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Ecoimmunology [Hardback]

Edited by (Professor and Chair, Department of Neuroscience, The Ohio State University), Edited by (Associate Professor of Biology, Neuroscience program, Indiana University)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 656 pages, height x width x depth: 185x257x36 mm, weight: 1301 g, 53 b&w line; 2 b&w halftones
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Jan-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199737347
  • ISBN-13: 9780199737345
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 158,75 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 656 pages, height x width x depth: 185x257x36 mm, weight: 1301 g, 53 b&w line; 2 b&w halftones
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Jan-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199737347
  • ISBN-13: 9780199737345
The role of parasites and pathogens in the evolution of life history traits is of increasing interest to both ecologists and evolutionary biologists. Immunology, which was once studied almost exclusively by immunologists, has become an important area of proximate investigation to animal physiologists as a means for understanding changes in disease susceptibility and the neural and neuroendocrine mechanisms that mediate these changes. The coalescence of these different perspectives has given rise to the field of ecological immunology, an interdisciplinary research field that examines interactions among host physiology and disease ecology in a wide range of environmentally relevant contexts. The goal of ecological immunology is to understand immune function in the context of life-history traits across a wide range of organisms. Research within the field combines diverse approaches from a wide range of scientific disciplines including evolution, ecology, and life history theory to endocrinology, neuroscience, molecular biology, and behavior.

This book critically reviews recent advances in the discipline of ecoimmunology. Chapters are written by experts in their respective fields and cover diverse topics including how environmental factors can affect host immune function, the complex dynamics among host immunity, pathogen prevalence and disease susceptibility, and the physiological mechanisms that lead to adaptive changes in immune responses. By integrating analyses of immune system function within animal biology, investigators will gain will gain a more comprehensive and satisfying understanding of organism-environment interactions at both ultimate and proximate levels of analysis.

Recenzijas

"I am heartened by this book. I keenly await the future discoveries that are made possible by its synthetic and empirically grounded approach to the evolutionary ecology of immune defence." -- Andrea L. Graham, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ Featured in The Quarterly Review of Biology.

Contributors ix
1 Introduction to Ecoimmunology
3(4)
Gregory E. Demas
Randy J. Nelson
2 Life-Nlstory Evolution, Hormones, and Avian Immune Function
7(38)
Dawn M. O'Neal
Ellen D. Ketterson
3 Sickness Behavior in Vertebrates; Allostasis, Life-History Modulation, and Hormonal Regulation
45(47)
Noah T. Ashley
John C. Wingfield
4 Amphibian Immunity: Staying in Tune with the Environment
92(52)
Louise A. Rollins-Smith
Douglas C. Woodhams
5 Immunity in Primates within a Psychobiological Perspective
144(21)
Christopher L. Coe
6 Maternal Modulation of Offspring Immune Function in Vertebrates
165(60)
Dennis Hasselquist
Michael Tobler
Jan-Ake Nilsson
7 Trade-offs Limiting MHC Heterozygosity
225(34)
Jason L. Kubinak
Adam C. Nelson
James S. Ruff
Wayne K. Potts
8 The Energetics of Immunity: Mechanisms Mediating Trade-offs in Ecoimmunology
259(38)
Gregory Demas
Timothy Greives
Emily Chester
Susannah French
9 Neuroendocrine Mechanisms of Seasonal Changes in Immune Function
297(29)
Zachary M. Weil
Randy J. Nelson
10 Pineal Gland and Circulatory Melatonin in the Regulation of Immune Status of Seasonally Breeding Mammals
326(34)
Chandana Haldar
Sameer Gupta
Seema Rai
Raise Ahmad
Rajesh Yadav
11 Environmental Challenges and the Neuroendocrine Mechanisms of Stress-Induced Modulation of Host Resistance to Microbial Infection
360(23)
Jacqueline W. Mays
Nicole D. Powell
Michael T. Bailey
John F. Sheridan
12 Inflammation and Behavior
383(30)
Keith W. Kelley
Arnaud Aubert
Robert Dantzer
13 The Importance of Physiology for Ecoimmunology: Lessons from the Insects
413(27)
Shelley A. Adamo
14 Interactions between Host Social Behavior, Physiology, and Disease Susceptibility: The Role of Dominance Status and Social Context
440(28)
Bonnie Fairbanks
Dana M. Hawley
15 Sexual Selection and Parasites: Do Mechanisms Matter?
468(29)
Anne C. Jacobs
Marlene Zuk
16 Sex Differences in Immune Responses to Viruses
497(33)
Dionne P. Robinson
Sabra L. Klein
17 Immunopathology in Ecological Immunology
530(18)
E. Rhiannon Pursall
Jens Rolff
18 The Evolutionary Ecology of Infectious Disease Virulence
548(31)
Lars Raberg
Martin Stjernman
19 Evolutionary Genetics of Infectious Disease
579(30)
Paul Schmid-Hempel
Index 609
Gregory E. Demas is Associate Professor of Biology and Director of the Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior (CISAB) at Indiana University, where he has been for the last 10 years.

Randy J. Nelson holds the Brumbaugh Chair in Brain Research and Teaching at The Ohio State University Medical Center. He is professor and Chair of the Department of Neuroscience and a member of the Institute for Behavioral Medicine at The Ohio State University Medical Center.