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 begin as encrusting mats, and only produce loose fronds after their first year of growth. They may reach 20 cm (8 in) long, and smell like lemons. Its microscopic structure was examined by Robert Hooke and illustrated in his 1665 work Micrographia.
Flustrafoliacea is a species of bryozoans found in the northern Atlantic Ocean. It is a colonial animal that is frequently mistaken for a seaweed. Colonies...
was first isolated as a secondary metabolite of the marine bryozoan Flustrafoliacea. dFBr has been identified as a novel positive allosteric modulator...
the Jurassic. A notable modern bryozoan with seaweed-like fronds is Flustrafoliacea. M Martins, Gustavo; Hipólito, Cláudia; Parreira, Filipe; C L Prestes...
listed in the presumed phylogenetic sequence: Cauloramphus disjunctus Flustrafoliacea Wikispecies has information related to Flustrina. BryoZone (2004):...
sometimes take shelter among the branchlets of the clumps. Alongside Flustrafoliacea, this species forms part of a dense bryozoan "turf" that is found on...
Kingdom, juveniles were found to be plentiful growing on the bryozoan, Flustrafoliacea. Large colonies sometimes form, but these are seldom on rocks. Larvae...