For a detailed description of " Radix auricularia ", including the radula and reproductive organs, see pages 179-183 in Baker F . C . " The Lymnaeidae of North and Middle America, recent and fossil " ( 1911 ).
32.
This revealed that species of fungi with " auricularioid " basidia were not necessarily closely related and that " Auricularia " had more in common with " Exidia " and its allies ( with " tremelloid " basidia ), than with other auricularioid fungi.
33.
""'Dolabella auricularia " "', common name the " wedge sea hare " or " Donsol " in the Philippines, is a species of large sea slug, a marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusk in the family Aplysiidae, the sea hares.
34.
There has been some debate about the appearance of the species in the tropics; while it has been frequently reported there, Bernard Lowy, in an article on " Auricularia ", said that " of the specimens I have examined, none could be assigned here ".
35.
Control of " F . auricularia " has been attempted using some of its natural enemies, including the parasitoid fly " Bigonicheta spinipenni ", the fungi " Erynia forficulae " and " Metarhizium anisopliae ", as well as many species of birds.
36.
However, the cerci of " Asiodiplatys speciousus " and " Forficula auricularia " differ greatly on one major front . " Asiodiplatys speciousus " had cerci that were more bead-like, or filiform, than the thicker cerci, specifically known as forceps, of most other earwigs.
37.
It is a potent antimitotic drug derived from peptides occurring in marine shell-less mollusc " Dolabella auricularia " called dolastatins which show potent activity in preclinical studies, both " in vitro " and " in vivo ", against a range of lymphomas, leukemia and solid tumors.
38.
In the Great Lakes Region : The first record of " Radix auricularia " in North America is from the Hudson River ( which is connected through the New York Canal System to Lakes Erie and Ontario ) near Troy, New York, before 1869 . The next record is from Lincoln Park, Chicago, beside Lake Michigan in 1901.
39.
Lowy, in 1951, described a key to the species of " Auricularia " that emphasized the internal structure of the fruit body, while de-emphasizing traditional characteristics such as color, shape and size, which he considered to be too variable and dependent upon such factors as the age of the specimen, exposure to light, or availability of moisture.