Hila Dror
Tel Aviv University
4 Papers
Hila Dror is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Jellyfish & Biology. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Tracking Jellyfish Swarm Origins Using a Combined Oceanographic-Genetic-Citizen Science Approach
Dor Edelist,Øyvind Knutsen,Ingrid H. Ellingsen,Sanna Majaneva,Nicole Aberle,Hila Dror,Dror L. Angel +6 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors combine citizen science observations, oceanographic modeling, and population genetics to track swarms of the invasive nomad jellyfish, Rhopilema nomadica, across the Eastern Mediterranean Sea.
Mechanism of nanoplastics capture by jellyfish mucin and its potential as a sustainable water treatment technology.
Eric Ben-David,Maryana Habibi,Elias Haddad,Marei Sammar,Dror L. Angel,Hila Dror,Haim Lahovitski,Andy M. Booth,Isam Sabbah +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors studied the mechanism that governs the capture of nanoplastics by jellyfish mucus extracted from the jellyfish Aurelia sp.a. (A.a.) and compared the capture/removal efficiency to that of conventional coagulants and mucus from other organisms.
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Rising seawater temperatures affect the fitness of Rhopilema nomadica polyps and podocysts and the expansion of this medusa into the western Mediterranean
Hila Dror,D. Angel +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the effect of temperature on the benthic stages of Rhopilema nomadica (polyps, podocysts, and strobilae) to assess whether it can survive and reproduce in the western Mediterranean temperature regime (12.2-26.2°C).
Core and Dynamic Microbial Communities of Two Invasive Ascidians: Can Host-Symbiont Dynamics Plasticity Affect Invasion Capacity?
TL;DR: Examination of the seasonal and spatial dynamics of the microbial communities in the inner-tunic of two invasive ascidians suggests that the associations between invasive Ascidians and their symbionts may enhance host functionality while maintaining host adaptability to changing environmental conditions.