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Ecology of the Acanthocephala
This 2006 book examines the ecology of spiny-headed worms and how they survive successfully in aquatic and terrestrial systems.
C. R. Kennedy (Author)
9781107405301, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 July 2012
260 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.35 kg
'The book has been produced with care, both by the author and the publisher, and is enjoyable to read … I can honestly recommend this book as a good read, more so because its raison d'être was not to promote yet another human pathogen but to express the intrinsically fascinating biology shown by this small, but not unassuming, group of parasites. In this it succeeds admirably.' Biologist
Acanthocephalans, or spiny-headed worms, are endoparasites found in almost all marine, freshwater and terrestrial systems. They infect a huge range of definitive and intermediate hosts during their life cycles, including both vertebrates and arthropods. This volume, first published in 2006, examines the distribution and abundance of the Acanthocephala, and uses this ecological information to reveal the group's enormous survival success. It discusses how the acanthocephalans have evolved differently to all other groups of parasites, and represent a distinct and alternative pathway of parasite evolution and host parasite-interactions. Written for graduate students and researchers in parasitology, ecology and zoology or anyone interested in reading about parasite ecology and evolution.
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Life cycles and transmission
3. Biogeography and distribution
4. Specificity
5. Host–parasite interactions
6. Population dynamics
7. Community dynamics
8. Introductions and extinctions
9. Relations to ecosystem changes
10. Conclusions
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Zoology: Invertebrates [PSVT], Parasitology [non-medical PSGH], Ecological science, the Biosphere [PSAF]