sources of many unique metabolites, including cytotoxic and
anticancer compounds. Natural sponge populations are insufficient or inaccessible for …

Clearance rates and aquiferous systems in two sponges with contrasting life‐history strategies

X Turon, J Galera, MJ Uriz - Journal of Experimental Zoology, 1997 - Wiley Online Library
The clearance rates and microarchitecture of the aquiferous systems of two sympatric
sponge species, Crambe crambe (Schmidt) and Dysidea avara (Schmidt), are compared …

How do reproductive output, larval behaviour, and recruitment contribute to adult spatial patterns in Mediterranean encrusting sponges?

MJ Uriz, M Maldonado, X Turon, R Martí - Marine Ecology Progress …, 1998 - int-res.com
We studied the abundance and spatial pattern of 2 Mediterranean enci-ust~ ng sponges,
Crambe crambe (highly toxic) and Scopalina lophyropoda (non-toxic), at 4 spatial scales …

10 Chemical Mediation of Surface Colonization

PD Steinberg, R de Nys, S Kjelleberg - Marine chemical ecology, 2001 - books.google.com
2. Carbohydrates 3. Fatty Acids 4. Other Metabolites 5. Biofilms B. Induction of Macroalgal
Settlement C. Why Soluble Primary Metabolites as Inducers? 1. The Signal Should Extend …

Cellular origin of chlorinated diketopiperazines in the dictyoceratid sponge Dysidea herbacea (Keller)

AE Flowers, MJ Garson, RI Webb, EJ Dumdei… - Cell and tissue …, 1998 - Springer
The tropical marine sponge Dysidea herbacea (Keller) contains the filamentous unicellular
cyanobacterium Oscillatoria spongeliae (Schulze) Hauck as an endosymbiont, plus …

Sponge chemical defenses are a possible mechanism for increasing sponge abundance on reefs in Zanzibar

SB Helber, DJJ Hoeijmakers, CA Muhando, S Rohde… - PloS one, 2018 - journals.plos.org
Coral reefs are experiencing increasing anthropogenic impacts that result in substantial
declines of reef-building corals and a change of community structure towards other benthic …