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 Location:  Home » Shark Fishing Books » Ecology » Plant-Arthropod Interactions in the Early Angiosperm History: Evidence from the Cretaceous of IsraelDecember 2, 2008  
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Plant-Arthropod Interactions in the Early Angiosperm History: Evidence from the Cretaceous of Israel
Creators: Valentin Krassilov, Alexandr Rasnitsyn
Publisher: Pensoft Publishers
Category: Book

Buy New: $247.50
Buy New/Used from $247.50

Sales Rank: 4386290

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 229
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.5 x 0.8

ISBN: 9546423157
Dewey Decimal Number: 560
EAN: 9789546423153
ASIN: 9546423157

Publication Date: July 30, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Paleontologists just recently opened their eyes on the wealth of fossil documents relevant to plant - arthropod interaction and are busy now accumulating raw data in the first place. Perhaps the richest regional collection of interaction traces came from the mid-Cretaceous deposits of the Negev Desert, Israel, encompassing the time interval of the rise and basal radiation of angiosperms - the flowering plants. The arthropods (insects and mites) inserting their eggs in the leaves and making leaf mines and galls were discovering new possibilities for endophytic life that the flowering plants provided. Their morphological disparity suggests a diversification race, in which the angiosperms failed to override their leaf parasites.Only a small fraction of insect diversity is represented by body fossils that belong to one extinct and nine extant families of beetles and cockroaches mostly. Because similar structures are produced on leaves by parasitic arthropods of different systematic alliances, a purely morphological classification is worked out for the trace fossils, with but tentative assignments to natural taxa, but referring to distinct types of parasitic behavior. It is evolution of behavior that is documented by the trace fossils. The body fossils and parasitic traces represent the morphologies and behavioral traits fairly advanced for their geological age. The expressiveness, abundance, co-occurrence, and host specialization of parasitic structures, as well as the marks of predation on mines and galls betray regulatory mechanisms of plant - arthropod interaction, analyzed in the broad context of ecosystem evolution, paleogeography and climate change.

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