Chemical ecology: The chemistry of biotic interaction
Chemical signals among organisms form `a vast communicative interplay, fundamental to the fabric of life,` in the words of one expert. Chemical ecology is the discipline that seeks to understand these interactions to use biology in the search for new substances of potential benefit to humankind. This book highlights selected research areas of medicinal and agricultural importance. Leading experts review the chemistry of: (1) insect defense and its applications to pest control; (2) Phyletic dominance--the survival success of insects; (3) Social regulation, with ant societies as a model of multicomponent signaling systems; (4) Eavesdropping, alarm, and deceit--the array of strategies used by insects to find and lure prey; (5) Reproduction--from the gamete attraction to courtship and sexual selection; (6) the chemistry of intracellular immunosuppression. Topics also include the appropriation of dietary factors for defense and communication; the use of chemical signals in the marine environment; the role of the olfactory system in chemical analysis; and the interaction of polydnaviruses, endoparasites, and the immune system of the host.
- Research Organization:
- National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC (United States)
- OSTI ID:
- 393237
- Report Number(s):
- PB-96-203906/XAB; ISBN 0-309-05281-5; TRN: 62891648
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: DN: Color illustrations reproduced in black and white. Library of Congress catalog card No. 95-18685; PBD: 1995
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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