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Photoperiodism: The Biological Calendar [Hardback]

Edited by (, Ohio State University), Edited by (, Ohio State University), Edited by (, Ohio State University)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 600 pages, height x width x depth: 165x236x38 mm, weight: 955 g, 17 black and white halftones, 95 line illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Feb-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195335902
  • ISBN-13: 9780195335903
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  • Cena: 126,24 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 600 pages, height x width x depth: 165x236x38 mm, weight: 955 g, 17 black and white halftones, 95 line illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Feb-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195335902
  • ISBN-13: 9780195335903
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Life evolves in a cyclic environment, and to be successful, organisms must adapt not only to their spatial habitat, but also to their temporal habitat. How do plants and animals determine the time of year so they can anticipate seasonal changes in their habitats? In most cases, day length, or photoperiod, acts as the principal external cue for determining seasonal activity. For organisms not living at the bottom of the ocean or deep in a cave, day follows night, and the length of the day changes predictably throughout the year. These changes in photoperiod provide the most accurate signal for predicting upcoming seasonal conditions. Measuring day length allows plants and animals to anticipate and adapt to seasonal changes in their environments in order to optimally time key developmental events including seasonal growth and flowering of plants, annual bouts of reproduction, dormancy and migration in insects, and the collapse and regrowth of the reproductive system that drives breeding seasons in mammals and birds.
Although research on photoperiodic time measurement originally integrated work on plants and animals, recent work has focused more narrowly and separately on plants, invertebrates, or vertebrates. As the fields have become more specialized there has been less interaction across the broader field of photoperiodism. As a result, researchers in each area often needlessly repeat both theoretical and experimental work. For example, understanding that there are genetically distinct morphs among species that, depending on latitude, respond to different critical photoperiods was discovered separately in plants, invertebrates, and vertebrates over the course of 20 years. However, over the past decade, intense work on daily and seasonal rhythms in fruit flies, mustard plants, and hamsters and mice, has led to remarkable progress in understanding the phenomenology, as well as the molecular and genetic mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms and clocks. This book was developed to further this type of cooperation among scientists from all related disciplines. It brings together leading researchers working on photoperiodic timing of seasonal adaptations in plants, invertebrates, and vertebrates. Each of its three sections begins with an introduction by the section editor, and at the end of the book, the section editors present a synthesis of common themes in photoperiodism, as well as discuss similarities and differences in approaches to the study of photoperiodism, and future directions for research on photoperiodic time measurement.

Recenzijas

This book brings together all the major players that have contributed studies over the past decade on how organisms perceive and respond to circadian clocks at the molecular biology and genetic levels. It is a major achievement of which the editors should be justly proud ... This is an important publication and I suspect will remain so for years to come. * The Biologist *

Contributors x
Part I. Photoperiodism in Plants and Fungi
Overview
3(6)
David E. Somers
Photoperiodic Flowering in the Long-Day Plant Arabidopsis thaliana
9(29)
Joanna Putterill
Christine Stockum
Guy Warman
Photoperiodic Control of Flowering in the Short-Day Plant Oryza sativa
38(21)
Takeshi Izawa
The Photoperiodic Flowering Response in Pharbitis nil
59(15)
Ryosuke Hayama
Photoperiodic Control of Flowering in Lemna
74(14)
Kumiko Ito-Miwa
Tokitaka Oyama
Photoperiodic Control of Dormancy and Flowering in Trees
88(19)
Pekka Heino
Ove Nilsson
Tapio Palva
Integration of Photoperiodic Timing and Vernalization in Arabidopsis
107(27)
Scott D. Michaels
Seasonality and Photoperiodism in Fungi
134(39)
Till Roenneberg
Tanja Radic
Manfred Godel
Martha Merrow
Part II. Photoperiodism in Invertebrates
Overview
165(8)
David L. Denlinger
Photoperiodism in Mollusks
173(20)
Hideharu Numata
Hiroko Udaka
Photoperiodism in Copepods
193(25)
Nancy H. Marcus
Lindsay P. Scheef
Photoperiodism in Insects: Migration and Diapause Responses
218(40)
David S. Saunders
Photoperiodism in Insects: Perception of Light and the Role of Clock Genes
258(29)
Shin S. Goto
Sakiko Shiga
Hideharu Numata
Photoperiodism in Insects: Molecular Basis and Consequences of Diapause
287(31)
Karen D. Williams
Paul S. Schmidt
Maria B. Sokolowski
Photoperiodism in Insects: Effects on Morphology
318(24)
H. Frederik Nijhout
Photoperiodism in Insects: Aphid Polyphenism
342(29)
Jim Hardie
Part III. Photoperiodism in Vertebrates
Overview
365(6)
Randy J. Nelson
Photoperiodism in Fishes
371(28)
Bertil Borg
Photoperiodism in Amphibians and Reptiles
399(21)
Zachary M. Weil
David Crews
Photoperiodism and Reproduction in Birds
420(26)
George E. Bentley
Genetic and Molecular Mechanisms of Avian Photoperiodism
446(15)
Takashi Yoshimura
Peter J. Sharp
Photoperiodism in Mammals: Regulation of Nonreproductive Traits
461(42)
Gregory E. Demas
Zachary M. Weil
Randy J. Nelson
Photoperiodism and Reproduction in Mammals
503(40)
Lance J. Kriegsfeld
Eric L. Bittman
Genetic and Molecular Mechanisms of Mammalian Photoperiodism
543(18)
David Hazlerigg
Epilogue: Future Directions
561(6)
David L. Denlinger
David E. Somers
Randy J. Nelson
Index 567
Randy J. Nelson is a Distinguished University Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Ohio State University.

David L. Denlinger is a Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Entomology at the Ohio State University.

David E. Somers is an Associate Professor in the Department of Plant Cellular and Molecular Biology at the Ohio State University.