Flustra foliacea is a species of bryozoans found in the northern Atlantic Ocean. It is a colonial animal that is frequently mistaken for a seaweed. Colonies...
which was first isolated as a secondary metabolite of the marine bryozoan Flustra foliacea. dFBr has been identified as a novel positive allosteric modulator...
listed in the presumed phylogenetic sequence: Cauloramphus disjunctus Flustra foliacea Wikispecies has information related to Flustrina. BryoZone (2004):...
Kingdom, juveniles were found to be plentiful growing on the bryozoan, Flustra foliacea. Large colonies sometimes form, but these are seldom on rocks...
described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus. He gave it the name Flustra lineata, but it was later transferred to the genus Callopora, becoming...
in the Jurassic. A notable modern bryozoan with seaweed-like fronds is Flustra foliacea. M Martins, Gustavo; Hipólito, Cláudia; Parreira, Filipe; C L...
observed cilia moving the microscopic larvae of a species of the bryozoan Flustra, and discovered that black spores often found in oyster shells were the...
sometimes take shelter among the branchlets of the clumps. Alongside Flustra foliacea, this species forms part of a dense bryozoan "turf" that is found...