R
Ranita Saha
Researcher at Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Publications - 9
Citations - 33
Ranita Saha is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Cretaceous. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications receiving 18 citations. Previous affiliations of Ranita Saha include Indian Institute of Technology Dhanbad.
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Family Naticidae (Gastropoda) from the Upper Jurassic of Kutch, India and a critical reappraisal of taxonomy and time of origination of the family
TL;DR: In this article, the authors attempted a holistic reappraisal of naticid taxonomy based on an extensive database of shell morphological characters and identified many distinct family and subfamily-specific characters that survived fossilization.
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Paleoecology of naticid–molluscan prey interaction during the Late Jurassic (Oxfordian) in Kutch, India: evolutionary implications
TL;DR: It is suggested that both turritellines and naticid evolved during the Jurassic, and the prey–predator interaction between them was established shortly thereafter, and among bivalves, corbulids also became important prey of naticids in the same spatiotemporal framework.
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Pre-burial taphonomic imprints on drilling intensity: a case study from the recent molluscs of Chandipur, India
TL;DR: Palaeoecological studies of drilling intensity, drawing ecological and evolutionary inferences, generally assume that drilled and undrilled specimens are equally preserved in the fossil record as discussed by the authors.
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Gastropod drilling predation in the upper jurassic of kutch, india
Ranita Saha,Shubhabrata Paul,Subhronil Mondal,Subhronil Mondal,Subhendu Bardhan,Shiladri S. Das,Sandip Saha,Debattam Sarkar +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a new dataset of gastropod drilling predation on Kimmeridgian and Tithonian bivalves of Kutch, India, which suggests that drilling was one of the prevailing modes of predation in the Upper Jurassic of the Kutch with strongly variable intensities.
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Chromosomes damage by sewage water studies in the Allium cepa L. and Zea mays L.
TL;DR: The obtained data exhibited a decline in reproductive capacity of cells and the occurrence of deviation from the normal mitotic cell division, which has cytotoxic effect on cells, threat to water ecosystem and human health.