4 Matching Results

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Leptodea fragilis, Specimen #485

One preserved mussel specimen including both the left and right valves. The specimen exhibits an oval shape; thin shell; double looped beak sculpturing; white internal coloring; tan external coloring; no external sculpturing. Collected in the Trinity basin. The specimen measures between 100 - 120 mm in length and was assessed to be recently dead when collected.
Date: June 6, 1972
Creator: Falzarano, A. & Britton, Joseph
Object Type: Specimen
System: The UNT Digital Library

Leptodea fragilis, Specimen #484

One preserved mussel specimen including the left valve only. The specimen exhibits an oval shape; thin shell; double looped beak sculpturing; white internal coloring; tan external coloring; no external sculpturing. Collected in the Trinity basin. The specimen measures between 100 - 120 mm in length and was assessed to be recently dead when collected.
Date: June 6, 1972
Creator: Falzarano, A. & Britton, Joseph
Object Type: Specimen
System: The UNT Digital Library
Histological features of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease revealed in response to mixed vehicle emission exposure and consumption of a high-fat diet in wildtype C57Bl/6 male mice (open access)

Histological features of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease revealed in response to mixed vehicle emission exposure and consumption of a high-fat diet in wildtype C57Bl/6 male mice

Article describes how non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is currently plaguing the population at pandemic proportions and is expected to become more prevalent over the next decade. The authors investigated the hypothesis that exposure to a mixture of gasoline and diesel engine emissions (MVE), coupled with the concurrent consumption of a HF diet, promotes the development of a NAFLD phenotype within the liver.
Date: June 6, 2023
Creator: Schneider, Leah J.; Santiago, Isabella; Johnson, Bailee; Stanley, Analana Hays; Penaredondo, Bea & Lund, Amie K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developmental plasticity of cardiac anoxia-tolerance in juvenile common snapping turtles ( Chelydra serpentina) (open access)

Developmental plasticity of cardiac anoxia-tolerance in juvenile common snapping turtles ( Chelydra serpentina)

Article describes study which tested the hypothesis that developmental hypoxia alters cardiomyocyte physiology in a manner that protects the heart from hypoxic stress.
Date: June 6, 2019
Creator: Ruhr, Ilan M.; McCourty, Heather; Bajjig, Afaf; Crossley, Dane A., II; Shiels, Holly A. & Galli, Gina L. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library