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El. knyga: Muscles of Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Evolution, Homologies and Development

, (Howard University College of Medicine, Washington DC, USA)
  • Formatas: 500 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Jul-2010
  • Leidėjas: Science Publishers,U.S.
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439845622
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 500 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Jul-2010
  • Leidėjas: Science Publishers,U.S.
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439845622
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The Vertebrata is one of the most speciose groups of animals, comprising more than 58,000 living species. This book provides a detailed account on the comparative anatomy, development, homologies and evolution of the head, neck, pectoral and forelimb muscles of vertebrates. It includes hundreds of illustrations, as well as numerous tables showing the homologies between the muscles of all the major extant vertebrate taxa, including lampreys, elasmobranchs, hagfish, coelacanths, dipnoans, actinistians, teleosts, halecomorphs, ginglymodians, chondrosteans, caecilians, anurans, urodeles, turtles, lepidosaurs, crocodylians, birds, and mammals such as monotremes, rodents, tree-shrews, flying lemurs and primates, including modern humans. It also provides a list of more than a thousand synonyms that have been used by other authors to designate these muscles in the literature. Importantly, it also reviews data obtained in the fields of evolutionary developmental biology, molecular biology and embryology, and explains how this data helps to understand the evolution and homologies of vertebrate muscles.

The book will useful to students, teachers, and researchers working in fields such as functional morphology, ecomorphology, evolutionary developmental biology, zoology, molecular biology, evolution, and phylogeny. As the book includes crucial information about the anatomy, development, homologies, evolution and muscular abnormalities of our own species, Homo sapiens, it will also be helpful to physicians and medical students.

Preface v
Acknowledgements vii
1 Introduction and Aims 1(5)
2 Methodology and Material 6(14)
3 Muscles of Non-Osteichthyan Vertebrates 20(41)
4 Head and Neck Muscles of Actinopterygians and Basal Sarcopterygians 61(47)
5 From Sarcopterygian Fish to Modern Humans: Head Muscles and Neck 108(97)
6 Head and Neck Muscles of Amphibians 205(23)
7 Head and Neck Muscles of Reptiles 228(43)
8 Pectoral and Pectoral Fin Muscles of Actinopterygian and Sarcopterygian Fishes 271(16)
9 From Sarcopterygian Fish to Modern Humans: Pectoral and Forelimb Muscles 287(72)
10 Pectoral and Forelimb Muscles of Limbed Amphibians and Reptiles 359(62)
11 General Comments 421(30)
11.1 Muscular splittings, fusions, paedomorphism, reversions and anatomical complexity
421(5)
11.2 Myological characters and phylogenetic reconstructions
426(8)
11.3 Myology, evolutionary developmental biology, model organisms, and the zebrafish
434(9)
11.4 Proposal of a unifying nomenclature for the muscles of vertebrates
443(8)
References 451(20)
Index 471(6)
About the Authors 477(2)
Color Plate Section 479
Rui Diogo: Dept of Anthropology, George Washington University, USA

Virginia Abdala: Professor, Universidad Nacional de Tucumįn, Argentina