This page contains the open access scholarship of the faculty of Spelman College. Open access is the ability to distribute and access scholarly research without restriction.
Jul 18, 2019

Spelman College Faculty Publications

This page contains the open access scholarship of the faculty of Spelman College. Open access is the ability to distribute and access scholarly research without restriction.

For:
  • Department = Department of Biology
Draft Genome of Cochliopodium minus (Amoebozoa): Insights into Its Complex Sexual Behavior, Across Domain Gene Acquisitions and Metazoan Type Signaling
Antimicrobial Resistance Profiles of Human Commensal Neisseria Species
"Chloroplast Genomes of the Green Tide Forming Alga Ulva compressa: Comparative Chloroplast Genomics in the Genus Ulva (Ulvophyceae, Chlorophyta)."
Comprehensive comparative genomics reveals over 50 phyla of free living and pathogenic bacteria are associated with diverse members of the amoebozoa
Effects of future climate on coral coral competition
Spelman College Faculty Publications
Antimalarial Peptide and Polyketide Natural Products from the Fijian Marine Cyanobacterium Moorea producens
Sleep Deprivation alters the influence of biological sex on active phase sleep behavior
Aphid secondary symbionts do not affect prey attractiveness to two species of predatory lady beetles
Evidence of indirect symbiont conferred protection against the predatory lady beetle Harmonia axyridis in the pea aphid
Evolvix BEST Names for semantic reproducibility across code2brain interfaces
Using Network Clustering to Predict Copy Number Variations Associated with Health Disparities
RNA-Seq Analysis of the Effect of Kanamycin and the ABC Transporter AtWBC19 on Arabidopsis thaliana Seedlings Reveals Changes in Metal Content
Aphid Facultative Symbionts Reduce Survival of the Predatory Lady Beetle Hippodamia convergens
Contrasting Evolutionary Patterns of Spore Coat Proteins in Two Bacillus Species Groups are Linked to a Difference in Cellular Structure
Cysteine (C)-X-C Receptor 4 Undergoes Transportin 1-Dependent Nuclear Localization and Remains Functional at the Nucleus of Metastatic Prostate Cancer Cells