Buch, Englisch, 368 Seiten, Format (B × H): 192 mm x 253 mm, Gewicht: 968 g
Buch, Englisch, 368 Seiten, Format (B × H): 192 mm x 253 mm, Gewicht: 968 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-289556-1
Verlag: Oxford University Press
We live in a world teeming with parasites. Many animal behaviors, including social interactions, mating displays, and decisions about where to move, nest, and forage are shaped by interactions with parasites. The same is true for humans, where our attraction to mates, hygienic behaviors, food choices, and decisions about when and where to gather in groups often depend on current and perceived infection risk. In turn, behaviors like social distancing and self-medication can alter the trajectories of parasite transmission and evolution, as vividly illustrated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The myriad connections between animal behavior and parasitism have been the subject of growing research interest since the 1970s and 80s, when fundamental theories linking the two fields of study emerged. Since then, a combination of conceptual and technological advances, and increased integration of ideas across disciplines, have helped to uncover fascinating new connections between animal behavior and the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases. This accessible text surveys emerging research in this vibrant field. Chapters focus on fundamental topics at the interface of animal behavior and parasitism, and authors have been selected to provide a diverse and international perspective.
Animal Behavior and Parasitism is an upper-level text suitable for senior undergraduate and graduate level students as well as professional researchers in animal behavior/behavioral ecology, disease ecology, parasitology, and evolutionary biology.
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Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- PART 1: INTRODUCTION
- 1: Vanessa O. Ezenwa, Sonia Altizer, and Richard J. Hall: Animal behavior and parasitism: where have we been, where are we going?
- 2: Dana M. Hawley and Vanessa O. Ezenwa: Parasites, host behavior, and their feedbacks
- PART II: SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
- 3: Baptiste Sadoughi, Simone Anzà, Charlotte Defolie, Virgile Manin, Nadine Müller-Klein, Tatiana Murillo, Markus Ulrich, and Doris Wu: Parasites in a social world: lessons from primates
- 4: Janine Mistrick, Marie L.J. Gilbertson, Lauren A. White, and Meggan E. Craft: Constructing animal networks for parasite transmission inference
- 5: Carl N. Keiser: Collective behavior and parasite transmission
- PART III: MOVEMENT BEHAVIOR
- 6: Orr Spiegel, Nili Anglister, and Miranda M Crafton: Movement data provides insight into feedbacks and heterogeneities in host-parasite interactions
- 7: Richard J. Hall, Sonia Altizer, Stephanie J. Peacock, and Allison K. Shaw: Animal migration and infection dynamics: recent advances and future frontiers
- 8: Hannah R. Meredith and Amy Wesolowski: Seasonal human movement and the consequences for infectious disease transmission
- PART IV: SEXUAL SELECTION AND MATING BEHAVIOR
- 9: Alistair Pirrie, Hettie Chapman, and Ben Ashby: Parasite-mediated sexual selection: to mate or not to mate?
- 10: Rebecca E. Koch and Geoffrey E. Hill: Shared biochemical pathways for ornamentation and immune function: rethinking the mechanisms underlying honest signalling of parasite resistance
- 11: Jamie C. Winternitz and Jessica L. Abbate: The genes of attraction: mating behavior, immunogenetic variation, and parasite resistance
- PART V: PARASITE MODIFICATION OF HOST BEHAVIOR
- 12: Stephanie S. Godfrey and Robert Poulin: Host manipulation by parasites: from individual to collective behavior
- 13: Lauren J. Cator: Altered feeding behaviors in disease vectors
- PART VI: BEHAVIORAL DEFENSES
- 14: Patricia C. Lopes, Susannah S. French, Douglas C. Woodhams, and Sandra A. Binning: Infection avoidance behaviors across vertebrate taxa: patterns, processes, and future directions
- 15: Clémence Poirotte and Marie J. E. Charpentier: Inter-individual variation in parasite avoidance behaviors and its epidemiological, ecological, and evolutionary consequences
- 16: Shaun Davis and Todd Schlenke: Behavioral defenses against parasitoids: genetic and neuronal mechanisms
- 17: Jessica F. Stephenson and James S. Adelman: The behavior of infected hosts: behavioral tolerance, behavioral resilience, and their implications for behavioral competence
- PART VII: EMERGING FRONTIERS
- 18: Sarah Guindre-Parker, Jenny Tung, and Alexander T. Strauss: Emerging frontiers in animal behavior and parasitism: integration across scales
- 19: Emlyn J. Resetarits, Lewis J. Bartlett, Cali A. Wilson, Anna R. Willoughby: Parallels in parasite behavior: the other side of the host-parasite relationship




