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Termites: Evolution, Sociality, Symbioses, Ecology
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Termites http://www.fishpond.co.nz/Books/Termites-David-Edward-Bignell-Edited-by-Yves-Roisin-Edited-by/9789048139767

Evolution, Sociality, Symbioses, Ecology

By David Edward Bignell (Edited by), Yves Roisin (Edited by), Nathan Lo (Edited by)

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Format:Hardback, 576 pages
Published In: Netherlands, 01 February 2010

Table of Contents

1. An introduction to termites: biology, taxonomy and functional morphology (Paul Eggleton) 1.1. Introduction 1.2. Diversity, taxonomy, classification 1.3. The colony 1.4. The colony as (super)organism 1.5. Reproduction and dispersal: alates 1.6. Worker morphology 1.7. Construction, feeding and tending 1.8. Active defence: soldiers 1.9. Protection, stability, fortification: nests and mounds 1.10. Conclusions References 2. Termite phylogenetics and co-cladogenesis with symbionts (Nathan Lo, Paul Eggleton) 2.1.Introduction 2.2. Phylogenetic 2.3. Co-cladogenesis between cockroaches, termites, and their symbionts 2.4. Fossil history and key events leading to the origin of termites 2.5. Taxonomic implications of the phylogenetic position of termites 2.6. Termite phylogeny: morphological character sets 2.7. Phylogenetic and taxonomic relationships among Termites 2.8. Conclusions References 3. Evolution and function of endogenous termite cellulases (Nathan Lo, Gaku Tokuda, Hirofumi Watanabe) 3.1. Introduction 3.2. Cellulose and cellulases 3.3. A brief history of cellulose research 3.4. Discovery of endogenous cellulose genes and their evolutionary origins 3.5. Endogenous endoglucanases and i -glucosidase copy number and expression in termites 3.6. Functional significance of endogenous cellulases 3.7. Caste specific production of cellulose genes 3.8. Conclusions References 4. Altricial development in wood-feeding cockroaches: the key antecedent of termite eusociality (Christine A Nalepa) 4.1. Introduction 4.2. Altricial development 4.3. Altricial offspring: necessary precedent to eusociality 4.4. Altricial development becomes the norm 4.5. Conclusions References 5. Eusocial evolution in termites and Hymenoptera (Kenneth J Howard, Barbara L. Thorne) 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Evolution from subsocial ancestors 5.3. Forms of helpers 5.4. Predisposition for eusociality 5.5. Selective processes promoting eusocial helpers 5.6. Synthesis References 6. Social organization and the status of workers in termites (Yves Roisin, Judith Korb) 6.1. Introduction 6.2. Mastotermitidae 6.3. Wood-dwelling termites 6.4. Hodotermitidae 6.5. Rhinotermitidae, Serritermitidae and Termitidae 6.6. Origin and evolution of the worker caste 6.7. Conclusion: what is a worker? References 7. Ecology, behavior and evolution of disease resistance in termites (Rebeca B Rosengaus, James FA Traniello, Mark S Bulmer) 7.1. Introduction 7.2. Phylogeny, eusociality and the evolution of disease resistance in termites 7.3. Termite microbial ecology, disease risk and immunocompetence 7.4. Social behavior and infection control 7.5. Termite life history, genetic diversity and disease resistance 7.6. Disease and colony foundation 7.7. Conclusions 8. Comparative biology of fungus cultivation in termites and ants (Tania Nobre, Corinne Rouland-Lefevre, Duur Aanen) 8.1. Introduction 8.2. Evolutionary history of fungiculture 8.3. Colony foundation and establishment of the fungus garden 8.4. Role of fungal symbiont 8.5. Fungus garden protection 8.6. Evolutionary stability 8.7. Concluding remarks References 9. Molecular basis underlying caste differentiation in termites (Toru Miura, Michael E Scharf) 9.1. Introduction 9.2. A historical view of classic work on case determination and differentiation 9.3. Screening of genes responsible for caste differentiation: gene discovery and genomics 9.4. Investigation of gene functions in termites: functional genomics 9.5. Hormonal regulation of caste differentiation 9.6. Morphogenesis in caste differentiation 9.7. Social regulation of caste ratios 9.8. Sociogenomics in termites 9.9. Conclusions and perspectives References 10. Sexual and asexual reproduction in termites (Kenji Matsuura) 10.1. Introduction 10.2. Facultative parthenogenesis in maleless colony Foundation 10.3. Mechanism of termite parthenogenesis 10.4. Asexual queen succession (AQS) 10.5. Parthenogenesis and recessive deleterious genes 10.6. Genetic basis of AQS 10.7. Comparison of AQS systems between termites and ants 10.8. Clues to find new AQS species References 11. Pheromones and chemical ecology of dispersal and foraging in termites (Christian Bordereau, Jacques M Pasteels) 11.1. Introduction 11.2. Dispersal 11.3. Foraging 11.4. Pheromonal parsimony 11.5. Conclusions References 12. Genetic structure of termite colonies and populations (Edward L Vargo, Claudia Husseneder) 12.1. Introduction 12.2. Genetic tools 12.3. Colony genetic structure 12.4. Population genetic structure 12.5. Phylogeography 12.6. Population genetics of invasive species References 13. Termite mound architecture, from function to construction (Judith Korb) 13.1. Introduction 13.2. Function and functional significance of termite mound Architecture 13.2.1. Fungus growing termites 13.2.2. Magnetic termites 13.3. Proximate mechanisms of mound building 13.4. Concluding remarks References 14. Morphology, physiology, biochemistry and functional design of the termite gut: an evolutionary Wonderland (David E Bignell) 14.1. Introduction 14.2. Structure and design: new insights 14.3. Physiology 14.4. Biochemistry 14.5. An overarching hypothesis of evolution References 15. Diversity, structure and evolution of the termite gut microbial community (Moriya Ohkuma, Andreas Brune) 15.1. Introduction 15.2. Molecular phylogeny and evolution of protists 15.3. Bacterial diversity 15.4. Archaeal diversity 15.5. Comparisons among host termites 15.6. Spatial distributions in lower termites 15.7. Protist-prokaryote associations 15.8. Features of microbial communities in higher termites 15.9. Conclusions and perspective References 16. Role of the termite gut microbiota in symbiotic digestion (Andreas Brune, Moriya Ohkuma) 16.1. Introduction 16.2. Digestion of wood polysaccharides 16.3. The anaerobic food web 16.4. Termite guts as gradient systems 16.5. Role of the gut microbiota in nitrogen metabolism 16.6. Digestion of soil organic matter 16.7. Do termites degrade lignin? 16.8. Conclusions References 17. Global biogeography of termites: a compilation of sources (David T Jones, Paul Eggleton) 17.1. Introduction 17.2..Termite functional and taxonomic classification 17.3. Exemplar assemblages 17.4. Taxonomic richness 17.5. Comparison of assemblages within biomes: some pre-liminary observations 17.6. Implications of varying assemblage structures for termite mediated decomposition in different biomes 17.7. Conclusions References 18. Termites as pests of tropical agriculture (Corinne Rouland-Lefevre) 18.1. Introduction 18.2. Damage to tropical crops 18.3. Chemical control 18.4. Control by non-chemical means 18.5. Biological control 18.6. Conclusions References 19. Invasive termites (Theodore A Evans) 19.1. Introduction 19.2. Definitions 19.3. List of invasive species 19.4. Characteristics of invasive species 19.5. Invaded habitats 19.6. Source habitats of invasive species 19.7. Future invasions? References

Reviews

Aus den Rezensionen zur 2. Auflage: "... Ein uberaus empfehlenswertes, brandaktuelles Nachschlagewerk zur Biologie der Termiten, fur Entomologen, Entwicklungsbiologen, Mikrobiologen, Soziobiologen und sich mit den Tropen befassenden Agrarwissenschaftlern." (R. Gerstmeier, in: Entomofauna, 29/April/2011)

Publisher: Springer
ISBN:9048139767
EAN:9789048139767
Dimensions: 23.37 x 15.75 x 3.56 centimeters (1.16 kg)
Age Range: 15+ years
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