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Язык оригинала | не определен |
---|---|
Название основной публикации | Arctic Biodiversity Assessment (The Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF), Arctic Council) |
Страницы | 560, 420–449 |
Состояние | Опубликовано - 2013 |
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Chapter 15. Parasites. / Hoberg, E.P.; Kutz, S.J.; Cook, J.; Galaktionov, K.V.; Haukisalmi, V.; Henttonen, H.; Laaksonen, S.; Makarikov, A.; Marcogliese, D.J.
Arctic Biodiversity Assessment (The Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF), Arctic Council). 2013. стр. 560, 420–449.Результат исследований: Публикации в книгах, отчётах, сборниках, трудах конференций › глава/раздел › научная › рецензирование
TY - CHAP
T1 - Chapter 15. Parasites
AU - Hoberg, E.P.
AU - Kutz, S.J.
AU - Cook, J.
AU - Galaktionov, K.V.
AU - Haukisalmi, V.
AU - Henttonen, H.
AU - Laaksonen, S.
AU - Makarikov, A.
AU - Marcogliese, D.J.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Parasites are among the most common organisms on the planet, and represent diverse members of all biological communities. Parasites tie communities together, revealing or telling stories about critical connections established by a history of evolution, ecology (food habits, foraging behavior, interactions among host species) and biogeography (patterns of geographic distribution) for host populations, species, ecosystems and regional faunas that constitute the biosphere. As such these organisms tell us about the processes, biological (e.g. range shifts, invasion) and physical (e.g. climate variation), that have determined the patterns of diversity that we observe in high latitude ecosystems. Parasites can have subtle to severe effects on individual hosts or broader impacts on host populations which may cascade through ecosystems. Parasitic diseases have dual significance: 1. influencing sustainability for species and populations of invertebrates, fishes, birds and mammals, and 2. secondarily affecting food
AB - Parasites are among the most common organisms on the planet, and represent diverse members of all biological communities. Parasites tie communities together, revealing or telling stories about critical connections established by a history of evolution, ecology (food habits, foraging behavior, interactions among host species) and biogeography (patterns of geographic distribution) for host populations, species, ecosystems and regional faunas that constitute the biosphere. As such these organisms tell us about the processes, biological (e.g. range shifts, invasion) and physical (e.g. climate variation), that have determined the patterns of diversity that we observe in high latitude ecosystems. Parasites can have subtle to severe effects on individual hosts or broader impacts on host populations which may cascade through ecosystems. Parasitic diseases have dual significance: 1. influencing sustainability for species and populations of invertebrates, fishes, birds and mammals, and 2. secondarily affecting food
M3 - глава/раздел
SN - 978-9935-431-22-6
SP - 560, 420–449
BT - Arctic Biodiversity Assessment (The Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF), Arctic Council)
ER -