Is it possible to omit parasites when studying free-living organisms? The answer is clearly no! Parasites have evolved independently in numerous animal lineages, and now make up a considerable proportion of the biodiversity of life. Ecologists, epidemiologists, conservationists and evolutionary biologists are increasingly aware of the universal significance of parasites to the study of ecology and evolution where they have become a powerful model system. This book provides a summary of the issues involved as well as an overview of the possibilities offered by this research topic including the practical applications for disease prevention. It uses well-documented case-studies across a range of scales to illustrate the main trends and prospects in this area, outlining areas for future research.
Ecology and Evolution of Parasitism is the first book to provide a broad synthesis of both the roles and consequences of pathogens on the ecology and evolution of free living systems. It focuses on hosts rather than the parasites themselves, integrating those aspects related to the ecology and the evolution of free-living species (sexual selection, behaviour, life history traits, regulation of populations etc.). The book includes examples across a range of scales from individuals to populations, communities and ecosystems.
Les mer
Biologists are increasingly aware of the universal significance of parasites to the study of ecology and evolution where they have become a powerful model system. This book provides a summary of the issues involved as well as an overview of the possibilities offered by this research topic including the practical applications in disease prevention.
Les mer
Preface ; Introduction ; 1. The evolutionary ecology of the immune response ; 2. Parasitism and evolution of life history traits ; 3. Parasites and sexual selection ; 4. Parasites and behaviour ; 5. Parasitism and hybrid zones ; 6. Parasitism and host population regulation ; 7. Parasitism and biological control ; 8. Health ecology: a new tool, the macroscope ; 9. Parasitism, biodiversity and conservation biology ; Conclusion ; Appendix: Methodological chapter
Les mer
The first book to provide a broad synthesis of both the roles and consequences of pathogens on the ecology and evolution of free living systems
Focuses on hosts rather than the parasites themselves
Integrates those aspects related to the ecology and the evolution of free-living species (sexual selection, behaviour, life history traits, regulation of populations etc.) with topics related to ecosystems and ecology of infectious diseases
Includes examples across a range of scales from individuals to populations, communities and ecosystems
Les mer
Frédéric Thomas, Jean-François Guégan and François Renaud are all Senior Research Fellows in two French research institutions (CNRS and IRD), and they are interested by the ecology and the evolution of host-parasite interactions. Their areas of research are various, involving population genetics, population dynamics, behavioural ecology, modelling and ecology of health. They regularly published in international journals (Nature,
Current Biology, Evolution, Journal of Evolutionary Biology, PLoS, Proceedings B, Trends in Parasitology).
Les mer
The first book to provide a broad synthesis of both the roles and consequences of pathogens on the ecology and evolution of free living systems
Focuses on hosts rather than the parasites themselves
Integrates those aspects related to the ecology and the evolution of free-living species (sexual selection, behaviour, life history traits, regulation of populations etc.) with topics related to ecosystems and ecology of infectious diseases
Includes examples across a range of scales from individuals to populations, communities and ecosystems
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199535330
Publisert
2008
Utgiver
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Vekt
527 gr
Høyde
246 mm
Bredde
189 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
240