Insect Movement: Mechanisms and Consequences : Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society's 20th SymposiumIan Woiwood, D. R. Reynolds, C. D. Thomas CABI, 2001 - 458 Seiten Knowledge of insect movement, particularly of flight, is crucial to our understanding of the great ecological and evolutionary success of insects. The last 20 years have seen many advances in this subject area. New fields have arisen, such as metapopulation theory, and dramatic developments have taken place in methods of studying movement, as a result of new techniques in molecular biology and radar monitoring. There have also been advances in our knowledge of flight-related physiology and behaviour. This book, which is based on the main papers presented at the Royal Entomological Society's 20th Symposium held in September 1999, brings us up to date with these developments.It contains chapters on:flight mechanismsforaging movementsmigrationthe evolution of movement strategiesthe interactions between dispersal rates, population structure and gene flow the effects of climate change on geographical distributionIt is essential reading for entomologists, and of interest to those researching animal behaviour, physiology, ecology and genetics. |
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Seite 2
... increased in size while being used for , say , display or thermoregulation purposes until they were large enough to ... increases in flight performance . Wootton ( Chapter 3 ) reviews various evolutionary developments in the biomechanics ...
... increased in size while being used for , say , display or thermoregulation purposes until they were large enough to ... increases in flight performance . Wootton ( Chapter 3 ) reviews various evolutionary developments in the biomechanics ...
Seite 3
... increases drag on the body in minute scale - insect ' crawlers ' before these are carried away by the wind ( Washburn ... increase in responsiveness to the stimuli that will eventually halt it . In some aphids , at least , interrup- tion ...
... increases drag on the body in minute scale - insect ' crawlers ' before these are carried away by the wind ( Washburn ... increase in responsiveness to the stimuli that will eventually halt it . In some aphids , at least , interrup- tion ...
Seite 4
... increase in separation between members of a population which may occur as a result of their migratory , vegetative or accidental movements . A more neutral term such as population redistribution may , however , be a better way of ...
... increase in separation between members of a population which may occur as a result of their migratory , vegetative or accidental movements . A more neutral term such as population redistribution may , however , be a better way of ...
Seite 8
... increased or decreased by moving , and escape from natural enemies could be a much more important determinant of ... increase in both theoretical and empirical work in this area ( e.g. Hanski and Gilpin , 1997 ; Tilman and Kareiva ...
... increased or decreased by moving , and escape from natural enemies could be a much more important determinant of ... increase in both theoretical and empirical work in this area ( e.g. Hanski and Gilpin , 1997 ; Tilman and Kareiva ...
Seite 10
... increasing performance of desktop computers has allowed researchers to work more easily with complex models of spatial dynamics . Some of the types of simulation models used to analyse the spatial structure of populations and the causes ...
... increasing performance of desktop computers has allowed researchers to work more easily with complex models of spatial dynamics . Some of the types of simulation models used to analyse the spatial structure of populations and the causes ...
Inhalt
1 | |
14 | |
19 | |
Deveson Australian Plague Locust Commission Agriculture | 39 |
How Insect Wings Evolved | 43 |
Physiology and Endocrine Control of Flight 65 | 65 |
Insect Behaviours Associated with Resource Finding | 87 |
Host Location by Parasitoids | 111 |
Significance of Habitat Persistence and Dimensionality in | 235 |
Predation and the Evolution of Dispersal | 261 |
a Tale of | 281 |
Dispersal and Conservation in Heterogeneous Landscapes | 299 |
Scale Dispersal and Population Structure | 321 |
Gene Flow | 337 |
Use of Genetic Diversity in Movement Studies of Flying Insects | 361 |
Coping with Modern Times? Insect Movement and Climate | 387 |
Observations Using | 129 |
The Evolution of Migratory Syndromes in Insects | 159 |
Orientation Mechanisms and Migration Strategies Within | 183 |
Characterizing Insect Migration Systems in Inland Australia with | 207 |
Analysing and Modelling Range Changes in UK Butterflies | 415 |
Index | 443 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adipokinetic hormone adult aerodynamic airspeed alanine aphid army ants bees beetles behaviour bugs bumblebees burchelli butterflies Carboniferous changes Coleoptera compensation crosswind cues Denno density Dingle direction dispersal distribution Dorylus downwind Drake drift Dudley Eciton effects Ellington Entomology evolution evolutionary Experimental Biology extinction fat body females flight muscles flying foraging frequency Gäde Gatehouse gene flow genetic habitat habitat persistence haemolymph hindwings honeybees host plants Hymenoptera increase individuals insect flight Insect Migration Insect Physiology insect wings interactions Journal of Experimental Journal of Insect Kukalová-Peck Lepidoptera locust macroptery male mechanisms metabolism metapopulation migratory moths odour plumes orientation parasitoids patches planthoppers polymorphism population predicted prey proline pterygote radar range reproduction resource response Review of Entomology risk of predation Roff selection sex pheromones soapberry bug spatial species Srygley strategies structure studies syndrome taxa track University Press upwind variation volatiles wind speed Wootton Zera
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 207 - University College, The University of New South Wales, Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra, ACT 2600, AUSTRALIA.
Seite 123 - Alborn, HT, Turlings, TCJ, Jones, TH, Stenhagen, G., Loughrin, JH and Tumlinson, JH (1997) An elicitor of plant volatiles from beet armyworm oral secretion. Science 276: 945-949.
Seite 411 - Mooney, HA (eds) Carbon Dioxide and Terrestrial Ecosystems. Academic Press, San Diego, pp.
Seite 126 - L.-Y. (1994) Worldwide use of Trichogramma for biological control on different crops: a survey. In E.
Seite 231 - Population dynamics of the Australian plague locust, Chortoicetes terminifera (Walker), in Central Western New South Wales.
Seite 83 - J Koolman, Analysis of ecdysteroids by fluorometry. A Edwards, Cholinesterase activity in the cockroach central nervous system . MW Goosey and DJ Candy, The D-octopamine content of the haemolymph of the locust, Schistocerca americana gregaria and its elevation during flight. LL Jackson, NF Hadley and GJ Blomquist, Epicuticular lipids of the desert tenebrinoid beetle, Eleodes armata: identification of the branched hydrocarbons. RAA Worm...