Buch, Englisch, 576 Seiten, Book, Format (B × H): 254 mm x 203 mm, Gewicht: 1497 g
Buch, Englisch, 576 Seiten, Book, Format (B × H): 254 mm x 203 mm, Gewicht: 1497 g
ISBN: 978-1-60535-344-9
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Zielgruppe
Lower undergraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
PART I: ENVIRONMENTAL MODES OF NORMAL DEVELOPMENT.- 1. Plasticity: The Environment as a Normal Agent in Producing Phenotypes.- 1.1. Honeybee Queen Determination.- 1.2. Mechanisms of Fish and Turtle Sex Determination.- 2. Environmental Epigenetics: How Agents in the Environment Effect Molecular Changes in Development.- 2.1. Mechanisms of DNA Methylation and Epimutation l Inheritance of Non-coding RNAs.- 2.2. Alteration of Chromatin State by Metabolism.- 2.3. Toxoplasma-induced Changes in Host Behavior Through DNA Methylation.- 2.4. Environment-induced Gene Expression of Hormones Through Invertebrate and Vertebrate Life Cycles.- 2.5. Environmentally induced Changes in Genes Involved in Behaviors.- 2.6. Alteration of Chromatin State by Exercise.- 2.7. Mechanisms of Transgenerational Inheritance of Epialleles.- 3. Developmental Symbiosis: Co-Development as a Strategy for Life.- 3.1. Tidal Seagrass Symbioses.- 3.2. Global Climate Change and Symbioses.- 3.3. Acoustic Signaling of Larval Development.- 3.4. Holobiont Perspective on Developmental Individuality.- 3.5. Symbionts Critical for Early Development.- 3.6. Symbionts in Salamander Development.- 3.7. Mechanisms of Developmental Symbiosis in Euprymna Squids.- 3.8. Symbionts as Determinants of Reproductive Isolation and Speciation.- 3.9. Symbionts and the Evolution of Social Insects.- 3.10. Birth as Continuation of Symbiotic Associations.- 3.11. Alteration of Immune and Brain Development by Gut Bacteria.- 3.12. Symbionts and the Development of Behaviors.- 3.13. Symbionts and the Induction of Transcription Factors.- 3.14. Co-metabolism: Symbionts and Bone Disease and Kwashiokor.- 3.15. New Data on the Hygiene Hypothesis.- PART II: ECOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY AND DISEASE STATES.- 4. Developmental Physiology for Survival in Changing Environments.- 4.1. Mutational Robustness.- 4.2. Parental Protection.- 4.3. Redox Protection and Signaling.- 4.4. Maternal Protection Against Pathogens.- 4.5. Innate/Chemical Immunological Defense.- 4.6. Symbiosis and Pathogen Defenses.- 4.7. Larval Defenses.- 4.8. Climate Change: Temperature.- 4.9. Climage Change: Ocean Acidification.- 5. Teratogenesis: Environmental Assaults on Development.- 5.1. Mechanisms of Thalidomide Pathology.- 5.2. Heavy Metals and Fish Development.- 5.3. Neurons and Neural Tract Development and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.- 5.4. Mechanisms of Retinoic Acid Teratogenesis.- 5.5. Glyphosate Pesticide Teratogenicity.- 5.6. Teratogens and Behavioral Conditions.- 5.7. Systems Biology and Teratogenesis.- 5.8. Teratogenesis from Oil Spills.- 6. Endocrine Disruptors.- 6.1. New Estrogen Receptors and EDC Binding Patterns.- 6.2. Phytoestrogens and Hormonal Disruption.- 6.3. Phthalates and Genital Morphology.- 6.4. Mechanisms of Obesogen Action in EDCs.- 6.5. Bisphenol-A in Human Infertility and Cancer.- 6.6. Bisphenol-A, the Nervous System and Behavior.- 6.7. Transcriptome Analyses of BPA Targets.- 6.8. Tricosan and Thyroid Inhibition.- 6.9. Fracking and Endocrine Disruptive Compounds.- 6.10. Transgenerational Effects of Endocrine Disruptors.- 7. The Developmental Origin of Adult Diseases.- 7.1. Developmental Stress Hormones and Adult Disease.- 7.2. Gene Expression Differences Caused by Intrauterine Diets.- 7.3. Paternal Epigenetic Effects.- 7.4. Gene Differences in Vitro Fertilization.- 8. Developmental Models of Cancer and Aging.- 8.1. Integration of Insulin-dependent, TOR Aging Pathways.- 8.2. The Epigenetic Aging Clock.- 8.3. Aging, Senescent Cells, and the Origins of Cancer.- 8.4. Paracrine and Field Hypotheses of Cancer.- 8.5. Criticality of the Stroma to Epithelial Cancers.- 8.6. Context-dependent Cancer Cells and Paracrine Environments.- 8.7. Cancer and Epimutations.- PART III: TOWARD A DEVELOPMENTAL EVOLUTIONARY SYNTHESIS.- 9. The Modern Synthesis: Natural Selection of Allelic Variation.- 9.1. Global Climate Change and Selection.- 9.2. Development and Sexual Selection.- 9.3. Developmental Mechanisms of Rapid Speciation.- 10. Evolution through Developmental Regulatory Genes.- 10.1. Regulatory Genes in Microevolutionary Change: Hair Colors.- 10.2. Regulatory Gene Changes in Batesian and Mullerian Mimicry.- 10.3. Snake Rib Development.- 10.4. Genes Regulating Human Brain Growth.- 10.5. Heterochronic Derivation of Dinosaur and Bird Skulls.- 11. Environment, Development, and Evolution: Toward a New Synthesis.- 11.1. Holobiont as Possible Unit of Evolutionary Selection.- 11.2. Holobiont Selection in Pea Aphids.- 11.3. Alteration of Host Genome by Symbionts.- 11.4. Reproductive Isolation Caused by Symbionts.- 11.5. Symbionts and the Origins of Multicellularity.- 11.6. Epiallelic Inheritance in Vertebrates and Invertebrates.- 11.7. Paramutants and Parent of Origin Effects.- 11.8. Plasticity-driven Evolution in Limb Evolution.- 11.9. The Domestication Syndrome in Mammals.- 11.10. Cryptic Genetic Variation and its Importance in Evolution.- 12. Coda: Philosophical Concerns Raised by Ecological Developmental Biology.- 12.1. Implications of Ecological Developmental Biology `Individuality`.- 12.2. `Becoming with` and `Being Against` Strategies of Evolution.- 12.3. New Metaphors of Evolution and Development.- 12.4. New Ways of Teaching Evolution, Development, and Ecology.- 12.5. Re-introducing `Natural History` into the Curriculum.- 12.6. Anthropocene as Event Not Epoch.- 12.7. Monarch Butterfly and Honey Bee as Critical Cases for Eco-devo.- 12.8. Environmental Justice and Development.- 12.9. `Terroir`.- Appendix A: Lysenko, Kammerer, and the Truncated Tradition of Ecological Developmental Biology.- Appendix B: The Molecular Mechanisms of Epigenetic Change.- Appendix C: Writing Development Out of the Modern Synthesis.- Appendix D: Epigenetic Inheritance Systems: The Inheritance of Environmentally Induced Traits.




