Biology of Turtles

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Apalone Spinifera
aquatic
Aquatic Turtles
carapace
Carapace Length
Caretta Caretta
Category=PSAJ
Category=PSC
Category=PSPM
Category=PSV
Category=PSVF
chelonia
Chelydra Serpentina
Chrysemys Picta
comparative physiology
developmental anatomy
Emydoidea Blandingii
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
evolutionary biology
Freshwater Turtles
herpetology research
Lapparent De Broin
length
marine
Marine Turtles
Mauremys Caspica
mydas
Neural Crest
Neural Crest Cells
Nuchal Bone
reproductive ecology
scripta
sea
Sea Turtles
Sex Ratio
shell evolution mechanisms
Spinal Cord
Sternotherus Odoratus
terrestrial
Terrestrial Locomotion
Terrestrial Turtles
trachemys
Trachemys Scripta
Trunk Neural Crest Cells
Turtle Brain
Turtle Shell
Vertebral Scutes
vertebrate morphology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780849333392
  • Weight: 2020g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Dec 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Featuring in-depth contributions from an international team of experts, the Biology of Turtles provides the first comprehensive review of the Testudinata. The book starts with the premise that the structure of turtles is particularly interesting and best understood within the context of their development, novelty, functional diversity, and evolution. It provides a robust discussion of the development and diversity of the shell. The book also explores the turtle body plan, its physiological and ecological consequences, evolutionary novelties, and their importance. The 200 illustrations found throughout the text enhance the chapters combine with color illustrations of the development of the shell, aspects of bone structural diversity, growth, and skeletochronology, to make this book an unparalleled resource. The volume concludes with a thoughtful discussion of the more than century long debate on the origins of turtles and the reasons why our understanding of the phylogenic origins and evolution of turtles remains tentative.

Currently available books on this subject are woefully out of date and no overall review of Testudinata has been undertaken…until now. Each chapter represents a milestone in synthesizing a wide range of available information on specific subjects. The book’s challenge: look both inside and outside the shell to build a clearer understanding of the diversity and evolution of turtles.

Jeanette Wyneken, Matthew H. Godfrey, Vincent Bels