Search
Now showing items 21-30 of 44
Castilleja coccinea (L.) spreng. (Scrophulariaceae), a first record for Nova Scotia
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1983)
The copepodid stages of the copepods Acartia tonsa, A. clausii and Eurytemora herdmani from the Annapolis River, Nova Scotia
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1981)
Induction and subculture of callus from petioles of Fraxinus americana (L.), white ash
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1983)
Considerations of fatty acids in menhaden from the northern limits of the species
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1981)
The inheritance of spontaneous pigment mutations in Chondrus crispus stackh. (Rhodophyceae)
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1981)
Arsenic pollution associated with tailings at an abandoned gold mine in Halifax County, Nova Scotia
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1982)
Some aspects of the chemistry and biology of the genus Hypocrea and its anamorphs, Trichoderma and Gliocladium
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1986)
The literature describing the occurrence, some aspects of the physiology and toxicology of the metabolic products of Hypocrea, Glioc/adium and Trichoderma spp. is reviewed. A list of known metabolites of this group of fungi ...
The appendages of Lophoura tetraphylla Ho, 1985 (Copepoda: Sphyriidae) a parasite of Antimora rostrata in deep waters of the northwest Atlantic Ocean
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1986)
The detailed structure of the cephalothoracic appendages of Lophoura rerraphylla, a parasitic cope pod of Antimora rostrata, are described. The first and second antennae possess a structure similar to that reported for ...
Description of Selected Lake Characteristics and Occurrence of Fish Species in T81 Nova Scotia Lakes
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1986)
Between 1964 and 1981, the Science Branch of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, the Canadian Wildlife Ser vice of the Department of the Environment and the Wildlife Division of the Nova Scotia Department of l ands and ...
Experimental Studies of the Effects of Acidity and Associated Water Chemistry on Amphibians
(Dalhousie Printing Centre, 1985-12)
Laboratory bioassays with 5 species of Nova Scotian amphibians (Ambystoma maculatum, Hyla crucifer, Rana sylvatica, R. palustris, and Bufo americana) and Xenopus laevis revealed pH 4.0 to 5.0 as the critical range within ...