
David Julian
personal site
Associate Professor
Ph.D. UCSF, 1997
Box 118525
Gainesville, FL
32611-8525
Voice: (352) 392-5878
Fax: (352) 392-3704
julian@zoology.ufl.edu
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Research Interests
Ecological
physiology and cellomics, especially
of marine invertebrates.
Students Currently Supervised
Benjamin Predmore
Regulation of vascular smooth muscle tone by hydrogen sulfide in
vertebrates and invertebrates.
Representative Publications
Wohlgemuth SE, Arp AJ, Bergquist DC and Julian D (2007).
Rapid induction and disappearance of electron-dense organelles
following sulfide exposure in the marine annelid Branchioasychis
americana. Invertebrate Biology, 126(2): 163-172.
Joyner-Matos J, Chapman LJ, Downs CA, Hofer T, Leeuwenburgh C and
Julian D (2007). Stress response of a freshwater clam along an abiotic
gradient: Too much oxygen may limit distribution. Functional Ecology
21: 344-355.
Joyner-Matos J, Downs CA and Julian D (2006). Increased expression of
stress proteins in the surf clam Donax variabilis following hydrogen
sulfide exposure. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A, 145:
245-257.
Julian D, April KL, Patel S, Stein JR and Wohlgemuth SE (2005).
Mitochondrial depolarization following hydrogen sulfide exposure in
erythrocytes from a sulfide-tolerant marine invertebrate. Journal of
Experimental Biology 208: 4109-4122.
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