Insect Movement Mechanisms and Consequences :Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society's 20th Symposium, London, UK, September 1999

Publication subTitle :Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society's 20th Symposium, London, UK, September 1999

Author: Woiwod   I.P.;Thomas   C.D.;Reynolds   D.R.  

Publisher: CABI Publishing‎

Publication year: 2001

E-ISBN: 9780851997810

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780851994567

Subject: Q96 Entomology

Keyword: Insects (Entomology)

Language: ENG

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Description

Knowledge of insect movement, particularly of flight, is crucial to our understanding of the great ecological and evolutionary success of insects. The last 20 years have seen many advances in this subject area. New fields have arisen, such as metapopulation theory, and dramatic developments have taken place in methods of studying movement, as a result of new techniques in molecular biology and radar monitoring. There have also been advances in our knowledge of flight-related physiology and behaviour. This book, which is based on the main papers presented at the Royal Entomological Society's 20th Symposium held in September 1999, brings us up to date with these developments.It contains chapters on:flight mechanismsforaging movementsmigrationthe evolution of movement strategiesthe interactions between dispersal rates, population structure and gene flow the effects of climate change on geographical distributionIt is essential reading for entomologists, and of interest to those researching animal behaviour, physiology, ecology and genetics.

Chapter

2 The Biomechanics and Functional Diversity of Flight

3 How Insect Wings Evolved

4 Physiology and Endocrine Control of Flight

5 Insect Behaviours Associated with Resource Finding

6 Host Location by Parasitoids

7 Flight Trajectories of Foraging Insects: Observations Using Harmonic Radar

8 The Evolution of Migratory Syndromes in Insects

9 Orientation Mechanisms and Migration Strategies Within the Flight Boundary Layer

10 Characterizing Insect Migration Systems in Inland Australia with Novel and Traditional Methodologies

11 Significance of Habitat Persistence and Dimensionality in the Evolution of Insect Migration Strategies

12 Predation and the Evolution of Dispersal

13 Evolution of Mass Transit Systems in Ants: a Tale of Two Societies

14 Dispersal and Conservation in Heterogeneous Landscapes

15 Scale, Dispersal and Population Structure

16 Gene Flow

17 Use of Genetic Diversity in Movement Studies of Flying Insects

18 Coping with Modern Times? Insect Movement and Climate Change

19 Analysing and Modelling Range Changes in UK Butterflies

Index

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