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|a Grimaldi, David
|9 15292
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|a Evolution of the insects /
|c David Grimaldi
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250 |
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|a 1st ed; repr.
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260 |
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|a Cambridge :
|b Cambridge University Press,
|c 2006.
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300 |
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|a 755 p. :
|b il., fot (alg. col.) ;
|c 30 cm.
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500 |
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|a Incluye índice analítico
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505 |
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|a 1. Diversity and Evolution -- Introduction -- Species: Their nature and number -- Drosophila -- Apis -- How Many Species of Insects? -- Reconstructing evolutionary history -- Systematics and Evolution -- Taxonomy, Nomenclature, and Classification -- Paleontology -- 2. Fossil Insects -- Insect fossilitation -- Types of Preservation -- Dating and ages -- Major fossil insect deposits -- Paleozoic -- Mesozoic -- Cenozoic -- 3. Arthropods and the Origin of Insects -- Onychophora: The velvet worms -- Tardigrada: The water bears -- Arthropoda: The jointed animals -- Marellomorpha: The Lace Crabs -- Arachnomorpha: Trilobites, Arachnids, and Relatives -- Crustaceomorpha -- Mandibulata -- The Invasion of Land -- Hexapoda: The six-legged arthropods -- Entognatha: Protura, Collembola, and Diplura -- 4. The Insects -- Mophlgy of insects -- General Structure -- The Head -- The Thorax -- The Abdomen -- Defining features of the insects -- Relationships among the insect orders -- A Brief History of Work -- A Roadmap to the Phylogeny of Insects -- 5. Earliest Insects -- Archaeognatha: The bristletails -- Dicondylia -- Sygentoma: The silverfish -- Rhyniognatha -- 6. Insects Take to the Skies -- Pterygota,Wings, and fligth -- Insect Wings -- Ephemeroptera: The mayflies -- Metapterygota -- PALAEODICTYOPTERIDA: extinct beaked insects -- Palaeodictyoptera -- Dicliptera -- Megasecoptera -- Diaphanopterodea -- Paleozoic Herbivory -- ODONATOPTERA: dragonflies and early relatives -- Geroptera -- Holodonata: Protodonata and Odonata -- Protodonata: The Griffenflies -- Order Odonata: The Dragonflies and Damselflies -- 7. Polyneoptera -- NEOPTERA -- What are Polyneoptera? -- Plecopterida -- Orthopterida -- PLECOPTERA: the stoneflies -- EMBIODEA: the webspinners -- ZORAPTERA: the Zorapterans -- ORTHOPTERA: the crickets, katydids, grasshoppers, wetas and kin -- Ensifera -- Caelifera -- PHASMATODEA: the stick and leaf insects -- TITANOPTERA: the titanic crawlers -- CALONEURODEA: the Caloneurodeans -- DERMAPTERA: the earwigs -- GRYLLOBLATTODEA: the ice crawlers -- MANTOPHASMATODEA: the african rock crawlers dictyoptera -- Dictyopteran Relationships -- Blattaria: The Roaches -- Citizen Roach: Isoptera (Termites) -- The Predatory Roachoids: Mantodea (Mantises) -- Ages of the Dictyoptera -- 8. The Paraneopteran Orders -- PSOCOPTERA: the bark lice -- PHTHIRAPTERA: the true lice -- Fossils and Ages -- FRINGE WINGS: Thysanoptera (Thrips) -- Feeding Habits -- Social Behavior -- Diversity and Relationships -- Fossils and Origins -- The sucking insects: Hemiptera -- Sternorrhyncha: Aphids, Whiteflies, Plant Lice, and Scale Insects -- Auchenorrhyncha: The Cicadas, Plant Hoppers, and Tree Hoppers -- Coleorrhyncha -- Heteroptera: The “True Bugs” -- 9. The Holometabola -- Problematic fossil orders -- Miomoptera -- Glosselytrodea -- The origins of complete metamorphosis -- On wings of lace: Neuropterida -- Raphidioptera: The Snakeflies -- Megaloptera: The Alderflies and Dobsonflies -- Neuroptera: The Lacewings, Antlions, and Relatives -- 10. Coleoptera and Strepsiptera -- Early fossils and overview of past diversity -- ARCHOSTEMATA -- ADEPHAGA -- MYXOPHAGA -- POLYPHAGA -- STREPSIPTERA: The enigmatic order -- Diversity -- Relationships to Other Orders -- Fossils -- 11. Hymenoptera: Ants, Bees, and Other Wasps -- The Euhymenoptera and parasitism -- ACULEATA -- The Ants -- The Bees (Anthophila) -- Evolution of insect sociality -- 12. Panorpida: Antliophora and Amphiesmenoptera -- PANORPIDA -- Antliophora: the scorpionflies, true and fleas -- MECOPTERIDA: Mecopterans and Siphonaptera -- Early History -- Recent Diversity and Relationships -- The Fleas -- Evolution of Ectoparasites and Blood Feeders of Vertebrates -- DIPTERA: The tre flies -- The Brachycera -- The Cyclorrhapha -- 13. Amphiesmenoptera: The Caddisflies and Lepidoptera -- TRICHOPTERA: The caddisflies -- LEPIDOPTERA: The moths and butterflies -- Mesozoic Fossils -- Basal Groups -- Ditrysia -- The “Higher” Ditrysians: Macrolepidoptera -- Butterflies and Their Relatives (Rhopalocera) -- Mimicry -- 14. Insects Become Modern: The Cretaceous and Tertiary Periods -- The Cretaceous -- Flowering of the World: The Angiosperm Radiations -- Plant Sex and Insects: Insect Pollination -- Radiations of Phytophagous Insects -- Austral Arthropods: Remnants of Gondwana? -- Insects, Mass Extinctions, and the K/T Boundary -- The Tertiary -- Mammalian Radiations -- Pleistocene Dispersal and Species Lifespans -- Island Faunas -- 15. Epilogue -- Why so many insect species? -- Age -- Design -- Capacity for High Speciation Rates -- Low Rates of Natural Extinction.
|
650 |
|
4 |
|a Entomología
|9 12613
|
650 |
|
0 |
|a Paleontología
|9 5693
|
650 |
|
4 |
|a Evolución
|9 1454
|
700 |
|
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|a Engel, Michael S.
|9 15293
|
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