Skip to product information
1 of 1

Treatise on Zoology - Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology. The Myriapoda, Volume 1

Publisher:

Regular price $338.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $338.00
Sold out
Myriapods are the only major zoological group for which a modern encyclopedic treatment has never been produced. In particular, this was the single major gap in the largest zoological treatise of t...
Read More
  • 21 March 2011
View Product Details
Myriapods are the only major zoological group for which a modern encyclopedic treatment has never been produced. In particular, this was the single major gap in the largest zoological treatise of the XIX century (Grassé’s Traité de Zoologie), whose publication has recently been stopped. The two volumes of “The Myriapoda” fill that gap with an updated treatment in the English language.

Volume I opens with an introductory treatment of myriapod affinities and phylogeny. The following chapters are mostly devoted to the Chilopoda or centipedes, extensively treated from the point of view of external and internal morphology, physiology, reproduction, development, distribution, ecology, phylogeny and taxonomy. All currently recognized suprageneric and generic taxa are considered. Additional chapters deal with the two smaller myriapod classes, the Symphyla and the Pauropoda.

All groups and features are extensively illustrated by line drawings and micrographs and living specimens of representative species of the main groups are presented in color photographs.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $338.00
Pages: 540
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Treatise on Zoology - Anatomy, Taxonomy, Biology - The Myriapoda
Publication Date: 21 March 2011
ISBN: 9789004156111
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Alessandro Minelli, Professor of Zoology at the University of Padova, is the author of Biological Systematics (Chapman & Hall, 1993), The Development of Animal Form (Cambridge University Press, 2003), Perspectives in Animal Phylogeny and Evolution (Oxford University Press, 2009) and Forms of Becoming (Princeton University Press, 2009). His main research interest is, currently, the evolution of body architecture.