Energetics of Desert Invertebrates
Energetics of Desert Invertebrates
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Author(s): Heatwole, Harold
ISBN No.: 9783642646065
Pages: xii, 266
Year: 201203
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 158.12
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

1 Introduction.- 1.1 Energetics.- 1.2 Deserts and Their Environments.- 1.2.1 Formation of Deserts.


- 1.2.2 Diagnostic Features of Deserts.- 1.3 The Deserts of the World.- 1.4 Desert Invertebrates.- 2 Foraging: The Acquisition of Energy.


- 2.1 Introduction.- 2.2 Optimal Foraging.- 2.3 Sit-and-Wait Foragers.- 2.4 Patterns of Active Foraging.


- 2.5 Factors Influencing Foraging.- 2.5.1 Internal Rhythms.- 2.5.2 Physical Factors.


- 2.5.2.1 Temperature.- 2.5.2.2 Moisture.


- 2.5.2.3 Light.- 2.5.2.4 Other Physical Factors.


- 2.5.2.5 Adaptive Strategies in Response to Harsh Physical Conditions.- 2.5.3 Food Supply.- 2.


6 Biotic Interactions and Foraging.- 2.6.1 Cooperation.- 2.6.1.1 Factors Affecting Mass Recruitment of Foragers by Ants.


- 2.6.2 Competition and Aggression.- 2.6.2.1 Exploitative Competition.- 2.


6.2.2 Interference Competition.- 2.6.3 Predation.- 2.7 Interactions of Factors.


- 2.8 Differences Among Ant Colonies in Foraging Activity.- 2.9 Role of Learning and Memory in Foraging and Food Processing.- 2.10 Apportionment of Foraging and other Activities.- 2.11 Foraging Success.


- 3 Metabolism: The Expenditure of Energy.- 3.1 Introduction.- 3.2 Metabolism and Temperature.- 3.2.1 Q10.


- 3.2.2 Acclimation.- 3.3 Metabolism and Water.- 3.3.1 Metabolic Water.


- 3.4 Metabolism and Activity.- 3.5 Metabolism and Body Size.- 3.6 Metabolism and Sex.- 3.7 Metabolism and Life-History Stage.


- 3.8 Metabolism and Biological Rhythm.- 3.9 Metabolism and Depth in Ground.- 3.10 Group Effects on Metabolism.- 3.11 Depressed Metabolism as a Desert Adaptation.


- 3.11.1 Taxa with Generally Low Metabolic Rates.- 3.11.2 Temporary Metabolic Depression During Food Shortage.- 4 Budgeting of Energy.- 4.


1 Introduction.- 4.2 Ingestion.- 4.3 Digestion.- 4.4 Assimilation.- 4.


5 Maintenance and Activity.- 4.6 Respiratory Quotients.- 4.7 Growth.- 4.8 Reproduction.- 4.


8.1 Direct Responses to Environmental Stimulation.- 4.8.2 Inhibition of Reproduction.- 4.8.3 Evolutionarily Adjusted Rhythms.


- 4.8.4 Adaptations in Life-History Characteristics.- 4.9 Egestion.- 4.10 Energy Budgets.- 4.


11 Energetics of Different Life-History Stages.- 4.12 Energy Expended in Desert Adaptation.- 5 Storage: The Hoarding of Energy.- 5.1 Introduction.- 5.2 Food Storage.


- 5.3 Body Reserves.- 5.3.1 Use of Larvae or Workers as Storage Receptacles.- 5.3.2 Cannibalism as Storage -.


- 5.4 Agriculture and Animal Husbandry.- 6 Quiescence and Dormancy: Waiting Out Energy Shortages.- 6.1 Introduction.- 6.2 Quiescence and Dormancy.- 6.


3 Diapause.- 6.4 Anhydrobiosis.- 6.5 Encystment of Protozoans.- 6.6 Risks of Dormancy.- 7 Migration and Nomadism: Tracking Energy Sources.


- 7.1 Introduction.- 7.2 Orthopteran Movements.- 7.2.1 Individual Flights.- 7.


2.2 Gregarious Flights.- 7.3 Other Nomadic Insects in Deserts.- 7.4 Migration on a Microscale.- 8 Community Dynamics: The Flow of Energy.- 8.


1 Introduction.- 8.2 Community Structure.- 8.3 Food Webs: Pathways of Energy Flow.- 8.4 Trophic Structure.- 8.


5 Quantitative Cycling of Energy and Nutrients.- 8.6 Interaction of Climatic and Biotic Factors in Cycling.- 9 Overview.- References.


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