1st Edition

Insect Symbiosis, Volume 2

Edited By Kostas Bourtzis, Thomas A. Miller Copyright 2006
300 Pages 4 Color & 57 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

304 Pages
by CRC Press

Summarizing current knowledge on symbiotic organisms in the biology of insects, Insect Symbiosis, Volume II describes the diversity of symbiotic bacteria associated with pests such as whiteflies, aphids, mealybugs, psyllids, and tsetse flies. The book illustrates how symbiosis research has important ramifications for evolutionary biology, physiology, parasitology, genetics, and animal behavior... Read more
Diversity of Prokaryote–Insect Associations within the Sternorrhyncha (psyllids, whiteflies, aphids, mealybugs), P. Baumann
An Alpha-Proteobacterium Invades the Mitochondria of the Tick Ixodes ricinus, N. Lo, T. Beninati, L. Sacchi, and C. Bandi
Inherited Bacteroidetes Symbionts in Arthropods, M.S. Hunter and E. Zchori-Fein
Complexity of Insect–Fungal Associations: Exploring the Influence of Microorganisms on Attine Ant–Fungus Symbiosis, M. Poulsen and C.R. Currie
The Evolutionary Origin and Maintenance of the Mutualistic Symbiosis Between Termites and Fungi, D.K. Aamen and K.K. Boomsma
Mollicutes Associated with Arthropods and Plants, E.-D. Ammar and S.A. Hogenhout
A Newly Discovered Virus Manipulates Superparasitism Behavior in a Parasitoid Wasp, J. Varaldi, S. Gandon, A. Rivero, S. Patot, and F. Fleury
Symbiont Culture, A.C. Darby and S.C. Welburn
Comparative Genomics in Buchnera aphidicola, Primary Endosymbiont of Aphids, A. Latorre and A. Moya
Wolbachia Genomics: Accelerating Our Understanding of a Pervasive Symbiosis, J.C. Brownlie and S.L. O’Neill
The Role of Wolbachia in the Biology and Pathogenesis of Filari, J.D. Turner, J.M. Foster, M. Ganatra, B.E. Slatk, and M.J. Taylor
Paternal Sex Ratio Chromosomes in Parasitoid Wasps: An Overview of the Ins and Outs of These Extremely Selfish B chromosomes, J.J.F.A. van Vugt, H. de Jong, and R. Stouthamer
Insecticidal Bacterial Effectors from Symbionts of Insect-Killing Nematodes, R.H. ffrench-Constant, A. Dowling, and N. Waterfield
Insect Pest Control Using Wolbachia and/or Radiation, K. Bourtzis and A.S. Robinson
Paratransgenesis Applied to Control Insect-Transmitted Plant Pathogens: The Pierce’s Disease Case , T. Miller, C. Lauzon, D. Lampe, R. Durvasula, and S. Matthews Index

Biography

Kostas Bourtzis, Thomas A. Miller

Each reader will find chapters to delight him- or herself. … should find a home in every biology library… a solid introduction to students, and extensive reviews of the past 20 years of research for professional investigators. They also will provide hours of enjoyable reading. The books represent the flowering of decades of research by dozens of pioneering scientists, and show how important symbiosis is to the biological sciences. The topic is so rich, and the investigators so productive that the editors could continue to produce a new volume every 3 years, indefinitely. Let’s hope they do.
—Michael F. Dolan, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA, in Symbiosis

We have a great deal to learn about this planet where animals thrive in symbioses with microorganisms and we can learn much about it here.
—From the Preface by Lynn Margulis, Distinguished Professor, Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts

Bourtzis … and Miller … present 15 contributions covering such topics as mollicutes associated with arthropods and plants, the evolutionary origin and maintenance of the mutualistic symbiosis between termites and fungi, paternal sex ratio chromosomes in parasitoid wasps, and insect pest control using Wolbachia and/or radiation, among others.
SciTech Book News, December 2006

Co-editor Thomas Miller has been awarded the G.J. Mendel Honorary Medal for Merit in the Biological Sciences. By awarding this medal, the Academy Council gives its highest recognition to Dr. Miller’s outstanding achievements, which have been acknowledged worldwide.
—Academy of  Sciences of the Czech Republic

This excellent overview of some of the relationships between insects and the various microorganisms that live within them should trigger additional research on the ‘bugs’ of interest to you. The chapters each contain numerous references and excellent illustrations, including color figures in the center of the volume. Run, don’t walk, to get a copy of this book; it just may change how you think about your ‘bugs’
—Marjorie A. Hoy, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA, in Florida Entomologist 86 (4)