Tadpoles of both Couch's spadefoot toad and the Western spadefoot toad accelerate metamorphosis in response to pond drying. |
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Prior to metamorphosis, the caterpillars pack together and suspend themselves by the tips of their abdomens from the inner walls. |
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The free-swimming larva settles and undergoes metamorphosis into a juvenile sponge. |
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Now she held their attention as they watched the metamorphosis from near death to vitality and renewed animation filling her essence. |
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He kicked the jack-of-all-trades route to the curb, got himself a band, and made a quick metamorphosis into a brash rocker. |
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This is unfortunate because the skeletal reorganization experienced by anurans during metamorphosis is unparalleled among vertebrates. |
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On the one hand, lycanthropy referred to the reality of the werewolf, that is, the phenomenon of metamorphosis from human form to wolf. |
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We will focus on 'complete' metamorphosis, the system promulgated by the order of the scaled wings. |
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Most studies of invertebrate larval metamorphosis have been performed with species that are sedentary or sessile as adults. |
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When Tom is identified as a thumbling, he has been speaking to a dragonfly larva also about to undergo a metamorphosis. |
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If sufficient stimuli are present, the physiological process of metamorphosis is initiated within the larvae. |
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This is followed by a discussion of metamorphosis in insects and amphibians. |
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This political metamorphosis is not the one chronicled this week by the mainstream press in both Mexico and the United States. |
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Table 4 captures this metamorphosis in major party support in a different way. |
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In its metamorphosis from novella to film, it wisely maintains the convention of narration, but unwisely pushes it to the wayside. |
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A close examination of the fresco reveals a series of allusions to metamorphosis. |
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After the second-half metamorphosis, it has suddenly become clear that there will be real competition for places come the summer. |
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So what kind of metamorphosis does the photograph as a form of animation effectuate? |
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Later, we see her in real terror as Namtar's metamorphosis takes hold and changes her very being. |
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The twist is that this metamorphosis is emphasized by the fact that the young heroine, Ginger, is simultaneously becoming a werewolf. |
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When it comes to national security, however, no one can say with assurance whether her metamorphosis is genuine. |
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Alternatively, competent larvae of many sessile invertebrate species do not progress toward metamorphosis if stimulatory cues are absent. |
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Endocrine studies have shown that thyroid hormone is the principle morphogen controlling amphibian metamorphosis. |
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Apart from the metamorphosis of the fat Raja into a sleek guy, the movie is simple and deals with human relationships. |
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No one can have failed to notice the metamorphosis of the humble vitreous china sink in Irish bathrooms. |
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The early stages of metamorphosis are characterized by programmed cell death and histolysis of most larval tissues. |
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During embryogenesis and metamorphosis, plasmatocytes are involved in the clearance of apoptotic cells and histolytic debris. |
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In their metamorphosis they pass easily from sandy beige to sulfurous beige, then to amber yellow. |
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Much of the larval ciliation is lost at metamorphosis, with the exception of that in the gut. |
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Its short-term metamorphosis from a failed state into a case study of post-conflict recovery puts this country under immense scrutiny. |
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Coincidentally, she escapes just as a metamorphosis begins and her accelerated biological clock kicks in. |
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Positive effects of juvenoids on crustacean metamorphosis were also encountered in barnacles early on. |
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People around the world have taken inspiration from the metamorphosis of the earthbound caterpillar into the ethereal butterfly. |
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In The Fly, protagonist Seth Brundle undergoes a dipterous metamorphosis that begins to change his voice. |
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For eleven months its grubby surface was covered by a makeshift blue wall, screening the leisurely metamorphosis behind. |
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That accolade was the final confirmation of Dragila's metamorphosis from quirky outsider to exalted global personality. |
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Elementals had always been understood to be capable of metamorphosis into omnifarious forms and shapes.
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Just before metamorphosis, the tadpoles weigh only a fraction of an ounce. |
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It uses the narrative as a way to investigate the notion of architectural metamorphosis and redemption, and it does so by means of powerful installation pieces. |
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Larry, of course, has gotten a few laughs out of Laurie's metamorphosis. |
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This metamorphosis has happened because while I'm happy to embrace country living I like it to be wrapped up in a duck-down duvet of urban comfort. |
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Poster proceeds to outline his own metamorphosis over nine chapters. |
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Frogs were not symbols of death but, on the contrary, of rebirth and renewal, because of its remarkable metamorphosis of egg into tadpole and from tadpole into frog. |
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However, Eastern spadefoot toads, which have a very short developmental period prior to metamorphosis, did not show any increase in corticosterone over an hour of confinement. |
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A model is proposed which postulates that insect metamorphosis is an effect of adaptations to differing sets of environmental selective pressures during ancestral amphibiotic life. |
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His transition from self-created victim to self-obsessed nouveau adolescent, to the gently compassionate man his family actually needs is an extraordinary metamorphosis. |
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We have watched her metamorphosis from a shy schoolgirl into a self-confident businesswoman. |
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In insects, the general view is that juvenile hormone maintains larval and nymphal characteristics in developing insects and suppresses metamorphosis into adults. |
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The imago can become multiradiate at the time of metamorphosis, or it can be 5-rayed at metamorphosis and add the supernumerary rays during post larval growth stages. |
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The class learned about how caterpillars undergo metamorphosis to become butterflies. |
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It has been, for Dobbs, a Kafka-like metamorphosis from WASPy establishmentarian to angry-populist cockroach. |
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Here was this person who was having a renaissance or a metamorphosis and seemed really joyous. |
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The granite peaks and sylvan hollows in the Blue Ridge Mountains are the results of geological changes and metamorphosis over perhaps a billion year period of time. |
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In addition to ecological studies investigating the timing of amphibian metamorphosis, a considerable amount of work has addressed the endocrine control of metamorphosis. |
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Another subunit appears about the time of metamorphosis to first juvenile instar, and expression of a sixth subunit begins four or five molts later. |
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Thus, in contrast to biofouling organisms, settlement and metamorphosis are probably not tightly coupled, as megalopae can move between sites before metamorphosis. |
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In most biofouling organisms, settlement and metamorphosis are so tightly coupled that there is some debate as to whether they are actually separate processes. |
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He wanted a model to be able to produce his metamorphosis, which is why he showed her in so many different ways. |
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At the late stages of the silver eel metamorphosis, their digestive organs deteriorate, presumably making more room for eggs. |
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The persistence of viruses in the epithelial cells leads to cytomegalic giant cell metamorphosis. |
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Pupation and metamorphosis were interrupted in the mosquitoes because the dose was lethal at this stage. |
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They are responsible for tissue apoptosis occurring during metamorphosis, as well as for phagocytosis of bacteria. |
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The government has undergone political metamorphosis since his election. |
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In 1974, Marjorie Garber argued that metamorphosis is both the major subject of the play and the model of its structure. |
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These nauplii feed on yolk reserves within their bodies and then undergo a metamorphosis into zoeae. |
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After several months of growth and development, these sprout limbs and undergo metamorphosis into tiny toads. |
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Larger juveniles at metamorphosis always outgrow smaller ones that have been reared in more crowded ponds. |
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The term glass eel refers to all developmental stages between the end of metamorphosis and full pigmentation. |
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The silvering metamorphosis results in morphological and physiological modifications that prepare the animal to migrate back to the Sargasso Sea. |
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The neurites underlying the prototroch are lost after metamorphosis, suggesting that these neurons serve a larval function. |
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The consequence of the altered form of the doctrine was a metamorphosis in the nature of popular Protestantism. |
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A recurring theme in Zimbabwean art is the metamorphosis of man into beast. |
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Male scale insects are mostly haploid, undergo an unusual metamorphosis, and feed only in the first two instars. |
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This is the metamorphosis of the zygote transformed into a full-fledged human being. |
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All 4 of these compounds had juvenile hormone activity, inducing metamorphosis in larvae of the annelid Capitella. |
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Juvenile hormones regulate metamorphosis and the quality of molting in insects. |
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Lightning bugs, I remember reading somewhere, are the last metamorphosis of glowworms. |
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During metamorphosis, nearly all the larval cells are replaced by cells arising from structures called imaginal discs. |
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Alchemy is a metaphor for the metamorphosis of being through the combining of apparently unmixable opposites. |
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During the spermatid stage of sperm development, mitochondria undergo an extensive metamorphosis to form two mitochondrial derivatives. |
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The comparative anatomy of the aortic arches of the urodeles and their relation to respiration and degree of metamorphosis. |
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He unifies his subject matter through the theme of metamorphosis. |
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Storage of nutritional resources is important for holometabolous species that have developmental stages during metamorphosis when insects do not feed. |
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Apoptosis is routine in developmental processes such as the removal of webbing between fingers in humans, the loss of tadpole tails in amphibians, and insect metamorphosis. |
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Based on the new technique, NIAS has induced precocious metamorphosis of silkworms by excessively producing juvenile hormone esterase, a kind of hormone-degrading enzyme. |
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The name Diomedea, assigned to the albatrosses by Linnaeus, references the mythical metamorphosis of the companions of the Greek warrior Diomedes into birds. |
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A gradual metamorphosis took place in the course of a hundred years. |
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