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Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 13

ISBN-13: 9783319220253 / Angielski / Twarda / 2015 / 536 str.

Bruce A. Schulte; Thomas E. Goodwin; Michael H. Ferkin
Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 13 Bruce A. Schulte Thomas E. Goodwin Michael H. Ferkin 9783319220253 Springer - książkaWidoczna okładka, to zdjęcie poglądowe, a rzeczywista szata graficzna może różnić się od prezentowanej.

Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 13

ISBN-13: 9783319220253 / Angielski / Twarda / 2015 / 536 str.

Bruce A. Schulte; Thomas E. Goodwin; Michael H. Ferkin
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In 2014, the Chemical Signals in Vertebrates (CSiV) group held its 13th triennial meeting in conjunction with the 30th meeting of the International Society of Chemical Ecology (ISCE). The meeting convened on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. This meeting was the first held jointly with these two groups, which share common history and are dedicated to understanding the role of chemical communication in the lives of organisms. This volume is a collection of the proceedings of this meeting and, like the meeting, cover a variety of topics in chemical ecology, including Chemical Ecology of Social Behavior; Chemical Signals Analysis and Synthesis; Evolution, Genomics, and Transcriptomics of Chemical Signals; Molecular Mechanisms of Semiochemical Perception and Processing; Multimodal Communication; and Neuroethology and Neurophysiology. "

Kategorie:
Nauka, Biologia i przyroda
Kategorie BISAC:
Science > Ssaki
Science > Biochemia
Science > Life Sciences - Ecology
Wydawca:
Springer
Język:
Angielski
ISBN-13:
9783319220253
Rok wydania:
2015
Ilość stron:
536
Waga:
1.20 kg
Wymiary:
24.21 x 15.62 x 3.56
Oprawa:
Twarda
Wolumenów:
01
Dodatkowe informacje:
Wydanie ilustrowane

    

Contents

 

Foreword and Dedication

            Bruce A. Schulte, Michael H. Ferkin, and Thomas E. Goodwin

 

A Tribute to Robert Johnston (1942-2014)

            Michael H. Ferkin and Aras Petrulis

 

Part I. Overviews of Chemical Ecology (in) Vertebrates

1.      Are Mammals Just Furry Bugs with Fewer Legs? Convergences in Mammalian and Insect Chemical Ecology

May Berenbaum

2.      Chemical Signals in Vertebrates 13: Where We Stand and What May Be Next

Dietland Müller-Schwarze

3.      Assessing The Role of Olfactory Cues in the Early Life History of Coral Reef Fish: Current Methods and Future Directions

Rohan M. Brooker and Danielle L. Dixson

4.      A Small Exposé on Bovine Pheromones - with Special Reference to Modifications of the Reproductive Cycle

Kristina Nordéus, Renée Båge, Hans Gustafsson, Robert Glinwood, and Lennart Söderquist

 

Part II. Microbiomes and Chemical Signals

5.      Coding of Group-Odor in the Subcaudal Gland Secretion of the European Badger Meles Meles: Chemical Composition and Pouch Microbiota

Christina D. Buesching, H. Veronica Tinnesand, YungWa Sin, Frank Rosell, Terry Burke, and David W. Macdonald

6.      The Role of Bacteria in Chemical Signals of Ele

phant Musth: Proximate Causes and Biochemical Pathways

Thomas E. Goodwin, Innocent H. Harelimana, Laura J. MacDonald, Daniel B. Mark, Aline Umuhire Juru, Qin Yin, James Engman, Randall A. Kopper, Cheryl F. Lichti, Samuel G. Mackintosh, James D. Shoemaker, Mark V. Sutherland, Alan J. Tackett, and Bruce A. Schulte

7.      All Paths Converge: Development of a Core Scent Pouch Microbiome in Striped Hyenas

Kevin R. Theis, Arvind Venkataraman, Aaron P. Wagne2, Kay E. Holekamp, and Thomas M. Schmidt

8.      Bacterial Communities Associated with Junco Preen Glands: Ramifications for Chemical Signaling

Danielle J. Whittaker and Kevin R. Theis

 

Part III. Intraspecific Signaling

9.      Age-Related Effects on Individual Discrimination among Meadow Voles, Microtus pennsylvanicus

Michael H. Ferkin, Christian T. Vlautin, and Lyndsey M. Pierson

10.  Putative pheromone of the indian crestless porcupine, hystrix brachyura

Biswatosh Ghosh, Mousumi Poddar-Sarkar, Sibdas Ray, Ratan Lal Brahmachary

11.  Chemical cues, Hibernation and Reproduction in Female Short-Beaked Echidnas (Tachyglossus aculeatus setosus): Implications for Sexual Conflict

Rachel L. Harris, Elissa Z. Cameron, Noel W. Davies, and Stewart C. Nicol

12.  Chemical Analyses Reve

al Family Specific Nest Odor Profiles in Zebra Finches (Taeniopygia guttata): A Pilot Study

Sarah Kohlwey, E. Tobias Krause, Markus Baier, Caroline Müller, and Barbara A. Caspers

13.  Exploring the Use of Olfactory Cues in Non-Social Context in Zebra Finches (Taeniopygia guttata)

E. Tobias Krause, Johanna Kabbert, and Barbara A. Caspers

14.  Variation in Urinary Amino Acids in the Mozambique Tilapia: A Signal of Dominance or Individuality?

Olesya Kutsyna,  Zélia Velez, Adelino V.M. Canário, Tina Keller-Costa, and Peter C. Hubbard

15.  A Low Phytoestrogen Diet Reduces the Proceptivity but Not the Attractivity of Meadow Voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus)

Lyndsey Pierson, Matthew Hetherington, and Michael H. Ferkin

16.  Chemical Communication in Indian Blackbuck (Antelope Cervicapra L) in Reference to Dominance and Estrous Cycle

T. Rajagopal and G. Archunan

17.  Asian Elephant Reflections: Chirality Counts

L.E.L. Rasmussen, David R. Greenwood, Thomas E. Goodwin, and Bruce A. Schulte

 

Part IV. Interspecific Signaling

18.  Detection of Fish and Newt Kairomones by Ovipositing Mosquitoes

Lauren L. Eveland, Jason Bohenek, Alon Silberbush, and William J. Resetarits

19.  Evolutionary As

pects of the Use of Predator Odors in Antipredator Strategies of Lumholtz’s  Tree-Kangaroos (Dendrolagus lumholtzi)

Sigrid R. Heise-Pavlov

20.  Small Emissions for Big Consequences: Specialized Malodorous Avian Defenses Breed Fluctuations in Brood Parasite-Host Interactions

Gregory Röder, Vittorio Baglione, Diana Bolopo, Daniela Canestrari, José M. Marcos, Alfréd Trnka, and Ted C. J. Turlings

 

Part V. Frog Chemosignals

21.  A Review of Chemical Defense in Poison Frogs (Dendrobatidae): Ecology, Pharmacokinetics and Autoresistance

Juan C. Santos, Rebecca D. Tarvin, and Lauren A. O'Connell

22.  Semiochemicals in Anurans: Testing All Categories with One Poison Frog Species

Lisa M. Schulte

23.  Chemosignals in Archaic New Zealand Frogs

Bruce Waldman

 

Part VI. Studies of Domestic and Zoo-Housed Animals

24.  Chemical Signals in Giant Panda Urine (Ailuropoda melanoleuca)

Martin Dehnhard, Thomas B. Hildebrandt, Cathleen Meerheim, Iain Valentine, and Frank Göritz

25.  Semiochemical Communication in Dogs in the Context of Reproductive Behavior

Michał Dzięcioł, Antoni Szumny, Wojciech Niżański, Marcin Wrzosek, Ewa Stańczyk, and Joanna Polikowska

26.  Hormonal and Behavioral Responses to Odor Cues in Zoo-Hou

sed African Painted Dogs (Lycaon pictus)

Michelle L. Rafacz, Matthew R. Heintz, and Rachel M. Santymire

27.  Responses to Domestic Cat Chemical Signals in the House Mouse are Modulated by Early Olfactory Experience

Vera V. Voznessenskaya, Ilya G. Kvasha, Artyom B. Klinov, and Tatiana K. Laktionova

 

Part VII. Field and Analytical Approaches

28.  Does Deconvolution Help to Disentangle the Complexities of Mammal Odors?

Peter Apps

29.  Guideline for Selecting a Method to Collect and Extract Avian Odors in Remote Field: Case of Work on a Sub-Antarctic Seabird

Marianne Gabirot, Jérôme Mardon, Sylvie Campagna, Nigel West, Francesco Bonadonna, and Sandra M. Saunders

30.  Pair-Specific Scents Ii African Wild Dogs, Lycaon pictus, and an Example of a Potential Method to Identify Signals within Complex Mixtures

Neil R. Jordan, Peter J. Apps, Krystyna A. Golabek, and J. Weldon McNutt

31.  Automated Headspace Solid-Phase Microextraction of Urinary VOCs from Eleven Maned Wolves (Chrysocyon brachyurus): A Recursive Workflow Method For GC-MS Analysis

Marieke E. Kester, Elizabeth W. Freeman, Nucharin Songsasen, and Thomas B. Huff

32.  Learning and Applications of Chemical Signals in Vertebrates for Human-Wildlife Conflict Mitigation

Bruce A. Schulte

33.  An Experimental Test of the Effect of Diet on Preen Wax Composition in New Zealand Silvereyes (Zosterops lateralis)

Laura Azzani, Justin L. Rasmussen, Steven Gieseg, and James V. Briskie

    

Dr. Bruce A. Schulte is a Professor and the Department Head of Biology at Western Kentucky University.

Dr. Thomas E. Goodwin is the Elbert L. Fausett Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Hendrix College.

Dr. Michael H. Ferkin is the Jack H. Morris Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Memphis.     

The thirteenth volume of Chemical Signals in Vertebrates (CSiV) emanates from the first joint meeting of CSiV and the International Society of Chemical Ecology (ISCE), which was held at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in June 2014. Chemicals involved in communication in both mammals and insects are by and large secondary metabolites—that is, they are generally not molecules involved in the primary physiological processes of life, such as respiration, digestion, excretion, and in the case of green plants, photosynthesis.   



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