Chemical Ecology: from Gene to Ecosystem

Proceedings of the Frontis Workshop on Chemical Ecology: from Gene to Ecosystem
Wageningen, The Netherlands 19-23 March 2005
Editors:
Marcel Dicke
Laboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Willem Takken
Laboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Series editor:
R.J. Bogers
Frontis – Wageningen International Nucleus for Strategic Expertise
Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, The Netherlands
About the book | Table of Contents
Chemical ecology is the ecology of body odour. Every organism
uses chemical information in intra- and interspecific
interactions. Animals emit chemicals to attract a mate or to
prevent a competitor from mating with the partner they just mated
with. Plants emit chemicals to recruit other organisms to take
care of their sex life or to attract bodyguards to defend them
against their enemies. Chemical cues mediate a whole gamut of
interactions in plant and animal communities. Chemical cues are
used to communicate, but can also be exploited in espionage or
eavesdropping. To understand the ecology of chemical signalling
in communities one needs to carry out manipulative experiments.
Such experiments have been done throughout the last century.
However, in recent years the degree of precision with which such
experiments can be done has grown tremendously as a result of
rapidly increasing knowledge at the molecular-genetic level. This
opens exciting new avenues to chemical ecologists. The connection
of molecular genetics to community ecology and ecosystem ecology
provides novel tools to take up old questions that were often
hard to answer.
This book provides an overview of chemical ecology related to
different ecosystems and an outlook at novel directions that can
be taken in chemical ecology through a molecular-ecological or
eco-genomic approach. The book addresses above- and belowground
terrestrial systems as well as aquatic systems, and the organisms
involved are micro- and macro-organisms, such as plants,
arthropods and mammals. The scientific approach presented in this
book is characteristic of modern biological research.
The book will be useful for scientists and students interested in
ecology in general as well those working in the fields of
molecular, chemical, behavioural, population or community ecology.
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