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Comparative Physiology of Vertebrate Respiration

por G. M. Hughes, George Morgan Hughes

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This book is a concise study of the structure and function of vertebrate respiratory systems. It describes not only the individual organ systems, but also the relationship of these systems to each other and to the animal's environment. For example, the author emphasizes that a proper understanding of respiration involves a consideration of the external environment as a source of oxygen as well as the biochemistry of the cell; and, from the evolutionary point of view, that physiological changes in the respiratory and circulatory systems are dominated by the origin of the land habit. The author's approach to the subject exemplifies that trend to the amalgamation of Zoology and Physiology, which has become increasingly marked at universities and schools in recent years. This synthesis requires, broadly, a knowledge of classical comparative anatomy, ecology, evolution, physiology and biochemistry; an enormous task, but nevertheless one in which the zoologist holds a central position. This book indicates the nature of such an eclectic approach, with the animal, in its environment and its evolution, as its focal point. Covering a rapidly changing field of research the author refers to many recent views and indicates where these differ from those commonly accepted.… (más)
Añadido recientemente porcheshire11, BMSC, CONASLIBRARY, rybie2, dmhudson, danielx
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This small book is a comprehensive account of respiration (gas exchange) in vertebrate animals. It is written at the level of the professional biologist, but understandable by graduate students and advanced undergraduates. It is now somewhat dated, as the one-way flow of air through the lung is no longer thought to be unique to birds, having been demonstrated in various extant reptiles. Likewise, our understanding of heart function in non-crocodilian reptiles is more sophisticated than was known in the early 1960s. Although I read this work carefully back in the early 1980s (and my copy of the book is filled with underlining and marginal notes), it has outlived its usefulness to me.

The book's coverage is indicated by its chapter headings, as follows:

1) Introduction
2) Aquatic respiration in fishes
3) Air breathing in fishes
4) Respiration of tetrapods
5) Metabolic activity of vertebrates
6) Control of respiration and body temperature
7) Transport of respiratory gases
8) The heart and circulatory system
9) Cellular respiration
10) Conclusions
1 vota danielx | Aug 6, 2023 |
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G. M. Hughesautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Hughes, George Morganautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
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This book is a concise study of the structure and function of vertebrate respiratory systems. It describes not only the individual organ systems, but also the relationship of these systems to each other and to the animal's environment. For example, the author emphasizes that a proper understanding of respiration involves a consideration of the external environment as a source of oxygen as well as the biochemistry of the cell; and, from the evolutionary point of view, that physiological changes in the respiratory and circulatory systems are dominated by the origin of the land habit. The author's approach to the subject exemplifies that trend to the amalgamation of Zoology and Physiology, which has become increasingly marked at universities and schools in recent years. This synthesis requires, broadly, a knowledge of classical comparative anatomy, ecology, evolution, physiology and biochemistry; an enormous task, but nevertheless one in which the zoologist holds a central position. This book indicates the nature of such an eclectic approach, with the animal, in its environment and its evolution, as its focal point. Covering a rapidly changing field of research the author refers to many recent views and indicates where these differ from those commonly accepted.

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