Embryos : color atlas of development
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Bibliographic Information
Embryos : color atlas of development
Wolfe, 1994
Available at / 24 libraries
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Hokkaido University, Library, Graduate School of Science, Faculty of Science and School of Science図書
dc20:574.33/b2352070307238
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
Rapid advances in developmental biology and molecular genetics have highlighted the growing need for a visual guide to the development of the major embryos used in laboratories world-wide. It is increasingly important that all biologists are familiar with the wide range of these embryos, each of which offers unique insights into one of the most exciting and challenging quests in biology: how does a complex adult animal develop from a single cell?
This atlas summarizes the early development of twelve key embryos. Jonathan Bard has brought together a team of experts to illustrate and write about the development of their own preferred research embryos-from plants, through primitive systems such as the slime mold, invertebrates (worms, mollusks, sea urchins, leeches, and Drosophila) to vertebrates (fish, toad, chick, mouse, and human). Each chapter has sections on the advantages of the embryo as an experimental system, an illustrated description of normal development, well-known developmental mutants, discussions of experimental manipulations, the future potential for the embryo, and key references.
Table of Contents
Arabidopsis (G. Jurgens and U. Mayer). Dictyostelium discoideum (R.R. Kay and R.H Insall). The Sea Urchin (J. Hardin). Caenorhabditis elegans, the Nematode Worm (I.A. Hope). Molluscs (J.A.M. van den Biggelaar, W.J.A.G. Dictus, and F. Serras). The Leech (D.A. Weisblat). Drosophila (M. Leptin). The Zebrafish (W.K. Metcalfe). Xenopus and Other Amphibians (J.M.W. Slack). The Chick (C.D. Stern). The Mouse (J.B.L. Bardd and M.H. Kaufman). The Human (M.A. England). Index.
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