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Book
Lizard Ecology: The Evolutionary Consequences of Foraging Mode
Department of Biology Faculty Bookshelf
  • Stephen M. Reilly, Ohio University
  • Lance D. McBrayer, Georgia Southern University
  • Donald B. Miles, Ohio University
Contributors
Georgia Southern faculty member Lance D. McBrayer co-edited Lizard Ecology: The Evolutionary Consequences of Foraging Mode in collaboration with non-faculty members Stephen M. Reilly and Donald B. Miles.
Abstract

Book Summary: The foraging mode of lizards has been a central theme in guiding research in lizard biology for three decades. Foraging mode has been shown to be a pervasive evolutionary force molding the diet, ecology, behavior, anatomy, biomechanics, life history, and physiology of lizards. This 2007 volume reviews the knowledge on the effects of foraging mode on these and other organismal systems to show how they have evolved, over a wide taxonomic survey of lizard groups. The reviews presented here reveal the continuous nature of foraging strategies in lizards and snakes, providing the reader with a review of the field, and will equip researchers with fresh insights and directions for the sit-and-wait vs. wide foraging paradigm. This will serve as a reference book for herpetologists, evolutionary biologists, ecologists and animal behaviorists.

  • Includes end-of-chapter review questions, allowing the reader to monitor their understanding of the material presented
  • Provides the first critical evaluation of the sit-and-wait vs. foraging paradigm: shifts the paradigm from dichotomous to continuum
  • Provides reviews of the field for both general and specialist readers

Publication Date
7-1-2007
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISBN for this edition (13-digit)
9780521833585
Disciplines
Citation Information
Stephen M. Reilly, Lance D. McBrayer and Donald B. Miles. Lizard Ecology: The Evolutionary Consequences of Foraging Mode. 1st EditionCambride, UK(2007) p. 1 - 558
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lance-mcbrayer/16/