How To Use Onychophoran In A Sentence
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Other ecdysozoan phyla include Nematoda, Tardigrada, and Onychophora; this classification thus removes onychophorans from the Arthropoda and makes them an outgroup.
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The branching pattern between nematodes, onychophorans, and tardigrades relative to Euarthropoda is not well resolved (low Bayesian support values).
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The Ecdysozoa, all of which molt and lack motile locomotory cilia, include priapulids, kinorhynchs, nematodes, nematomorphs, tardigrades, onychophorans, and arthropods.
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He doesn't know what you mean by arthropod, let alone onychophoran.
Pharyngula
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A number of fossils from the Cambrian have been described which look more or less like onychophorans.
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Whilst true arthropods, tardigrades and onychophorans are highly differentiated in form today, such was not always the case.
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In that time, the first undoubted fossil annelids, arthropods, brachiopods, echinoderms, molluscs, onychophorans, poriferans, and priapulids show up in rocks all over the world.
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The fossil is not very different from living onychophorans.
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The second clade includes arthropods and other molting animals: tardigrades, onychophorans, nematodes, nematomorphans, kinorhynchs, and priapulans.
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Other organisms placed in the Ecdysozoa include kinorhynchs, priapulids, nematomorphs, onychophorans and tardigrades.
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Furthermore, the absence of engrailed expression in the onychophoran ectoderm makes more sense in the context of a skeleton bounding function rather than a general segmentation program.
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Onychophorans themselves have few predators, except perhaps insect carnivores such as centipedes, birds and rodents.
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The limb staining suggests shared ancestry of the onychophoran and arthropod limbs.
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All of these Cambrian forms differed from living onychophorans in being marine.
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The two onychophoran taxa plot centrally, as do the two Marellomorphs.
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Similarly, onychophorans have been used in developmental studies of the evolution of appendages and of body segmentation.
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In that time, the first undoubted fossil annelids, arthropods, brachiopods, echinoderms, molluscs, onychophorans, poriferans, and priapulids show up in rocks all over the world.