Parasite Diversity and Diversification: Evolutionary Ecology Meets Phylogenetics
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
The development of molecular tools has dramatically increased our knowledge of parasite diversity and the vectors that transmit them. From viruses and protists to arthropods and helminths, each branch of the Tree of Life offers an insight into significant, yet cryptic, biodiversity. Alongside this, the studies of host-parasite interactions and parasitism have influenced many scientific disciplines, such as biogeography and evolutionary ecology, by using comparative methods based on phylogenetic information to unravel shared evolutionary histories. Parasite Diversity and Diversification brings together two active fields of research, phylogenetics and evolutionary ecology, to reveal and explain the patterns of parasite diversity and the diversification of their hosts. This book will encourage students and researchers in the fields of ecology and evolution of parasitism, as well as animal and human health, to integrate phylogenetics into the investigation of parasitism in evolutionary ecology, health ecology, medicine and conservation.
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Product Details
Weight: 1130g
Dimensions: 181 x 253mm
Publication Date: 26 Feb 2015
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107037656
About
Serge Morand is CNRS researcher at the Institute of Evolutionary Sciences at the University of Montpellier II France. His research focuses on the evolutionary ecology of host-parasite interactions and population ecology of parasites and pathogens. He is conducting several projects on the impacts of global changes on the links between biodiversity and health in Southeast Asia using rodent-borne diseases as a model. He is the co-author of several articles and books on these fields. Boris R. Krasnov is Professor and Head of the Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology in the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Israel. He is interested in the various aspects of ecology and evolution of host-parasite relationships. Parasitic fleas on small mammals represent his main study model of parasite-host associations although he studies some other parasite taxa as well. He is an author of three monographs editor and co-editor of three collections and author of more than 200 scientific publications. D. Timothy J. Littlewood is a Merit Researcher and currently Head of the Life Sciences Department at the Natural History Museum London. His main research interests include: the systematics of platyhelminths (flatworms) and other phyla particularly with a view to revealing evolutionary patterns associated with parasitism; the development and application of molecular tools for species diagnosis life cycle completion and biodiversity assessment; and mitogenomics and phylogenomics pursued by means of next-generation sequencing.
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