chordates

  • 1chordates — chordiniai statusas T sritis zoologija | vardynas atitikmenys: lot. Chordata angl. chordates vok. Chordatiere rus. хордовые pranc. chordés ryšiai: platesnis terminas – gyvūnai siauresnis terminas – stuburiniai …

    Paukščių pavadinimų žodynas

  • 2chordates — n. member of the phylum Chordata that comprises the most highly developed animals (vertebrates, Craniata, marine invertebrate, etc.) …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 3Chordate — Chordata Temporal range: Early Cambrian – Recent, 540–0 Ma …

    Wikipedia

  • 4chordate — /kawr dayt/, Zool. adj. 1. belonging or pertaining to the phylum Chordata, comprising the true vertebrates and those animals having a notochord, as the lancelets and tunicates. n. 2. a chordate animal. [1885 90; see CHORDATA] * * * Any member of… …

    Universalium

  • 5Walter Garstang — (February 9, 1868 February 23, 1949), a Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford, was a marine biologist and zoologist who was one of the first to study the functional biology of marine invertebrate larvae. His best known works on marine larvae were his …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Deuterostome — Deuterostomes Temporal range: Late Ediacaran – Recent …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Notochord — Transverse section of a chick embryo of forty five hours’ incubation. Latin notochorda Gray s …

    Wikipedia

  • 8cephalochordate — /sef euh loh kawr dayt/, adj. 1. belonging or pertaining to the Cephalochordata. n. 2. any chordate animal of the subphylum Cephalochordata, having fishlike characters but lacking a spinal column, comprising the lancelets. [ < NL Cephalochordata; …

    Universalium

  • 9tunicate — /tooh ni kit, kayt , tyooh /, n. 1. Zool. any sessile marine chordate of the subphylum Tunicata (Urochordata), having a saclike body enclosed in a thick membrane or tunic and two openings or siphons for the ingress and egress of water. adj. Also …

    Universalium

  • 10animal development — Introduction  the processes that lead eventually to the formation of a new animal starting from cells derived from one or more parent individuals. Development thus occurs following the process by which a new generation of organisms is produced by …

    Universalium