2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.asd.2019.100886
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Comparative analysis of the antennae of three amphipod species with different lifestyles

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Sexual dimorphism in the crustacean antennule is generally not as common or apparent as in the olfactory organ of insects (Hallberg et al, 1992(Hallberg et al, , 1997Galizia and Rössler, 2010;Derby and Weissburg, 2014). But there are reports of sexual dimorphism in aesthetascs and other setae, such as males having more numerous or larger aesthetascs than conspecific females (Hallberg et al, 1997;Boxshall and Huys, 1998;Thiel, 2011;Urbschat and Scholtz, 2019).…”
Section: Structural Diversity Of Antennules and Their Setaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sexual dimorphism in the crustacean antennule is generally not as common or apparent as in the olfactory organ of insects (Hallberg et al, 1992(Hallberg et al, , 1997Galizia and Rössler, 2010;Derby and Weissburg, 2014). But there are reports of sexual dimorphism in aesthetascs and other setae, such as males having more numerous or larger aesthetascs than conspecific females (Hallberg et al, 1997;Boxshall and Huys, 1998;Thiel, 2011;Urbschat and Scholtz, 2019).…”
Section: Structural Diversity Of Antennules and Their Setaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chemoreception is the dominant sensory modality for most crustaceans due to the complex aquatic environment (Harzsch and Krieger, 2018), which is the base of crustaceans for their daily activities, such as searching for food, reproduction, and communication (Blinova and Cherkashin, 2012). Previous studies suggest that the antenna is one of the predominant chemosensory organs of most crustaceans (Harzsch et al, 2011;Waldrop, 2013;Urbschat and Scholtz, 2019). Crustaceans receive chemical signals through several parallel channels, which can be summarized into two modes of "olfaction" and "distributed chemoreception" (Schmidt and Mellon, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%