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▼aKarasov, William H.,▼d1953- |
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▼aPhysiological ecology :▼bhow animals process energy, nutrients, and toxins /▼cWilliam H. Karasov and Carlos Marti?nez del Rio. |
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▼aPrinceton :▼bPrinceton University Press,▼c짤2007. |
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▼a1 online resource (xiv, 741 pages) :▼billustrations |
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▼atext▼btxt▼2rdacontent |
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▼acomputer▼bc▼2rdamedia |
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▼aonline resource▼bcr▼2rdacarrier |
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▼aIncludes bibliographical references and index. |
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▼tPreface --▼tAcknowledgments --▼tSection 1 : Overview --▼gch. 1.▼tBasic concepts : budgets, allometry, temperature, and the imprint of history --▼g1.1.▼tThe input/output budget : a key conceptual framework --▼g1.2.▼tThe importance of size : scaling of physiological and ecological traits --▼g1.3.▼tThe importance of temperature --▼g1.4.▼tUsing historical data in comparative studies --▼tSection 2 : Chemical ecology of food --▼gch. 2.▼tThe chemistry and biology of food --▼g2.1.▼tGetting started ; first catch (store and prepare) the hare --▼g2.2▼tProximate nutrient analysis --▼g2.3.▼tDietary fiber --▼g2.4.▼tCarbohydrates --▼g2.5.▼tAmino acids and proteins --▼g2.6.▼tLipids --▼g2.7.▼tVitamins --▼g2.8.▼tMinerals --▼g2.9.▼tSecondary metabolites --▼g2.10.▼tWords of encouragement --▼tSection 3 : Digestive ecology --▼gch. 3.▼tFood intake and utilization efficiency --▼g3.1.▼tOverview of section 3 : Why study digestion? --▼g3.2.▼tDigestive efficiency is inversely related to "fiber" content --▼g3.3.▼tBoth digestion rate and digestive efficiency are key nutritional variables --▼g3.4.▼tDaily food intake : energy maximization or regulation? |
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▼gch. 4.▼tSimple guts : the ecological biochemistry and physiology of catalytic digestion --▼g4.1.▼tLots of guts, but only a few basic types --▼g4.2.▼tThe gut as a bottleneck to energy flow --▼g4.3.▼tThe gut in energy intake maximizers --▼g4.4.▼tIntermittent feeders --▼g4.5.▼tThe gut in diet switchers --▼g4.6.▼tThe evolutionary match between digestion, diets, and animal energetics --▼g4.7.▼tSummary : the interplay between digestive physiology and ecology --▼gch. 5.▼tPhotosynthetic animals and gas-powered mussels : the physiological ecology of nutritional symbioses --▼g5.1.▼tA symbiotic world --▼g5.2.▼tA diversity of nutritional symbioses --▼g5.3.▼tHot vents and cold seeps : chemolithotrophs of the deep sea --▼g5.4.▼tThe importance of nitrogen in nutritional symbioses --▼gch. 6.▼tDigestive symbioses : how insect and vertebrate herbivores cope with low quality plant foods --▼g6.1.▼tFermentation of cell wall materials --▼g6.2.▼tMicrobial fermentation in insect guts --▼g6.3.▼tTerrestrial vertebrates --▼g6.4.▼tHerbivory and detritivory in fish. |
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▼tSection 4 : The ecology of postabsorptive nutrient processing --▼gch. 7.▼tPostabsorptive processing of nutrients --▼g7.1.▼tOverview : The postabsorptive fate of absorbed materials --▼g7.2.▼tControls over postabsorptive processing --▼g7.3.▼tCosts of digestive and postabsorptive processing --▼g7.4.▼tFeast and famine : the biochemistry of natural fasting and starvation --▼g7.5.▼tBiochemical indices of nutritional status and habitat quality --▼gch. 8.▼tIsotopic ecology --▼g8.1.▼tBasic principles --▼g8.2.▼tMixing models --▼g8.3.▼tIsotopic signatures --▼g8.4.▼tThe dynamics of isotopic incorporation --▼g8.5.▼tStable isotopes and migration --▼g8.6.▼tNitrogen isotopes --▼g8.7.▼tConcluding remarks and (yet again) a call for laboratory experiments --▼gch. 9.▼tHow animals deal with poisons and pollutants --▼g9.1.▼tOverview : the postabsorptive fate of absorbed xenobiotics --▼g9.2.▼tDistribution of xenobiotics in the body --▼g9.3.▼tBiotransformation of absorbed xenobiotics --▼g9.4.▼tElimination of xenobiotics and their metabolites --▼g9.5.▼tCosts of xenobiotic biotransformation and elimination --▼g9.6.▼tModeling approaches can integrate the processes of absorption, distribution, and elimination (including biotransformation and excretion) --▼g9.7.▼tModels can predict bioaccumulation and biomagnification in ecosystems --▼g9.8.▼tPostingestional effects of xenobiotics on feeding behavior --▼g9.9.▼tToxic effects of xenobiotics in wild animals --▼g9.10.▼tToxicogenomics : new methodologies for the integrative study of exposure, postabsorptive processing, and toxicity in animals exposed to natural and manmade toxins. |
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▼tSection 5 : Limiting nutrients --▼gch. 10.▼tEcological stoichiometry --▼g10.1.▼tEcological stoichiometry : the power of elemental analysis --▼g10.2.▼tAn ecological stoichiometry primer --▼g10.3.▼tAre energy and elements two independent currencies? --▼gch. 11.▼tNitrogen and mineral requirements --▼g11.1.▼tNitrogen requirements and limitation in ecology--▼g11.2.▼tMineral requirements and limitation in ecology --▼gch. 12.▼tWater requirements and water flux --▼g12.1.▼tWater budgets, fluxes, and requirements --▼g12.2.▼tAvenues of water loss --▼g12.3.▼tThe dietary requirement for water --▼g12.4.▼tIngestion of xenobiotics can increase the dietary requirement for water --▼g12.5.▼tIs water ecologically limiting? --▼g12.6.▼tTesting the evolutionary match between environmental aridity and water relations --▼tSection 6 : Production in budgets of mass and energy --▼gch. 13.▼tGrowth budgets of mass and energy --▼g13.1.▼tOverview of chapters 13 and 14 --▼g13.2.▼tTwo approaches are used to evaluate costs of production --▼g13.3.▼tEnergetics of growth--▼g13.4.▼tRates of growth --▼g13.5.▼tGrowth in relation to life history transitions --▼gch. 14.▼tReproduction in budgets of mass and energy --▼g1.41.▼tAllocation to reproduction : trade-off with development and effects of body size --▼g14.2.▼tApproaches for measuring costs of reproduction --▼g14.3.▼tMaterial costs of reproduction --▼g14.4.▼tNutritional control of reproduction --▼g14.5.▼tPutting energy and material costs of reproduction in perspective --▼tIndex. |
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▼3Use copy▼fRestrictions unspecified▼2star▼5MiAaHDL |
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▼a"Unlocking the puzzle of how animals behave and how they interact with their environments is impossible without understanding the physiological processes that determine their use of food resources. But long overdue is a user-friendly introduction to the subject that systematically bridges the gap between physiology and ecology. Ecologists - for whom such knowledge can help clarify the consequences of global climate change, the biodiversity crisis, and pollution - often find themselves wading through an unwieldy, technically top-heavy literature. Here, William Karasov and Carlos Martinez del Rio present the first accessible and authoritative one-volume overview of the physiological and biochemical principles that shape how animals procure energy and nutrients and free themselves of toxins - and how this relates to broader ecological phenomena."--Jacket. |
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▼aElectronic reproduction.▼b[S.l.] :▼cHathiTrust Digital Library,▼d2010.▼5MiAaHDL |
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▼aMaster and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.▼uhttp://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212▼5MiAaHDL |
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▼adigitized▼c2010▼hHathiTrust Digital Library▼lcommitted to preserve▼2pda▼5MiAaHDL |
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▼aPrint version record. |
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▼aAdded to collection customer.56279.3 |
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▼aAnimal ecophysiology. |
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▼aAnimaux▼xE?cophysiologie. |
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▼aAnimal ecophysiology.▼2fast▼0(OCoLC)fst00809160 |
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▼aAnimaux▼xE?cophysiologie.▼2ram |
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▼aAuto?kologie▼2gnd |
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▼aTiere▼2gnd |
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▼aSCIENCE / Life Sciences / Biochemistry▼2bisacsh |
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▼aElectronic books. |
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▼aMarti?nez del Rio, Carlos,▼d1956- |
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▼iPrint version:▼aKarasov, William H., 1953-▼tPhysiological ecology.▼dPrinceton : Princeton University Press, 짤2007▼w(DLC) 2006037344▼w(OCoLC)76141932 |
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