Principles of Insect Morphology

Principles of Insect Morphology
Author: Robert E. Snodgrass
Publisher: Comstock Publishing Associates
Total Pages: 696
Release: 1993
Genre: Nature
ISBN:

**** Reprint of the McGraw-Hill book originally published in 1935 in the series McGraw-Hill Publications in the Zoological Sciences (and cited in BCL3). New foreword. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Textbook of Arthropod Anatomy

Textbook of Arthropod Anatomy
Author: R. E. Snodgrass
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 481
Release: 2019-03-15
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1501740814

The facts of arthropod structure are presented in clear, easy-to-use fashion in this text by R. E. Snodgrass. Examples of each of the classes from trilobites to insects are given. Musculature and mechanism of legs, eyes, feeding apparatus, body, head, and organs of digestion, excretion, and reproduction are described and illustrated. Over 640 drawings, most of them by the author, are arranged in 88 figures.

Insect Morphology and Phylogeny

Insect Morphology and Phylogeny
Author: Rolf G. Beutel
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages: 532
Release: 2013-12-12
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3110264048

In the last decades a remarkable renaissance has materialized in insect morphology, mainly triggered by the development of new cutting-edge technologies. This is an exciting time for biological synthesis where the mysteries and data derived from genomes can be combined with centuries of data from morphology and development. And, now, more than ever, detailed knowledge of morphology is essential to understanding the evolution of all groups of organisms. In this “age of phylogenomics” researchers rely on morphological data to support molecular findings, test complex evolutionary scenarios, and for placing fossil taxa. This textbook provides an in-depth treatment of the structures and the phylogeny of the megadiverse Hexapoda. The first part presents an up-to-date overview of general insect morphology with detailed drawings, scanning electron micrographs, and 3-D reconstructions. Also included is a chapter covering innovative morphological techniques (e.g., μ-computer tomography, 3-D modeling), brief treatments of insect development and phylogenetic methods, and a comprehensive morphological glossary. The second part is of a modern synthesis of insect systematics that includes taxon-specific morphological information for all Orders. The work is an invaluable reference for students and researchers working in all facets of biology and is a must for evolutionary biologists. A detailed understanding of morphology is essential in unraveling phylogenetic relationships and developing complex evolutionary scenarios. Increasingly researchers in phylogenomics are re/turning to morphological data to support their findings, while the development of new cutting-edge technologies has further increased interest in this growing field. This definitive handbook provides an in-depth treatment of insect morphology. The first part presents an up-to-date overview of insect morphology with detailed drawings, brilliant scanning electron micrographs and 3-D reconstructions as interactive PDFs. This is complemented by a chapter on innovative morphological techniques (e.g., μ-computer tomography, 3-D modeling) and a comprehensive morphological glossary. The second part treats the state of the art in insect systematics and includes taxon-specific morphological information for all orders. Systematics are treated formally, with for example the arguments for relationships (“apomorphies”) always listed explicitly. The work is a useful reference for students and researchers working in different fields of biology and a must for those dealing with insects from an evolutionary perspective.

Principles of Insects Morphology

Principles of Insects Morphology
Author: A. B. Saxena
Publisher:
Total Pages: 340
Release: 1996
Genre:
ISBN: 9788174883476

Principles Of Insect Morphology Deals With The Elongated And Slender Body Of The Insects And All Principles Leading To The Insect Morphology. The Text Of The Book Has Been Carefully Organised To Meet The Long Felt Needs Of A Large Number Of Students And Research Scholars Who Deal With Different Aspects Of Entomology. The Title Is Intelligible To The Educated Layman But It Deals With Some Complex Ideas.The General Entomologist And Students Of Agricultural Entomology Will Find In This Book Valuable And Recent Information On The Subject And Its Allied Branches. The Book Provides A Nucleus Around Which The Teacher Can Plan A Successful Course Without Much Bearing On Complementary And Supplementary Readings. The Book Contains Diagrams, Graphs, Tables And Photographs Wherever Necessary.The Book Will Prove To Be A Boon To Teachers, Students And Research Scholars.

The Principles of Insect Physiology

The Principles of Insect Physiology
Author: Vincent B. Wigglesworth
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 832
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9400959737

INSECTS PROVIDE an ideal medium in which to study all the problems of physiology. But if this medium is to be used to the best advantage, the principles and peculiarities of the insect's organization must be first appreciated. It is the purpose of this book to set forth these principles so far as they are understood at the present day. There exist already many excellent text-books of general ento mology; notably those of Imms, Weber, and Snodgrass, to mention only the more recent. But these authors have necessarily been preoccupied chiefly with describing the diversity of form among insects; discussions on function being correspondingly condensed. In the present work the emphasis is reversed. Struc ture is described only to an extent sufficient to make the physiological argument intelligible. Every anatomical peculiarity, every ecological specialization, has indeed its physiological counterpart. In that sense, anatomy, physiology and ecology are not separable. But regarded from the standpoint from which the present work is written, the endless modifications that are met with among insects are but illustrations of the general principles of their physiology, which it is the aim of this book to set forth. Completeness in such a work is not possible, or desirable; but an endeavour has been made to illustrate each physiological characteristic by a few concrete examples, and to include sufficient references to guide the student to the more important sources. The physiology of insects is to some the handmaid of Economic Entomology.