DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Xiphosura
Xiphosura
Introduction to Arthropod Groups What Is Entomology?
Phylogenomic Resolution of Sea Spider Diversification Through Integration Of
The Effect of Prolonged Starvation on Blood Chemistry of Horseshoe Crab, Carcinoscorpius Rotundicauda (Chelicerata: Xiphosura)
Current Views on Chelicerate Phylogeny —A Tribute to Peter Weygoldt
Geological History and Phylogeny of Chelicerata
Enhanced Growth of Juvenile Tachypleus Tridentatus (Chelicerata: Xiphosura) in the Laboratory: a Step Towards Population Restocking for Conservation of the Species
Arthropod Fossil Data Increase Congruence of Morphological and Molecular Phylogenies
Valloisella Lievinensis RACHEBOEUF, 1992 (Chelicerata; Xiphosura) from the Westphalian B of England
Species Diversity
The Sea Spider's Contribution to TH Morgan's
A Taxonomic and Taphonomic Analysis of Late Jurassic
Invertebrate Notes
The Oldest Peracarid Crustacean Reveals a Late Devonian Freshwater Colonisation by Isopod Relatives
Horseshoe Crab Limulus Polyphemus
Ancestral Whole-Genome Duplication in the Marine Chelicerate Horseshoe Crabs
Palaeozoic Arachnids and Their Significance for Arachnid Phylogeny
Arthropod Phylogeny Revisited, with a Focus on Crustacean Relationships
A Collection of Horseshoe Crabs (Chelicerata: Xiphosura) in the National Museum, Prague (Czech Republic) and a Review of Their Immunological Importance
Top View
Silurian Horseshoe Crab Illuminates the Evolution of Arthropod Limbs
Sea Spider Development
A Late Permian Fossil Horseshoe Crab (Paleolimulus: Xiphosura) from Poatina, Great Western Tiers, Tasmania
Evolution of the Arthropod Mandible: a Molecular Developmental Perspective
Suggest the Structure of Palaeozoic Compound Eyes Brigitte Schoenemann1*, Markus Poschmann 2 & Euan N
A Redescription of Chasmataspis Laurencii Caster & Brooks, 1956
A Collection of Sea Spiders (Pycnogonida: Pantopoda) in the National Museum, Prague (Czech Republic)
Reproductive Competition and Sexual Selection in Horseshoe Crabs
Possible Homologies in the Proventriculi of Dicondylia (Hexapoda) and Malacostraca (Crustacea)