Overview
- Editors:
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Jeanette A. Thomas
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Office of Aquatic Studies, Western Illinois University, Macomb, USA
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Ronald A. Kastelein
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Harderwijk Marine Mammal Park, Harderwijk, The Netherlands
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Alexander Ya. Supin
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Severtsov Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology of Animals, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian Federation
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Table of contents (48 chapters)
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Sensory Systems and Behavior
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- Robert Gisiner, Ronald J. Schusterman
Pages 643-662
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- Thomas A. Jefferson, Bernd Würsig, Dagmar Fertl
Pages 663-684
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- Ron Kastelein, Piet Mosterd, Nancy Vaughan
Pages 685-700
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- Jon Lien, Wayne Barney, Sean Todd, Rosie Seton, John Guzzwell
Pages 701-708
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- Louis M. Herman, Adam A. Pack
Pages 709-726
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- Sean Todd, Jon Lien, Amy Verhulst
Pages 727-739
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- Lorenzo von Fersen, Constance S. Manos, Boris Goldowsky, Herbert Roitblat
Pages 753-762
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Back Matter
Pages 767-773
About this book
This book is a collection of original research papers given at a symposium entitled "Sensory Systems and Behavior of Aquatic Mammals", hosted by the USSR Academy of Sciences. The meeting was held in Moscow from 16 to 25 October, 1991 and involved nearly 100 scientists from around the world. The major headings of the book correspond to the session topics at the symposium. This meeting was not the first dedicated to problems of sensory systems in aquatic mammals. Experts in this field met several times previously to discuss important problems of sensory functions in echolocating animals. symposia on biosonar systems were held in Frascati, Italy in 1966, then in Jersey, France in 1978, and in Helsingor, Denmark in 1986. Papers presented at these meetings were pUblished in books that advanced significantly the understanding of sensory systems (Busnel and Fish, 1980; Nachtigall and Moore, 1988). Initially, echolocating bats were the main subjects of consideration. However, studies on echolocating aquatic mammals, whales and dolphins, increased from one meeting to the next. Indeed, aquatic mammals are of exceptional interest for studying the adaptation of sensory functions for echolocation in specific aquatic environments. As a natural consequence of these developments, the 1989 symposium in Rome was devoted specifically to the sensory systems of cetaceans (Thomas and Kastelein, 1990). This symposium was held within the Fifth International Theriological Congress and was attended by many scientists.
Editors and Affiliations
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Office of Aquatic Studies, Western Illinois University, Macomb, USA
Jeanette A. Thomas
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Harderwijk Marine Mammal Park, Harderwijk, The Netherlands
Ronald A. Kastelein
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Severtsov Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology of Animals, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian Federation
Alexander Ya. Supin