Recent ideas and experimental studies suggest that the relationship between parasitism and host behaviour has been a powerful shaping force in the evolution not only of behaviour patterns themselves but, through them, of morphology and population and community dynamics. This book brings together recent work across the disciplines of parasitology and animal behaviour which is revealing the fundamental role of parasitism in the evolution of behaviour. The aim is to look broadly at the relationship between parasitism and behaviour from pathology and epidemiology to strategies of exploitation and counter exploitation. In doing so the book will traverse the phylogenetic scale from enteric protozoa and nematodes to colouration and courtship of birds and human cultural traditions.
Edited by:
C F Barnard,
J. M. Behnke
Imprint: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Spine: 24mm
Weight: 707g
ISBN: 9780850664980
ISBN 10: 0850664985
Pages: 346
Publication Date: 09 August 1990
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
General/trade
,
Undergraduate
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Preface, Contributors, Chapter 1. Parasitic relationships, Chapter 2. Pathology and host behaviour, Chapter 3. Physiological alterations during parasitism and their effects on host behaviour, Chapter 4. Parasites and host decision-making, Chapter 5. Parasites and the evolution of host sexual behaviour, Chapter 6. Host behaviour and opportunism in parasite life cycles, Chapter 7. Phylogenetic perspective on the evolution of altered host behaviours: a critical look at the manipulation hypothesis, Appendix 1, Appendix 2, Chapter 8. Human behaviour and the epidemiology of helminth infections: cultural practices and microepidemiology, Chapter 9. Human behaviour and the epidemiology of helminth infections: the role of behaviour in exposure to infection, Chapter 10. Influence of host behaviour on some ectoparasites of birds and mammals