Insect Taste
Vol 63
Edited by Philip Newland, Matthew Cobb, Frederic Marion-Poll
Published October 3rd 2008 by Taylor & Francis – 266 pages
Series: Society for Experimental Biology
Published October 3rd 2008 by Taylor & Francis – 266 pages
Series: Society for Experimental Biology
Insect Taste offers an accessible overview to some of the many advances in insect taste research. The book covers how insects solve the basic problem of taste gustatory processing, from detection and transduction, through coding to the generation of behavior and the evolutionary biology underpinning gustaory learning.
Preface
Chapter 1: Gustation in Drosophila Melanogaster
Chapter 2: Drosophila Gr5a: Expression Pattern, Ligand Profile and Transduction Pathway
Chapter 3: Neurophysiology of Gustatory Receptor Neurons in Drosophila
Chapter 4: Chemosensory Regulation of Feeding in the Blowfly: Several Studies after the Hungry Fly
Chapter 5: Tasting in Plant-Feeding Insects: From Single Compounds to Complex Natural Stimuli
Chapter 6: Tasting Toxicants as Bitter: Phytoecdysteroids
Chapter 7: Peripheral Modulation of Taste Responses
Chapter 8: The "Sweet Tooth" of the Honeybee: The Perception of Nectar and its Influence on Honeybee Behaviour
Chapter 9: Effects of Experience on the Physiology of Taste Discrimination in Insects
Chapter 10: Evolutionary Biology of Learning in Insect: The Search for Food
Name: Insect Taste: Vol 63 (Hardback) – Taylor & Francis
Description: Edited by Philip Newland, Matthew Cobb, Frederic Marion-Poll. Insect Taste offers an accessible overview to some of the many advances in insect taste research. The book covers how insects solve the basic problem of taste gustatory processing, from detection and transduction, through coding to the generation of...
Categories: General Science