Changes in cricket salivary glands in relation to feeding and amines

Data derived from a PhD for N. W. Othman in the Research School of Biology, awarded 2013. Methodologies include HPLC, immunohistochemistry, normal histology, and various forms of mass assessment. Data was collected from crickets either starved or fed to determine how their condition influence their morphology and chemical content of salivary glands.
Type
collection
Title
Changes in cricket salivary glands in relation to feeding and amines
Collection Type
Dataset
Access Privileges
Division of Ecology & Evolution
DOI - Digital Object Identifier
10.25911/ebmp-9c92
Significance Statement
Demonstrates that starvation and feeding affect salivary gland activity in cricket Teleogryllus commodus
Brief Description
Images and raw data used to determine effects on cricket salivary glands
Full Description
Data derived from a PhD for N. W. Othman in the Research School of Biology, awarded 2013. Methodologies include HPLC, immunohistochemistry, normal histology, and various forms of mass assessment. Data was collected from crickets either starved or fed to determine how their condition influence their morphology and chemical content of salivary glands.
Contact Email
paul.cooper@anu.edu.au
Contact Address
Research School of Biology, Bld 46, The Australian National University
Contact Phone Number
61253069
Principal Investigator
N.W. Othman
Supervisors
Paul Cooper
Collaborators
Andrew Barron
Fields of Research
3109 - Zoology
Socio-Economic Objective
280102 - Expanding knowledge in the biological sciences; 280111 - Expanding knowledge in the environmental sciences
Keywords
Periodic feeding, starvation, amine content, cell changes, insects
Type of Research Activity
Applied Research
Time Period
2010-2020
Date of data creation
2020
Year of data publication
2025
Creator(s) for Citation
Othman
Nurul Wahida
Publisher for Citation
The Australian National University Data Commons
Access Rights
Embargoes until 1 year after publication of the research
Access Rights Type
Open
Licence Type
CC-BY - Attribution
Embargo Date
2024-06-06
Retention Period
7 years
Disposal Date
2031-06-30
Extent or Quantity
15
Data Size
22 MB
Data Management Plan
No
Status: Published
Published to:
  • Australian National University
  • Australian National Data Service
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