quarta-feira, 29 de setembro de 2021

2018 - Gasol & Kirchman (Eds.) - Microbial ecology of the oceans 3ª Edição



"The first edition of Microbial Ecology of the Oceans was published almost 20 years ago, and the second edition reached the bookstores nearly 10 years ago. It is about time for a third edition. This one, like the second edition, is not a revision but really a new book. In addition to having new topics, the book has subjects that had been dealt with in previous versions but have been approached from a different point of view, usually by different authors. This third edition, however, has the same audience as the other two editions: advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate students, and colleagues from other fields wishing to learn about microbes and the processes they mediate in marine systems. As we discuss in Chapter 1, aquatic microbial ecology has become a well‐established discipline that is still growing in size and attracting practitioners from other disciplines. This book is for students and colleagues looking for an updated view of some aspects of the field, written at an accessible level. Although a multi‐authored book of limited size can never be a proper textbook, the various editions of the book—combined, can be used as one—with the additional advantage that together they reflect the evolution of the field (or so we hope). This edition does not replace the two previous ones even if some subjects have advanced more than others since 2000. Although some chapters of the previous editions might now seem old, most are still useful for a basic course in marine microbial ecology or microbial oceanography.

In the introductory chapter to the first edition, Kirchman and Williams argued that it probably would take much less than 20 years of work to fill another book titled Microbial Ecology of the Oceans. Well, two further editions have appeared in nearly 20 years, yet by far not all relevant issues are touched on by the three books, as we discuss in Chapter 1. A new edition is necessarily incomplete. Because only a few chapters can fit in a book like this one, we must necessarily select subjects that we believe relevant, that have clearly changed significantly in the last 10 years or that reflect new ways in which we see our science. We would be rewarded if the different views taken by the authors stimulate further innovative research. One disclaimer: This book is planktocentric. This probably reflects our training and interests and also the setting in which we work, surrounded by oceanographers and biogeochemists. We considered having chapters on the benthic habitat (there was one in the second edition), as well as special habitats like sea ice, polluted environments, hydrothermal vents, or the microbiomes of large eukaryotic plants and animals. But this would have increased the size of the book in unaffordable ways or would have been a partial view of a growing field (e.g., microbiomes).

In addition to presenting the science, we would like to contribute to how it is executed. We think the field is still very much compartmentalized. Often researchers focused on phytoplankton do not deal with bacteria or archaea, or those that have viruses as their target do not care much about what protist people do. In the same way, sponge microbiome people interact little with plankton ecologists, except when they have new methods in common. Some of the chapters in this third edition have a focus on bacteria or phytoplankton or viruses, but several are cross‐cutting and include both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, or because they are more biogeochemical, deal with several groups of organisms. We hope to contribute to breaking down the barriers between topics in marine microbial ecology.

Are textbooks still needed? Both editors of this book recently had to clean out their offices for renovation. We threw away whole collections of journals and hundreds of reprints. To (maybe) the despair of science historians, we threw away letters and preprints and submitted (and rejected!) versions of manuscripts, but neither of us threw out any relevant books, even textbooks from the last century. We hope the previous editions of Microbial Ecology of the Oceans, and this new one, will stand in libraries and remain in your office for years in the future even when renovation comes along.

We thank everyone that has been involved in this third edition, especially the authors that contributed manuscripts and the reviewers of the book syllabus and of the various chapters. In some cases, authors of this edition or of chapters in previous editions served as reviewers. In particular, we would like to thank Claudia Benitez‐Nelson, Alison Buchan, Craig Carlson, Matt Church, Byron Crump, Paul del Giorgio, Virgina Edgcomb, Kyle Edwards, Zoe Finkel, Hans‐Peter Grossart, Åke Hagström, Thomas Kiørboe, Emilio Marañón, Ramon Massana, Mark Moore, Mary Ann Moran, Mark Saito, Ruth‐Anne Sandaa, Marta Sebastián, Evelyn and Barry Sherr, Meinhard Simon, Osvaldo Ulloa, Daniel Vaulot, and Erik Wommack. We especially thank Clara Ruiz‐González for the figures in Chapter 1, and our students and colleagues (some contributed to compiling Table 1.1) for discussion about many aspects of the book." (Josep M. Gasol & David L. Kirchman)


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terça-feira, 28 de setembro de 2021

2013 - Fleagle - Primate Adaptation and Evolution 3ª Edição



"Primatology and primate evolution have changed considerably in the two and a half decades since the first edition of Primate Adaptation and Evolution was written. Like all other areas on knowledge, our knowledge of these subjects has  increased  dramatically,  and  the  published  literature manyfold. There are more species, more sites, more studies,  more  techniques,  more  analyses,  more  articles,  more journals, and, hopefully, more understanding. But there is also more evidence of just how limited out current knowledge actually is, and how much it is likely to change in the future. This, like every other book, is perhaps best viewed as a progress report rather than a synthesis.

In  this  edition,  every  chapter  has  been  revised  and rewritten, some much more than others. All of the tables have been redone; there are many new figures; and most of the references are new. Some of these changes deserve further explanation.

The number of recognized primate species has risen dramatically in the past decade. There are many reasons for this. Partly it reflects an extensive increase in fieldwork in remote parts of the world that has generated a greater appreciation of the details of primate biogeography and diversity. In addition, the increasing influence of molecular systematics has generated new insights into the genetic diversity among primate populations. Finally, the widespread use of the Phylogenetic Species Concept has had a major effect on the abilities and willingness of systematists to describe and diagnose new or forgotten taxa. In general, I have used the IUCN Red List website in creating the tables of extant species in this volume. However, this increase in recognized primate species has created problems in the use of older literature for retrieving information about the behavior, ecology, body mass or limb proportions of individual taxa. For example, data that in previous decades, or previous editions of this book, were attributed to the single species of woolly lemur, Avahi laniger, may well have been derived from one of several other species now recognized as distinct in that genus. Readers should thus view the data in the tables especially as only rough estimates for the purpose of broad comparisons, not detailed analyses.

In previous editions, I tried to provide body mass estimates  from  most  species  of  fossil  primates  derived  from a single regression formula based on molar tooth dimensions. However, in the current edition I have relied more on estimates of the size of fossil species from a wide variety of sources in the literature, based on many different parameters.  Thus  many  estimates  across  taxa  are  not  methodologically comparable. They are meant to give the reader a general appreciation for the size of extinct taxa in a general sense and are not meant to be suitable for detailed analyses.

As in  previous editions,  I  have  included two types of references  for  each  chapter.  There  are  general  references which provide broad reviews of the topics covered in that chapter. These are designed to provide more detailed documentation  and  discussion,  and  in  some  cases,  alternative views on the material discussed in that chapter. In addition, there are numerous citations within the text of each chapter that are listed as cited references at the end of the chapter. These are not meant to provide a comprehensive or even representative documentation for the contents of the chapter. Rather they are meant to provide the readers with an entry into the literature regarding particular facts and ideas that I found interesting and/or significant. In particular, I have cited relatively recent publications that may not appear in the larger General references. However, in the early part of the twentieth century, I fully expect any reader will be able to find numerous additional references to any topic in this book through an online search.

This edition of Primate Adaptation and Evolution contains many additional illustrations. As with previous editions I have limited these to line drawings and black and white photos with an emphasis on comparisons rather than documentation and description. Nevertheless, I appreciate that these do not capture the remarkable beauty and diversity of living primates or the details of morphology that are available in various other media, including videos and 3-dimensional figures. Readers are urged to look more widely for additional illustrative materials, and I especially recommend All the World's Primates (www.alltheworldsprimates.org).

This  edition  has  benefitted  from  the  generous  advice, assistance  and  expertise  of  many  people. The  efforts  and contributions  of  those  listed  in  previous  editions  are  still greatly  appreciated.  For  help  with  this  edition,  I  thank  the  following  people,  in  no  particular  order:  Alfred  Rosenberger,  Todd  Disotell,  Callum  Ross,  Colin  Groves, Richard Kay, James Rossie, Tim Smith, Chris Kirk, Mark Coleman,  Stephanie  Maiolino,  Doug  Boyer,  Steve  Leigh, Andreas  Koenig,  Carola  Borries,  Charles  Janson,  Tim Clutton-Brock, Katie Hinde, Erin Vogel, Peter Lucas, Nate Dominy, Vivek Venkataraman, Diane Doran-Sheehy, Scott Suarez, Herman Pontzer, Patricia Wright, Chia Tan, Mireya Mayor,  Shawn  Lehman,  Rachel  Jacobs,  Laurie  Godfrey, Tim  Ryan,  Bill  Jungers,  Brigitte  demes,  Betsy  Dumont,  Suzanne  Strait,  Sara  Martin,  Anja  Deppe,  Ian  Tattersall,  Myron  Shekelle,  Dan  Gebo,  Marion  Dagosto, Anna  Nekaris,  Anne Yoder,  Christian  Roos,  Russ  Mittermeier, Sharon  Gursky,  Peter  Kappeler,  Tony  DiFiore,  Marilyn  Norconk, Alfred Rosenberger, Paul Garber, Anthony Rylands, Leila  Porter,  Mark Van  Roosmalen,  Barth Wright,  Karen Wright, Scott McGraw, Joan Silk, Chris Gilbert, Eric Sargis, Alice Elder, Wendy Erb, David Fernandez, Jessica Rothman, Jessica  Lodwick,  Michael  Steiper,  Richard  Wrangham, John Mitani, Dan Lieberman, Sarah Hrdy, Kristen Hawkes, Kim  Hill,  Kaye  Reed,  Jason  Kamilar,  Sandy  Harcourt,  Oliver  Schulke,  Julia  Oster,  Jon  Bloch,  Philip  Gingerich, Frank Brown, Thure Cerling, Craig Feibel, Ian McDougall, Mary Silcox, Stephen Chester, Gregg Gunnell, Xijun Ni, Matt Cartmill, Ken Rose, Lawrence Flynn, Chris Heesy, Elwyn Simons,  Nancy  Stevens,  Jorn  Hurum,  Blythe  Williams,  Walter Hartwig, Jonathan Perry, Marc Godinot, Chris Beard,  Mark  Klinger,  Lauren  Halenar,  Siobhan  Cooke,  Alexa Krupp,  Castor  Cartelle,  Ross  MacPhee,  Terry  Harrison,  Bill Sanders, Iyad Zalmout, Jay Kelley, John  Kappelman, David Alba, Sergio Almecija, Salvador Moya-Sola, Isaac Casanovas-Vilar,  David  Pilbeam,  Ellen  Miller,  Ari  Grossman, Nina Jablonski, Rajeev Patnaik, Russ Ciochon, Brenda  Benefit,  Eric  Delson,  Martin  Pickford,  Mauricio Anton, Meave Leakey, The Turkana Basin Institute, Richard  Leakey,  Carol  Ward,  Michael  Plavcan,  Peter  Ungar,  The Kenya  National  Museum,  Michel  Brunet,  Franck  Guy,  Bill  Kimbel,  Adam  Gordon,  Bernard  Wood,  Brian  Richmond,  Chris  Stringer,  Randall  Susman,  Fred  Grine, Karen Baab, Philip Rightmire, David Strait, Ian Wallace, Gunter  Brauer,  Susan  Larson,  Zeray  Alemseged,  Tim White, John Shea, Lee Berger, and many others I may have overlooked.

As with previous editions, the heart of this book is the illustrations.  Most  of  these  are  the  due  to  the  longterm efforts  and  unfailing  patience  of  Stephen  Nash  and  Luci Betti-Nash. In their talented hands even the most muddled ideas  are  somehow  transformed  into  illustrations  that  are crisp and understandable.

Several  people  were  especially  helpful  in  the  production of this edition. Mary Silcox provided the classification of  plesiadapiforms.  Stevie  Carnation,  Amanda  Kingston, Rachel  Jacobs,  and  Ian  Wallace  contributed  herculean efforts in the construction and ordering of tables, figures, and references. Amanda and Ian were invaluable in correcting the proofs. Rachel wrote all of the teacher aids. Most of all, this edition owes its existence to the sustained efforts of Dr. Andrea Baden, whose scientific knowledge and judgment, editorial, graphic and photographic skills, and overall organizational abilities pulled it all together into a coherent volume." (John G. Fleagle)


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sexta-feira, 10 de setembro de 2021

2019 - Souza, Vázquez & Marucci (Eds.) - Natural Enemies of Insect Pests in Neotropical Agroecosystems: Biological Control and Functional Biodiversity

 


"The use of biological agents for phytosanitary management has increased  considerably in recent years, which is due to the awareness of the benefits derived from its use. Several  factors  contribute  to  this  new  perception,  among  which  are  the  selection of populations of resistant organisms caused by indiscriminate use of phytosanitary products, the problems related to environmental contamination, and exposure of the applicators to the products used. Besides that, producers have recognized this form of control as a highly efficient technique and responsible for guaranteeing quality and free of chemical residue products, which meets the demands of a consumer market increasingly aware of the need for healthy and safe health foods.

These arguments have encouraged the scientific community to develop more sustainable control strategies with the consequent formation of research groups on biological control of pest arthropods, weeds, and plant diseases in order to contribute to the expansion and success of this control method. In addition, regulatory requirements  imposed  by  the  United  States  and  European  countries,  which  determine acceptable levels of residues and banned active ingredients, have raised expectations of growth in the number of companies producing biological control agents in the world.

The megadiversity of species present in the Neotropical region, which is represented by the countries of Latin America, and the Caribbean islands, gives this region high exploration potential for bioprospecting new control agents. However, although there are research projects and published studies, pest management with the use of natural enemies is still incipient, and the knowledge generated is dispersed, not contextualizing the reality about the use of biological control in diverse environments in that part of the continent.

The  reader  will  find  in  Natural  Enemies  of  Insect  Pests  in  Neotropical Agroecosystems: Biological Control and Functional Biodiversity a set of information  related  to  the  functionality  of  plant  diversification,  focusing  on  agricultural production and biological control (conservative and large-scale production) and the use of these bioagents in large crops, pastures, forests, ornamental and horticultural plants, weeds, and plant diseases. Finally, examples of biological control integration with other pest management strategies resulting from research carried out in Latin America will be addressed.

The book has the participation of 92 researchers from 33 research institutions and universities from 8 Latin American countries. Many of the results presented in the book are the fruit of research projects of undergraduate students and the graduate program in Entomology (PPGEN) of Lavras Federal University (UFLA), as well as of former PPGEN graduates who currently act as researchers in Brazilian institutions and other Latin American countries. Thus, 35 PPGEN graduates contributed to the preparation of the book, which will be a vehicle for disseminating the knowledge generated in the area of CB in the last 30 years of PPGEN/UFLA." (Brígida Souza, Luis L. Vázquez & Rosangela C. Marucci)


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