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Books > Science & Mathematics > Biology, life sciences > Zoology & animal sciences
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Bats
(Hardcover)
Heimo Mikkola
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R3,064
Discovery Miles 30 640
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Vertebrate Skeletal Development, Volume 133, the latest release in
the Current Topics in Developmental Biology series, presents
interesting chapters on a variety of topics, with this edition
focusing on Craniofacial skeletal development, Regulatory mechanism
of jawbone and tooth development, Development of the axial skeleton
and intervertebral discs, Stem and progenitor cells in skeletal
development, Origin, functioning and morphogenetic activity of limb
synovial joint, ECM signaling in cartilage development and
endochondral ossification, Sox genes in skeletal development,
Wnt-Signaling in Skeletal Development, Gas signaling in skeletal
development and diseases, FGF signaling in skeletal development,
Bone morphogenetic growth factors in bone development, and more.
From world renowned photographer Michio Hoshino, and with half a million copies sold in Japan, this enduringly popular collection recounts Hoshino's experiences with the wildlife and offers his reflections of our place within it. First published in 1994, and reprinted 57 times (with half a million copies sold), The Travelling Tree by world renowned photographer Michio Hoshino is a literary classic of nature writing. In this enduringly popular collection, naturalist, mystic and adventurer Michio Hoshino recounts his experiences with the wildlife and reflects on and our place within it. Michio Hoshino's life was changed after coming across a book containing an aerial photograph of the tiny Inupuiak (Eskimo) village, Shishmaref, in a used bookstore in Tokyo. The teenager was immediately enchanted by this tiny cluster of dwellings on the Arctic Sea. What sort of people lived in such a desolate place, seemingly at the ends of the Earth? The photograph intrigued him so much that he decided to write a letter asking if he could visit the village. Not knowing to whom he should address the letter, he made it out to simply, "Mayor, Shishmaref." To his surprise, he received a response from an Inupiak family willing to host him and spent the next summer, at the age of 19, immersed in their way of life. After this introduction to Alaska, Hoshino was smitten with America's northernmost state and dedicated the remainder of his life to photographing and writing about it. The Travelling Tree is a collection of his writing published at the peak of his artistic prowess, only two years before his career was tragically cut short at the age of 43 by a fatal bear attack while on a shoot in the Kamchatka Peninsula. The Travelling Tree has gained increasing popularity in the more than 20 years since Hoshino's untimely death. His work has been featured in numerous Japanese television specials and documentaries and an exhibition of his photography has travelled to cities and communities across Japan
Nano-Biopesticides Today and Future Perspectives is the first
single-volume resource to examine the practical development,
implementation and implications of combining the environmentally
aware use of biopesticides with the potential power of
nanotechnology. While biopesticides have been utilized for years,
researchers have only recently begun exploring delivery methods
that utilize nanotechnology to increase efficacy while limiting the
negative impacts traditionally seen through the use of pest control
means. Written by a panel of global experts, the book provides a
foundation on nano-biopesticide development paths, plant health and
nutrition, formulation and means of delivery. Researchers in
academic and commercial settings will value this foundational
reference of insights within the biopesticide realm.
The Flowering of Ecology presents an English translation of Maria
Sibylla Merian's 1679 'caterpillar' book, Der Raupen wunderbare
Verwandelung und sonderbare Blumen-Nahrung. Her processes in making
the book and an analysis of its scientific content are presented in
a historical context. Merian raised insects for five decades,
recording the food plants, behavior and ecology of roughly 300
species. Her most influential invention was an 'ecological'
composition in which the metamorphic cycles of insects (usually
moths and butterflies) were arrayed around plants that served as
food for the caterpillars. Kay Etheridge analyzes the 1679
caterpillar book from the viewpoint of a biologist, arguing that
Merian's study of insect interactions with plants, the first of its
kind, was a formative contribution to natural history. Read Kay
Etheridge's blogpost on "Art Herstory". See inside the book.
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