Evolutionary perspectives on pregnancy / John C. Avise.
Material type:
- 9780231160605
- 573.66 23 Av958
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | ISI Library, Kolkata | 573.66 Av958 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 137458 |
Browsing ISI Library, Kolkata shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||
573.616 F848 Sexual cycles of vertebrates | 573.619 Z28 Biochemistry of mammalian reproduction | 573.65 Se495 Male reproduction | 573.66 Av958 Evolutionary perspectives on pregnancy / | 573.66516 J78 Vertebrates ovary | 573.66519 Z94 Ovary | 573.66519 Z94 Ovary |
Animal drawings by Trudy Nicholson.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. One generation inside another --
2. Verebrate live-bearers : the borne and the born --
3. Vertebrate alternatives to standard pregnancy --
4. Nonvertebrate brooders --
5. Human pregnancy in mythology and in real life --
6. Natural selection during mammalian pregnancy --
7. Sexual selection and piscine pregnancy --
8. Pregnancy in a comparative light --
Epilogue --
Appendix. Molecular-genetic parentage analysis --
Glossary.
Covering both the internal and external incubation of offspring, this book provides a biology-rich survey of the natural history, ecology, genetics, and evolution of pregnancy-like phenomena. From mammals and other live-bearing organisms to viviparous reptiles, male-pregnant fishes, larval-brooding worms, crabs, sea cucumbers, and corals, the world's various species display pregnancy and other forms of parental devotion in surprisingly multifaceted ways. An adult female (or male) can incubate its offspring in a womb, stomach, mouth, vocal sac, gill chamber, epithelial pouch, backpack, leg pocket, nest, or an encasing of embryos, and by studying these diverse examples from a comparative vantage point, the ecological and evolutionary-genetic outcomes of different reproductive models become fascinatingly clear. John C. Avise discusses each mode of pregnancy and the decipherable genetic signatures it has left on the reproductive structures, physiologies, and innate sexual behaviors of extant species. By considering the many biological aspects of gestation from different evolutionary angles, Avise offers captivating new insights into the significance of "heavy" parental investment in progeny.
There are no comments on this title.