This thematic volume fulfills a need for a focused, affordable collection of reference articles on fungi and protists.
PREFACE
I. FUNGI
Yeasts
Aspergillus: A Multifaceted Genus
Clavicipitaceae: Free-Living and Saprotrophs to Plant
Endophytes
Microsporidia: a model for minimal parasite–host interactions
Mycorrhizae
Endophytic Microbes
Lichens
Plant Pathogens: Newly Emerging Diseases
Fungal and Protist Plant Pathogens
Entomogenous fungi
Fungal Infections, Systemic
Fungal Infections, Cutaneous
II. PROTISTS
Amitochondriate Protists (Diplomonads, Parabasalids, Oxymonads)
Amoebas (Lobose)
Ciliates
Secretive ciliates and putative asexuality in microbial
eukaryotes
Coccolithophores
Diatoms: The Grass Menagerie
Dinoflagellates
Dyctiostelium
Foraminifera
Euglenozoa
Protozoan, Intestinal
Leishmania
Oomycetes (Water Mold)
Picoeukaryotes
Stramenopiles
Toxoplasmosis
Trypanosomes
Sleeping Sickness
Secondary endosymbiosis
Algal blooms
Food Webs, Microbial
Dr. Schaechter is a Distinguished Professor, Emeritus at Tufts University, where he served as chairman of the Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology from 1970 to 1993. He has worked on bacterial growth physiology and the relationship of the chromosome and the bacterial cell membrane. He has authored ten treatises and textbooks, most in collaboration with others, plus a book for the general public, In the Company of Mushrooms. He has served as President of the American Society for Microbiology. Currently, he is Adjunct Professor Emeritus, Biology Department, at San Diego State University and Visiting Scholar at the University of California, San Diego.
"The book is well illustrated with diagrams, figures and tables, and the chapters are thorough, well-presented and easy to read. The content has been carefully selected from the huge range of topics that are covered under eukaryotic microbiology, and provides an excellent overview. It will be a useful reference work for researchers and students in many areas of eukaryotic microbiology, and of course for all other microbiologists fascinated by these incredible, beautiful and important organisms."--Microbiology Today
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