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Academic & Professional Books  Organismal to Molecular Biology  Animals: Vertebrate Zoology

Egg Incubation Its Effects on Embryonic Development in Birds and Reptiles

Edited By: D Charles Deeming and Mark WJ Ferguson
448 pages, 50 b/w illus, 250 line illus
Egg Incubation
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  • Egg Incubation ISBN: 9780521612036 Paperback Nov 2004 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £54.99
    #164329
  • Egg Incubation ISBN: 9780521390712 Hardback Dec 1991 Out of Print #11234
Selected version: £54.99
About this book Contents Customer reviews Related titles

About this book

A comprehensive review of how different incubation conditions - temperature, water, gas and turning - can affect embryonic development in birds and reptiles. Further chapters deal with aestivation, megapodes and oviparity and the methods used to investigate and manipulate the embryo.

Contents

Preface Denis C. Deeming and Mark W. J. Ferguson; 1. Maternal diet, maternal proteins and egg quality Harold B. White III; 2. Comparative composition and utilisation of yolk lipid by embryonic birds and reptiles Ray C. Noble; 3. Oviductal proteins and their influence on embryonic development in birds and reptiles Brent D. Palmer and Louis J. Guillette, Jr.; 4. Fluxes during embryogenesis Kenneth Simkiss; 5. Eggshell structure and formation in eggs of oviparous reptiles Mary J. Packard and Vincent G. DeMarco; 6. Shell structure and formation in avian eggs Ronald G. Board and Nick H. C. Sparks; 7. Physical characteristics of reptilian eggs and a comparison with avian eggs John B. Iverson and Michael A. Ewert; 8. Egg shape in birds Iain H. M. Smart; 9. The thermal energetics of incubated birds' eggs J. Scott Turner; 10. Physiological effects of incubation temperature on embryonic development in reptiles and birds Denis C. Deeming and Mark W. J. Ferguson; 11. Cold torpor, diapause, delayed hatching and aestivation in reptiles and birds Michael A. Ewert; 12. Physical factors affecting the water exchange of buried reptile eggs Ralph A. Ackerman; 13. The physiological and ecological importance of water to embryos of oviparous reptiles Gary C. Packard; 14. Roles of water in avian eggs Amos Ar; 15. Water economy and solute regulation of reptilian and avian embryos David Vleck; 16. The avian eggshell as a mediating barrier: respiratory gas fluxes and pressures during development Charles V. Paganelli; 17. Gas exchange across reptilian eggshells Denis C. Deeming and Michael B. Thompson; 18. Metabolism and energetics of reptilian and avian embryos Carol M. Vleck and Donald F. Hoyt; 19. Reasons for the dichotomy in egg turning in birds and reptiles Denis C. Deeming; 20. A comparison of reptilian eggs with those of megapode birds David T. Booth and Michael B. Thompson; 21. Why birds lay eggs Hermann Rahn; 22. Influences of incubation requirements on the evolution of viviparity Richard Shine; 23. Overview of early stages of avian and reptilian development Ruth Bellairs; 24. Ions and ion regulating mechanisms in the developing fowl embryo James I. Gillespie, James R. Greenwell, Elspeth Russell and Claire J. Dickens; 25. Electrochemical processes during embryonic development Paul O'Shea; 26. Methods for shell-less and semi-shell-less culture of avian and reptilian embryos Bruce E. Dunn; 27. Experimental studies on cultured, shell-less fowl embryos: calcium transport, skeletal development and cardio-vascular functions Rocky S. Tuan, Tamao Ono, Robert E. Akins and Masafumi Koide.

Customer Reviews

Edited By: D Charles Deeming and Mark WJ Ferguson
448 pages, 50 b/w illus, 250 line illus
Media reviews
...an authoritative summary of achievements in the physiological ecology of egg incubation of birds and reptiles, not only reviewing recent developments in this field but defining areas for inquiry. It is exactly what is required for advances in our understanding of the physiology and evolution of the amniote egg. Barry Sinervo, Science "This authoritative work stands as a comprehensive guide to a changing field, and will prove valuable to individuals in developmental biology, physiology, ecology, evolutionary biology, wildlife management, and other zoological disciplines." Choice "As stated in the preface, 'this book...aims to be a comprehensive review of relevant and avian embryonic data: a text designed as a reference guide for the next few years.' The coverage is actually broader than that, and the book serves its purpose well." Thomas R. Howell, Journal of Field Ornithology
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