Crassostrea Sp
Mostrando 25-28 de 28 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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25. Detection of human calicivirus (Small round structured virus - SRSV) using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in oysters from São Paulo beaches, Brazil. / Detecção de Calicivírus Humano (Small Round Structured Virus-SRSV) pela Relação em Cadeia da Polimerase( PCR) em Ostras do Litoral do Estado de São Paulo.
Vírus causadores de gastroenterite, descritos como pequenos vírus de estrutura arredondada (Small Round Structured Viruses-SRSV), foram detectados em extratos de ostras Crassostrea spp., coletadas em regiões distintas do litoral do Estado de São Paulo, utilizando a Reação em Cadeia por Polimerase com transcrição reversa (RT-PCR).Treze lotes de amostr
Publicado em: 1999
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26. Efeitos do petróleo e da limpeza por jateamento em costão rochoso da praia de Barequecaba, São Sebastião, SP. / Effects of oil and cleanup by high pressure flushing on a rocky shore at Barequeçaba beach, São Sebastião, Brazil.
Rocky shores of São Sebastião region are vulnerable ecosystems to oil spills, due to the proximity of the Petroleum Terminal Almirante Barroso (TEBAR) from PETROBRÁS. It was documented 144 spills in the last 14 years, at the area. Few studies were done about the community structure of rocky shores on São Sebastião Channel, specially including the effect
Publicado em: 1994
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27. Properties of Pseudomonas enalia, a Marine Bacterium Pathogenic for the Invertebrate Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg)1
Bacteriological investigations of dead and dying oysters in populations of Crassostrea gigas grown in Hood Canal, Oyster Bay, and Willapa Bay, Washington, were undertaken. Living, and presumably normal, oysters within the same sample set were also examined. Results indicated that the natural flora of Crassostrea gigas (Thunberg) is composed of organisms repr
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28. Indigenous Bacteria in Hemolymph and Tissues of Marine Bivalves at Low Temperatures
Hemolymph and soft tissues of Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas) kept in sand-filtered seawater at temperatures between 1 and 8°C were normally found to contain bacteria, with viable counts (CFU) in hemolymph in the range 1.4 × 102 to 5.6 × 102 bacteria per ml. Pseudomonas, Alteromonas, Vibrio, and Aeromonas organisms dominated, with a smaller variety of