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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Fordham University Press
    Keywords: Philosophy, American-20th century ; Philosophy, American-20th century ; Electronic books
    Description / Table of Contents: Intro -- Half Title -- Frontispiece -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Epigraph -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Preface to the Fordham University Press Edition -- Preface -- Introduction -- Chronology -- Bibliographic Abbreviations -- Editor's Note on the Text -- Half Title -- I: An Autobiographical Sketch -- 1. Words of Professor Royce at the Walton Hotel at Philadelphia, December 29, 1915 -- II: The American Context -- 2. The Struggle for Order: Self-Government, Good-Humor and Violence in the Mines -- 3. An Episode of Early California Life: The Squatter Riot of 1850 in Sacramento -- 4. The Settlers at Oakfield Creek -- 5. The Pacific Coast: A Psychological Study of the Relations of Climate and Civilization -- 6. William James and the Philosophy of Life -- III: The European Background -- 7. Shelley and the Revolution -- 8. Pessimism and Modern Thought -- 9. The Rediscovery of the Inner Life: From Spinoza to Kant -- 10. The Concept of the Absolute and the Dialectical Method -- IV: Religious Questions -- 11. The Possibility of Error -- 12. The Conception of God: Address by Professor Royce -- 13. Immortality -- 14. Monotheism -- V: The World and the Individual -- 15. Self-Consciousness, Social Consciousness and Nature -- 16. The Religious Problems and the Theory of Being -- 17. The Internal and External Meaning of Ideas -- 18. The Fourth Conception of Being -- 19. The Linkage of Facts -- 20. The Temporal and the Eternal -- Index -- Series Page
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (464 pages)
    ISBN: 9780823282791
    Series Statement: American Philosophy Ser v.Vol. 17
    DDC: 191
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Fordham University Press
    Keywords: Philosophy, American-20th century ; Philosophy, American-20th century ; Electronic books
    Description / Table of Contents: Intro -- Half Title -- Frontispiece -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Epigraph -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Preface to the Fordham University Press Edition -- Preface -- Chronology -- Bibliographic Abbreviations -- Editor's Note on the Text -- Half Title -- VI: Logic and Methodology -- 21. Recent Logical Inquiries and Their Psychological Bearings -- 22. The Problem of Truth in the Light of Recent Discussion -- 23. The Mechanical, The Historical, and the Statistical -- 24. Mind -- 25. [The Methodology of Science] -- 26. Introduction to Poincaré's Science and Hypothesis -- 27. [Types of Order] -- VII: Moral and Religious Experience -- 28. The Problem of Job -- 29. The Philosophy of Loyalty -- 30. Individual Experience and Social Experience as Sources of Religious Insight -- 31. The Religious Mission of Sorrow -- VIII: Community as Lived -- 32. Provincialism -- 33. Race Questions and Prejudices -- 34. On Certain Limitations of the Thoughtful Public in America -- 35. The Possibility of International Insurance -- 36. The Hope of the Great Community -- IX: Annotated Bibliography of the Published Works of Josiah Royce by Ignas Skrupskelis -- Index -- Series Page
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (447 pages)
    ISBN: 9780823282807
    Series Statement: American Philosophy Ser v.Vol. 17
    DDC: 191
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 365 (1997), S. 251-256 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: marine intertidal ; amphipods
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Marine hoplonemerteans were collected intertidally inAlgoa Bay, Port Elizabeth, South Africa in 1983.Algoa Living worms appear to belong to the genus Nipponnemertes, perhaps N. africanus (Wheeler, 1940). The external morphology and thestylet apparatus are described and illustrated. Laboratory observations showed that this speciesattacked and consumed two species of sympatricamphipods, Elasmopus pectenicrus and Hyalegrandicornis (the only two species tested). Thefeeding behavior was similar to that documented forother suctorial nemerteans that feed on amphipods. Onecomplete feeding sequence, from the initial strike tocompletion of feeding on H. grandicornis,took approximately 12 min: the proboscis struck theventral side of the amphipod, which was immobilized in〈1 min; the head eventually wedged between thesternal plates, and the internal organs were evacuatedby suctorial action. The addition of E. pectenicrus andH. grandicornis as potentialprey for suctorial hoplonemerteans brings the totalknown number of amphipod species to 25, involving atleast ten families. A summary of all species ofAmphipoda known to be potential prey for suctorialhoplonemerteans is presented.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 365 (1997), S. 223-231 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Crassostrea ; Nemertea ; North Carolina ; Pinnotheridae ; symbiosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The pea crab, Zaops ostreum, a symbiont in the mantle cavity of the American oyster (Crassostreavirginica), is itself a host to a symbiotic nemertean. Thisnemertean belongs to the genus Carcinonemertes, and issimilar to or possibly the same as C. pinnotheridophila,known from another sympatric pinnotherid crab, Pinnixachaetopterana. Living in mucous sheaths within the gillchambers of female crabs, the life cycle of the nemertean isintimately synchronized with and dependent on the crab's reproduction. A total of 138 pea crabs were collected andexamined for nemerteans during the summers of 1965 to 1967 atBeaufort, North Carolina, U.S.A.; of these 97 (70%) were mature(5th stage) female crabs. Mature females harbored thenemerteans, and had a prevalence of 39.2%. A maximum of 20worms was found in the gill chambers of a single crab, 9 ofwhich were the red, eyeless, mature female worms, along with 11colorless males. Worm egg sacs were attached to the pleopods ofovigorous crabs; a maximum of 293 sacs was recorded in anindividual crab with 7 mature females. At about 110 eggs persac, this translates to a potential production of 〉32 200nemertean larvae. Since female Z. ostreum may live for 2to 3 yr and produce two broods of eggs per year (beyond thefirst year), the reproductive potential of the symbionts may beeven greater. Gills of crabs with more than one mature femalewere usually covered by the worm sheaths, and were frequentlydamaged (gnarled, torn, silted, etc.). The sternum of infestedcrabs was often damaged due to the projection of worm sheathsthrough it to the subabdominal region. There the egg sacs weredeposited on the pleopods to develop along with the crabembryos.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 156 (1988), S. 1-11 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: hoplonemerteans ; seagrasses ; Zostera ; predation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Seagrasses of the world harbor a rich and varied fauna, but a review of the literature revealed that little has been done to evaluate the ecological importance of nemerteans in such communities. Monostiliferous hoplonemerteans are common inhabitants of some seagrasses, e.g. eelgrass (Zostera), but generally they are seldom collected or identified or are apparently absent in other species such as schoalgrass (Halodule) or turtlegrass (Thalassia). Nineteen species of hoplonemerteans (four families) have been identified from eelgrass beds around the world; they exist mainly as epifauna, and all except two species are probably suctorial feeders. Some palaeonemerteans (2 species) and heteronemerteans (4 species) are also associated with eelgrass, but mainly as infauna. Suctorial nemerteans (4 species in 3 families) from eelgrass beds located along the mid-Atlantic coast of the United States feed in the laboratory on a variety of amphipod species that inhabit eelgrass. Tubicolous species (e.g. Corophium) seem to be preferred. Zygonemertes virescens feeds on nine species of amphipods belonging to six families, and is the only species to feed on isopods (3 species). Analyses of field studies on the occurrence of hoplonemerteans in eelgrass beds in Virginia and New Jersey, along with available information on the food habits of these worms, were used as a basis for demonstrating their potential importance as predators of peracarids in seagrass systems. More careful methods for collecting and identifying worms, continued studies on food preferences and rates of predation, and emphasis on the population dynamics of worms and prey, are recommended in order to evaluate the role of suctorial hoplonemerteans in the ecology of seagrasses.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 156 (1988), S. 47-51 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Oerstedia ; Hoplonemertea ; feeding behavior ; New Jersey
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The monostiliferous nemertean Oerstedia dorsalis was collected from eelgrass (Zostera marina) beds located along the coast of New Jersey, and feeding responses to amphipods and isopods were observed in the laboratory. Tests with 46 worms showed that they fed suctorially on Ampelisca vadorum, Ampithoe longimana, Corophium acherusicum and C. tuberculata. Corophiids were preferred. Upon contact with an amphipod, the proboscis is everted and strikes the prey on the ventral side, immobilizing it in a few minutes. The worm probes the sternal region with its head and everts its proboscis one or more times during the process. The exoskeleton is eventually penetrated by the head, and the stomach is everted into the hemocoel as a flattened funnel-like structure. Peristaltic undulations of the body signify the suctorial action that removes the living contents from the exoskeleton. The actual feeding process (from head penetration to removal of the head) takes about 7 min. O. dorsalis is only the third species within the Prosorhochmidae for which the feeding behavior has been documented. The other two are terrestrial species, and are also suctorial.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: host-symbiont relationships
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new species of Carcinonemertes, C. pinnotheridophila, is described and illustrated. The worms were found in the pinnotherid crab Pinnixa chaetopterana collected from the coasts of New Jersey, North Carolina and Florida. The anatomy of the new species is compared and contrasted with that of other members of the genus Carcinonemertes and an emended generic diagnosis is provided. The nemerteans only inhabit female hosts, crabs being infested with one or two mature female worms but with no more than one ensheathed in each branchial chamber; one or more smaller male nemerteans may be associated with each female. Sheaths are attached to the medial portion of the host branchial exoskeleton, and project through an opening in the floor of the chamber to exit via another aperture in the sternum; the anterior part of the sheath opens in the excurrent canal of the branchial chamber. Female worms cement their oval egg sacs on the pleopods to which the crab's eggs are also attached. Attachment, development and hatching of both host and symbiont eggs are synchronous. The incidence of infestation, reproductive potential of the nemertean, damage to its host and tolerance of the crab's growth cycles are described.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: ecology ; feeding experiments
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The densities of nemerteans and associated fauna on a soft-bottom sampling station (27–30 m deep) in the Øresund were determined from 47 cores (each 135 cm2 in cross-section; 20 + cm deep) collected from September to December 1989; these data were compared with 14 cores taken from the same location in December 1982. Nine species of nemerteans were identified from cores and dredge samples: Palaeonemertea — Callinera-like sp.; Heteronemertea — Cerebratulus fuscus, C. marginatus, Lineus bilineatus, Micrura fasciolata, M. purpurea; Hoplonemertea — Amphiporus bioculatus, A. dissimulans, Nipponnemertes pulcher. Mean numbers of heteronemerteans were 32 and 10 m−2 in 1982 and 1989, respectively, and hoplonemerteans were 90 and 71 m−2 , respectively. Only one palaeonemertean was collected during both years. Mean densities of the dominant species, N. pulcher, were similar for the two years, 74 and 68 m−2. The dominant groups of macrofauna (n m−2) in 1989 were ostracods (1028), amphipods (618), polychaetes (514), and ophiuroids (449). Amphipods (〉90% Haploops spp.) and polychaetes (at least 30 spp.) are the major potential prey for hoplonemerteans and heteronemerteans, respectively. Laboratory feeding experiments with N. pulcher revealed that it consumed amphipods (Haploops tenuis and H. tubicola) at a rate of 2.6 worm−1 d−1 during the first 12 hours, but after 36 hours and beyond the rate was maintained at approximately 0.2 worm−1 d−1. Beyond 12 hours this nemertean showed a tendancy to only partially evacuate its prey. It was demonstrated experimentally that N. pulcher has a supply of toxin capable of killing six amphipods in approximately one hour. Limited tests showed that N. pulcher fed on the cumacean Diastylis tumida, but not on the amphipod Maera loveni or the ostracod Philomedes globosus, and that Amphiporus dissimulans readily attacked Haploops spp., but not Maera or Philomedes. Although the results of laboratory experiments are tentative, they do suggest that suctorial hoplonemerteans can exert a potentially significant effect on benthic communities. Employing seven species of polychaetes as prey for Cerebratulus fuscus and Micrura fasciolata, only the latter responded positively to one of them, Glycera alba. The hermit crab Pagurus bernhardus violently rejected N. pulcher in all feeding trials.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Journal of Natural History, 45 (39-40). pp. 2419-2441.
    Publication Date: 2016-08-30
    Description: Two brachyurans of the varunid genus Hemigrapsus from the northwestern Pacific Ocean have invaded coastal regions of the north Atlantic – Hemigrapsus takanoi (sibling species of Hemigrapsus penicillatus) and Hemigrapsus sanguineus in Europe and the latter in the USA. Parasites are known from these crabs in their native habitats, but except for an undescribed larval nematode, none has been found in those examined from their new locations. These parasites include metacercariae of eight species of microphallid trematode, the rhizocephalan barnacles Polyascus polygenea, Sacculina nigra and Sacculina senta, and the obligate gut-inhabiting mesomycetozoan Enteromyces callianassae (potential parasite). The following have been identified in four of the other eight Pacific crabs within the genus (Hemigrapsus nudus and Hemigrapsus oregonensis, northern hemisphere; Hemigrapsus crenulatus and Hemigrapsus sexdentatus, southern hemisphere), none of which have been geographically displaced: metacercariae of two microphallid trematodes; cystacanths of three acanthocephalans Profilicollis antarcticus, Profilicollis botulus and Profilicollis novaezelandensis; larval nematode Ascarophis sp.; nematomorph Nectonema zealandica; entoniscid isopod Portunion conformis; mesomycetozoan Taeniella carcini; and nemertean egg predator Carcinonemertes epialti. The likelihood of the displaced species of shore crabs being rejoined with their native parasites or their susceptibility to becoming infected by similar parasites in their new locations is discussed. In future global displacements of parasitized Hemigrapsus species it is possible that their most serious parasites, rhizocephalans and entoniscid isopods, may infect previously uninfected species. For example, the two eastern Pacific species of Hemigrapsus (H. nudus and H. oregonensis) may be vulnerable to the rhizocephalans and may in turn be a source of entoniscids transported elsewhere.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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