Published in 2006, Chemical Ecology of Vertebrates was the first book to focus exclusively on the chemically-mediated interactions between vertebrates including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals, and other animals and plants. Reviewing research in three core areas - pheromones (where the interactions are between members of the same species), interspecific interactions involving allomones (where the sender benefits) and kairomones (where the receiver benefits), it pulls together information from widely scattered technical literature in many different disciplines into a coherent whole. Chapters on the environment, properties of odour signals, and production and release of chemosignals set the stage for discussion of more complex behavioural topics. While the main focus is ecological, dealing with behaviour and interactions in the field, it also covers chemoreception, orientation and navigation, the development of behaviour and the practical applications of chemosignal
1. The odorsphere: the environment for transmission of chemical signals
2. Properties of vertebrate semiochemicals
3. Odor production and release
4. Chemical cues in orientation and navigation
5. Chemoreception
6. Signaling pheromones
7. Priming pheromones
8. Development of intra- and interspecific chemical interactions
9. Chemical defense by animals
10. Herbivores' exposure to chemical defenses of plants
11. Kairomones and synomones
12. Practical applications of semiochemicals
Glossary
References
Dietland Müller-Schwarze is Professor of Environmental Biology at the State University of New York.
"This is an interesting book for anyone with even a passing interest in chemical ecology... raises awareness and whets the appetite."
- Gordon Hamilton, Bulletin of the British Ecological Society