Parasites, People, and Places: Essays on Field ParasitologyProfessor Gerald W. Esch, one of the world's leading ecological parasitologists, presents a series of essays on classic examples of field parasitology. The essays focus on the significance of the work and its contribution to the field but also on the people and, particularly, the sites at which the work took place. Taken together, they represent a beautifully written account of the development of an entire field of scientific endeavor spanning a period of 50 years or more. While the essays are not meant to be academic in a scientific sense, they contain a great deal of science. The book will be of great value to all parasitologists and ecologists, but also to anyone interested in how biological field work is carried out and how it contributes to greater understanding of the natural world. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 29
Page viii
... described by none other than Henry Baldwin Ward as the " father " of American parasitology . Some refer to Ward in this regard . If the latter are correct , then I guess we could say that Leidy is the " grandfather , " though not of the ...
... described by none other than Henry Baldwin Ward as the " father " of American parasitology . Some refer to Ward in this regard . If the latter are correct , then I guess we could say that Leidy is the " grandfather , " though not of the ...
Page 14
... described parasites as being distributed in their host populations . I showed the paper to one of the ecologists at KBS , a really good one too , and his reaction was kind of , oh hum ! In other words , he didn't get it . For a while ...
... described parasites as being distributed in their host populations . I showed the paper to one of the ecologists at KBS , a really good one too , and his reaction was kind of , oh hum ! In other words , he didn't get it . For a while ...
Page 20
... described by Yamaguti in Japan some 50 years before and , I would add , a parasite that had not been previously present in Belews Lake . This cestode is what one might call the ultimate opportunist among fish parasites . First described ...
... described by Yamaguti in Japan some 50 years before and , I would add , a parasite that had not been previously present in Belews Lake . This cestode is what one might call the ultimate opportunist among fish parasites . First described ...
Page 28
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Page 42
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Contents
From Elbing in Kansas to Elblag in Poland | 27 |
Slapton Ley and other matters British | 47 |
Ecological studies in Charlies Pond a stream of consciousness | 69 |
Douglas Lake early field parasitology in North America | 97 |
A day in the life of a field parasitology student Janovy style | 124 |
Other editions - View all
Parasites, People, and Places: Essays on Field Parasitology Gerald W. Esch No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
acanthocephalan Algonquin Park anceps aquatic began Belews Lake Biological Station biology birds Brent Canadian Carolina Cedar Point cercariae cestode Charlie's Pond Clive Kennedy collected Colorado Cort Crofton cycle Darwin definitive host developed disease Douglas Lake early ecology eggs Elblag epidemiology essay eutrophication Exeter fauna field parasitology field station fish fluke genetic Goater going graduate students green frogs Gull Lake Halipegus occidualis helminth helminth parasites hookworm host-parasite humans hypolimnion idea infected interactions interesting intermediate host John Janovy Journal of Parasitology Lake Druzno large numbers larval long-term malaria Master's Michigan Mick molecular moose Nebraska necropsy neurocysticercosis North America Oklahoma paper parasite's parasitology course Ph.D Platte plerocercoids problem Professor Pudoc rediae River roach schistosome Slapton Ley snails solium species SREL summer swimmer's itch tapeworm teaching temperature things tion transmission trematode turtles UMBS undergraduate University Wake Forest Wisniewski wonderful worms Zoology
Popular passages
Page 1 - Living backwards!" Alice repeated in great astonishment. "I never heard of such a thing!" " — but there's one great advantage in it, that one's memory works both ways." "I'm sure mine only works one way," Alice remarked. "I ca'n't remember things before they happen." "It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards,
Page 7 - Dodds is an Associate Professor of Nutrition at the School of Public Health of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
References to this book
Parasites and Infectious Disease: Discovery by Serendipity and Otherwise Gerald Esch Limited preview - 2007 |