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All Flesh Is Grass [electronic resource] : Plant-Animal Interrelationships / edited by Zvy Dubinsky, Joseph Seckbach.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology ; 16 | Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology ; 16Editor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2011Descripción: XVI, 532 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789048193165
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 630 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • S1-S972
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: This new book takes us through a journey from early life to modern agriculture. The thirty eight authors present current studies on the interrelation of plants-animals. This topic has always fascinated man, as evidenced even by the first chapters of Genesis. The world of aqueous and terrestrial fauna appeared on early earth only after the flora covered the areas with the green pigmentation. Almost all life depends upon sunlight via the photosynthesis of the botanical world. We read abut the harnessing of bee pollination of crops to make it an essential component of modern agriculture endeavor. Some plants seduce insects for pollination by their appearance (e.g., disguised orchids entice visitors); there is the production of sweet nectar as a bribe in flowers to attract bees, butterflies, and honey-sucking birds. A particular outstanding phenomena are the carnivorous plants that have developed trapping and digesting systems of insects and higher animals.
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Introduction . [Seckbach, J.] -- List of authors and their addresses -- PART 1: EVOLUTION -- Evolution of Plant-Animal Interactions. [Chela-Flores, J., et al.] -- PART 2: INSECTS INTERACTIONS -- The Leaf Cutting Ant-Plant Interaction from a Microbial Ecology Perspective. [Abril A.] -- Intestinal Spirochetes of Termites. [Kȵnig, H. and Drȵge, S.] -- The PlantAphid Universe. [Iluz, D.] -- InsectPlant Interactions: The Gall Factor. [Raman, A.] -- PART 3: POLLINATION AND SEED DISPERSAL -- Ants as Pollinators of Plants and the Role of Floral Scents. [Rostas, M. and Tautz, J.] -- Crop Pollination In Modern Agriculture.[Dag, A.] -- Bee Cognition and Crop Pollination: Proven and Potential Applications. [Shafir, S.] -- Zoochory seed dispersal. [Iluz, D.] -- PART 4: ANIMALS AND HUMANS INVOLVEMENT -- Grazing Livestock, Our Connection To Grass: A Mediterra-Nean Insight: Why They Eat What They Eat, And How It Affects Us. [Landau, S.Y. and Molle, G.] -- Herbivore Plant Interactions And Desertification In Arid Lands. [Whitford, W.G. and Steinberger, Y.] -- Microscopic in Size: Macroscopic in Impact. Diatom-Human Interactions. [Kociolek, J. P.] -- PART 5: PLANT DEFENSES -- Biochemical Plant Defenses Against Herbivores: From Poisons to Spices. [Smith, C. M.] -- The Xanthium Genus: Cocklebur Toxins Against Hostile Surroundings and Its Pharmacological Properties. [Seckbach, J] -- PART 6: MARINE ENVIRONMENTS -- The Diversity of Epizoic Diatoms: Relationships Between Diatoms and Marine Invertebrates. [Totti, et al.] -- Epizoic Diatoms on Gastropod Shells: When Substrate Complexity Selects for Microcommunity Complexity. [Dalelio, D. et al] -- Managing the Interactions Between Plants and Animals in Marine Multi-Trophic Aquaculture: Integrated Shrimp and Valuable Low Food Chain Organisms with Seaweeds. [Robledo, D. and Freile-Pelegrin, Y.] -- Marine Microralgae/CyanobacteriaInvertebrate Symbiosis: Trading Energy for Strategic Material. [Stambler, N.] -- The Role of Rhodolith Beds in the Recruitment of Invertebrate Species: from the South-western Gulf of California, Mexico. Riosmena-Rodriguez, R. and Medina-Lopez M.A.] -- Fueled by symbiosis foraminifera have evolved to be giant complex protists.[Lee, J. J.] -- PART 7: CARNIVOROUS PLANTS -- Ecophysiological Look at Plant Carnivory: Why are Plants Carnivorous? [Adamec L.] -- Reversing the Roles of Predator and Prey: A Review of Carnivory in the Botanical World. [Rice, B.A.] -- PART 8: OUTLOOK AND SUMMARY -- Summary, Final Comments and Conclusions. [Dubinsky, Z. and Seckbach, J.] -- Organism Index -- Subject Index -- Author Index.

This new book takes us through a journey from early life to modern agriculture. The thirty eight authors present current studies on the interrelation of plants-animals. This topic has always fascinated man, as evidenced even by the first chapters of Genesis. The world of aqueous and terrestrial fauna appeared on early earth only after the flora covered the areas with the green pigmentation. Almost all life depends upon sunlight via the photosynthesis of the botanical world. We read abut the harnessing of bee pollination of crops to make it an essential component of modern agriculture endeavor. Some plants seduce insects for pollination by their appearance (e.g., disguised orchids entice visitors); there is the production of sweet nectar as a bribe in flowers to attract bees, butterflies, and honey-sucking birds. A particular outstanding phenomena are the carnivorous plants that have developed trapping and digesting systems of insects and higher animals.

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