FROM THE PREFACE: Dramatic changes occur in the physiology of most animals during their development. Among the vertebrates, birds are entirely oviparous, live for variable periods in a cleidoic egg, and show fundamental alterations in excretion, nutrition, and respiration at the time of hatching. In contrast, the eutherian mammals are all viviparous, depend on the maternal circulation and a specialized placenta to provide food, exchange gases, and discharge wastes. The physiology of both mother and fetus is highly specialized during gestation and changes fundamentally at the time of birth. Fishes exemplify both the oviparous and the viviparous modes of development, with some examples that are intermediate between the two. In these two volumes, selected reviews of many, but not all, aspects of development are presented. The chapters in Part A relate to the physiology of eggs and larvae; those in Part B concern viviparity and the physiology of posthatching juvenile fishes.
Author(s): W.S. Hoar and D.J. Randall (Eds.)
Series: Fish Physiology 11, Part B
Publisher: Academic Press
Year: 1988
Language: English
Pages: ii-ix, 1-436
Content:
Contributors
Page ii
Edited by
Page iii
Copyright page
Page iv
Contributors
Page vii
Preface
Page ix
W.S. Hoar, D.J. Randall
1 The Maternal-Embryonic Relationship in Viviparous Fishes Original Research Article
Pages 1-134
John P. Wourms, Bryon D. Grove, Julian Lombardi
2 First Metamorphosis Original Research Article
Pages 135-196
John H. Youson
3 Factors Controlling Meristic Variation Original Research Article
Pages 197-274
C.C. Lindsey
4 The Physiology of Smolting Salmonids Original Research Article
Pages 275-343
W.S. Hoar
5 Ontogeny of Behavior and Concurrent Developmental Changes in Sensory Systems in Teleost Fishes Original Research Article
Pages 345-395
David L.G. Noakes, Jean-Guy J. Godin
Author Index
Pages 397-414
Systematic Index
Pages 415-425
Subject Index
Pages 427-436