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Pleistoannelida, Sedentaria II (Hardcover)
Gunter Purschke; Edited by (fouders) Willy Kukenthal; Edited by Markus Boeggemann, Andreas Schmidt-Rhaesa, Wilfried Westheide
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R9,373
Discovery Miles 93 730
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book is the second volume in a series of 4 volumes in the
Handbook of Zoology series treating morphology, anatomy,
reproduction, development, ecology, phylogeny, systematics and
taxonomy of polychaetous Annelida. In this volume a comprehensive
review of a few more derived higher taxa within Sedentaria are
given, namely Sabellida, Opheliida/Capitellida as well as
Hrabeiellidae. The former comprise annelids possessing a body
divided into two more or less distinct regions or tagmata called
thorax and abdomen. Here two groups of families are united, the
spioniform and sabelliform polychaetes. Especially Spionidae and
Sabellidae are speciose families within this group and represent
two of the largest annelid families. These animals live in various
types of burrows or tubes and all possess so-called feeding palps.
In one group these appendages are differentiated as grooved feeding
palps, whereas in the other they may form highly elaborated
circular tentacular crowns comprising a number of radioles mostly
giving off numerous filamentous pinnulae. Often additionally
colourful, the latter are also received the common names
"feather-duster worms", "flowers of the sea", "Christmas-tree
worms". Opheliida/Capitellida including five families of truly
worm-like annelids without appendages represents the contrary.
Their members burrow in soft bottom substrates and may be
classified as non-selective deposit feeders. Molecular phylogenetic
analyses have shown that Echiura or spoon worms, formerly regarded
to represent a separate phylum, are members of this group. Last not
least Hrabeiellidae is one out of only two families of
oligochaete-like terrestrial polychaetes and for this reason
received strong scientific interest.
This volume of the series Handbook of Zoology deals with the
anatomy of the gastrointestinal digestive tract - stomach, small
intestine, caecum and colon - in all eutherian orders and
suborders. It presents compilations of anatomical studies, as well
as an extensive list of references, which makes widely dispersed
literature accessible. Introductory sections to orders and
suborders give notice to biology, taxonomy, biogeography and food
of the respective taxon. It is a characteristic of this book that
different sections of the post-oesophageal tract are discussed
separately from each other. Informations on form and function of
organs of digestion in eutherians are discussed under
comparative-anatomical aspects. The variability and diversity of
anatomical structures represents the basis of functional
differentiations.
Covering 100 years of zoological research, the Handbook of Zoology
represents a vast store of knowledge. Handbook of Zoology provides
an in-depth treatment of the entire animal kingdom covering both
invertebrates and vertebrates. It publishes comprehensive overviews
on animal systematics and morphology and covers extensively further
aspects like physiology, behavior, ecology and applied zoological
research. Although our knowledge regarding many taxonomic groups
has grown enormously over the last decades, it is still the
objective of the Handbook of Zoology to be comprehensive in the
sense that text and references together provide a solid basis for
further research. Editors and authors seek a balance between
describing species richness and diversity, explaining the
importance of certain groups in a phylogenetic context and
presenting a review of available knowledge and up-to-date
references. New contributions to the series present the combined
effort of an international team of editors and authors, entirely
published in English and tailored to the needs of the international
scientific community. Upcoming volumes and projects in progress
include volumes on Annelida (Volumes 1-3), Bryozoa, Mammalia,
Miscellaneous Invertebrates, Nannomecoptera, Neomecoptera and
Strepsiptera and are followed later by fishes, reptiles and further
volumes on mammals. Background The renowned German reference work
Handbook of Zoology was founded in the 1920's by Professor Willi
Kukenthal in Berlin and treated the complete animal kingdom from
single cell organisms to mammals in eight thematic volumes: Volume
I Protozoa, Porifera, Colenteratea, Mesozoa (1925); Volume II
Vermes (1933/34); Volume III Arthropoda ex. Insecta (1927/1932);
Volume IV Arthropoda: Insecta; Volume V Solenogastres, Mollusca,
Echinoderma (1925); Volume VI Pisces / Amphibia (1930); Volume VII
Reptilia / Aves (1931); Volume VIII Mammalia. The Volumes IV
Arthropoda: Insecta and VII Mammalia continued publication into the
present with the most recent contributions in English language.
Adapting to the accelerating speed of scientific discovery in the
past decades the Handbook of Zoology entered a next phase in 2010.
In the new edition of the Handbook of Zoology, the original eight
thematic volumes gave way for smaller and more flexible groupings
that reflect the current state of phylogenetic knowledge. All
subsequent volumes were published in print as well as e-book
format. The Handbook of Zoology is additionally offered as a
database, the Handbook of Zoology Online, which can easily be
searched and rapidly updated. Original Handbook material (ca. 28
000 pages) has been reordered along taxonomic (instead of
bibliographical) categories and forms the historical basis of this
Online Reference Work. As a living Online Reference, the content is
continuously updated and new content added. The material can be
accessed through taxonomic and subject categories as well as free
text, with a diversity of linking and search options. Faster
publication times through online-first publication, reference- and
cross-linking, and make the Handbook of Zoology highly attractive
to both authors and users.
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Handbook of Zoology, Vol VIII: Mammalia; Part 61, Vol 2 - the Flight of Bats (German, English, Hardcover, Reprint 2020)
Willy Kukenthal; Edited by Max Beier, Maximilian Fischer, Johann-Gerhard Helmcke, Dietrich Starck, …
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R6,469
Discovery Miles 64 690
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The present volume continues Koopman's book on the systematics of
the Chiroptera from 1994 with three further contributions, namely
on the Biology of Flight, the Sensory Organs, and on Chronobiology.
Written by internationally wellknown authors these contributions
present information on their topics in unique breadth and depth,
all of them furnished with an extensive bibliography. The language
is either English or German; contributions in the German language
having an English summary.
This book is the first in a series of 4 volumes in the Handbook of
Zoology series about morphology, anatomy, reproduction,
development, ecology, phylogeny and systematics of Annelida. This
first volume covers members of the so-called basal radiation and
the first part of Sedentaria. It is supplemented by chapters on the
history of annelid research, their fossil record, and an
introduction to the phylogeny of annelids and their position in the
tree of life. In the latter chapter the history of their systematic
is reviewed giving an almost complete picture of
systematic-scientific progress especially in the past years which
changed our view on annelid phylogeny dramatically. The most basal
annelids, lately united as Palaeoannelida, represent two families
of aberrant polychaetes formerly often suggested to be highly
derived which now give us a fresh look on how the ancestral annelid
may have looked like. These lack certain key characters such as
nuchal organs and possess rather simple nervous systems which now
likely represent primitive character states. In this basal
radiation the first taxon of apparently unsegmented and
achaetigerous animals is positioned, the Sipuncula. Most likely
another group of platyhelminth-like and unsegmented and even
chaeta-lees annelids, Lobatocerebridae falls into this basal
radiation. The section of Sedentaria starts with Orbiniida, a taxon
characterized by elongated, thread-like worms which do not have
anterior appendages like palps and comprises several families
representing members of the Meiofauna. These minute worms often
inhabiting the interstitial spaces in marine sands are suggested to
have evolved by progenesis. The second higher taxon is represented
by Cirratuliformia comprising nine families of typical sedentary
polychaetes each of which showing a remarkable variation of the
annelid body plan. Members of this taxon usually exhibit many
annelid characters but certain also lack the most typical
prostomial appendages, the palps.
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