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    Damaged copy - Carnivorous Plants

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    Damaged copy - Carnivorous Plants - Summarizes the latest research into the physiology, ecology, and evolution of carnivorous plants
    Provides an agenda for future research
    Contributions from the world's leading researchers in the field... Show more
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    Product description

    This is a  slightly damaged copy! (See picture)

    AuthorsAaron Ellison & Lubomír Adamec
    LanguageEnglish
    ISBN9780198833727
    PublisherOxford University Press
    Pages552
    Size246x189mm
    FormatPaperback
    ImagesImages and illustrations
    Year published  2019

    Carnivorous plants have fascinated botanists, evolutionary biologists, ecologists, physiologists, developmental biologists, anatomists, horticulturalists, and the general public for centuries. Charles Darwin was the first scientist to demonstrate experimentally that some plants could actually attract, kill, digest, and absorb nutrients from insect prey; his book Insectivorous Plants (1875) remains a widely-cited classic. Since then, many movies and plays, short stories, novels, coffee-table picture books, and popular books on the cultivation of carnivorous plants have been produced. However, all of these widely read products depend on accurate scientific information, and most of them have repeated and recycled data from just three comprehensive, but now long out of date, scientific monographs. The field has evolved and changed dramatically in the nearly 30 years since the last of these books was published, and thousands of scientific papers on carnivorous plants have appeared in the academic journal literature. In response, Ellison and Adamec have assembled the world's leading experts to provide a truly modern synthesis. They examine every aspect of physiology, biochemistry, genomics, ecology, and evolution of these remarkable plants, culminating in a description of the serious threats they now face from over-collection, poaching, habitat loss, and climatic change which directly threaten their habitats and continued persistence in them.

    Table of Contents

    Part I: Overview
    1:Introduction, Aaron M. Ellison and Lubomír Adamec
    2:Biogeography and habitats of carnivorous plants, J. Stephen Brewer and Jan Schlauer
    3:Evolution of carnivory in angiosperms, Andreas Fleischmann, Jan Schlauer, Stephen A. Smith, and Thomas J. Givnish
    Part II: Systematics and evolution of carnivorous plants
    4:Systematics and evolution of Droseraceae, Andreas Fleischmann, Adam T. Cross, Robert Gibson, Paulo M. Gonella, and Kingsley W. Dixon
    5:Systematics and evolution of NepenthesCharles Clarke, Jan Schlauer, Jonathan Moran, and Alastair Robinson
    6:Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: I. PinguiculaAndreas Fleischmann and Aymeric Roccia
    7:Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: II. GenliseaAndreas Fleischmann
    8:Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: III. UtriculariaRichard W. Jobson, Paulo C. Baleeiro, and Cástor Guisande
    9:Systematics and evolution of Sarraceniaceae, Robert F.C. Naczi
    10:Systematics and evolution of small genera of carnivorous plants, Adam T. Cross, Maria Paniw, André Vito Scatigna, Nick Kalfas, Bruce Anderson, Thomas J. Givnish, and Andreas Fleischmann
    11:Carnivorous plant genomes, Tanya Renner, Tianying Lan, Kimberly M. Farr, Enrique Ibarra-Laclette, Luis Herrera- Esrella, Stephan C. Schuster, Mitsuyasu Hasebe, Kenji Fukushima, and Victor A. Albert
    Part III: Physiology, form, and function
    12:Attraction of prey, John D. Horner, Bartosz J. Plachno, Ulrike Bauer, and Bruno Di Giusto
    13:Functional anatomy of carnivorous traps, Bartosz J. Plachno and Lyudmila E. Muravnik
    14:Motile traps, Simon Poppinga, Ulrike Bauer, Thomas Speck, and Alexander G. Volkov
    15:Non-motile traps, Ulrike Bauer, Reinhard Jetter, and Simon Poppinga
    16:Biochemistry of prey digestion and nutrient absorption, Ildikó Matušiková, Andrej Pavlovic, and Tanya Renner
    17:Mineral nutrition of terrestrial carnivorous plants, Lubomír Adamec and Andrej Pavlovic
    18:Why are plants carnivorous? Cost/benefit analysis, whole-plant growth, and the context- specific advantages of botanical carnivory, Thomas J. Givnish, K. William Sparks, Steven J. Hunter, and Andrej Pavlovic
    19:Ecophysiology of aquatic carnivorous plants, Lubomír Adamec
    20:Biotechnology with carnivorous plants, Laurent Legendre and Douglas W. Darnowski
    Part IV: Ecology
    21:Prey selection and specialization by carnivorous plants, Douglas W. Darnowski, Ulrike Bauer, Marcos Méndez, John D. Horner, and Bartosz J. Plachno
    22:Reproductive biology and prey-pollinator conflicts, Adam T. Cross, Arthur R. Davis, Andreas Fleischmann, John D. Horner, Andreas Jürgens, David J. Merritt, Gillian L. Murza, and Shane R. Turner
    23:Commensals of Nepenthes pitchers, Leonora S. Bittleston
    24:Pitcher-plant communities as model systems for addressing fundamental questions in ecology and evolution, Thomas E. Miller, William E. Bradshaw, and Christina M. Holzapfel
    25:The Utricularia-associated microbiome: composition, function, and ecology, Dagmara Sirová, Jirí Bárta, Jakub Borovec, and Jaroslav Vrba
    26:Nutritional mutualisms of Nepenthes and RoridulaJonathan A. Moran, Bruce Anderson, Lijin Chin, Melinda Greenwood, and Charles Clarke
    Part V: The future of carnivorous plants
    27:Conservation of carnivorous plants, Charles Clarke, Adam Ross, and Barry Rice
    28:Estimating the exposure of carnivorous plants to rapid climatic change, Matthew C. Fitzpatrick and Aaron M. Ellison
    29:The future of research with carnivorous plants, Aaron M. Ellison and Lubomír Adamec

    Specifications

    Article number
    9780198833727
    EAN
    9780198833727

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    1 In stock: Ordered on working days before 17:00, shipped the same day.
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