Osmotic Gradients across Snail Epidermis: Evidence for a Water Barrier
- 22 February 1974
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 183 (4126) , 759-760
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.183.4126.759
Abstract
Cryoscopic analysis of frozen sections provided indirect evidence for the presence of a waterproof layer limiting evaporation from living epithelial cells in dormant land snails.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nature of passive flows through tightly folded membranesThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1973
- Surface specializations of the epithelial cells at the tip of the optic tentacle, dorsal surface of the head and ventral surface of the foot in Helix aspersaCell and tissue research, 1971
- Some observations on the skin ofOxychilus spp. (Fitzinger), with particular reference toO. helveticus (Blum)(Mollusca, Pulmonata, Zonitidae)Protoplasma, 1969
- Passive water movements through skin of the toad Bufo marinus in air and in waterAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1969
- Elektronenoptische Untersuchungen der Körperdecke vonArion rufus L. (Pulmonata)Protoplasma, 1968
- THE PERMEABILITY OF THE EPIPHRAGM OF TERRESTRIAL SNAILS TO WATER VAPORThe Biological Bulletin, 1968
- Standing-Gradient Osmotic FlowThe Journal of general physiology, 1967
- Structural adaptation for reducing water‐loss in three species of terrestrial snailJournal of Zoology, 1967
- Notes on the coordination of basic research in cryobiology and of applied research in the cryopreservation of organs and organized tissues, with particular reference to skinCryobiology, 1966
- OSMOTIC PROPERTIES OF THE ERYTHROCYTEThe Biological Bulletin, 1932