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Kin Recognition

Kin Recognition

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Cambridge University Press, 6/28/1991
EAN 9780521372671, ISBN10: 0521372674

Hardcover, 470 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 3 cm
Language: English

Kin recognition, the ability to identify and respond differentially to one's genetic relatives, is one of the fastest growing and most exciting areas of ethology. Dr Hepper has brought together leading researchers in the field to create a thought-provoking and critical analysis of our current knowledge of the phenomenon, with particular emphasis on the underlying processes involved, and their significance for the evolution of social behaviour. Students of animal behaviour and evolutionary biology will find this book an invaluable source of information and ideas.

Contributors
Preface
1. Introduction P. G. Hepper
2. The correlation between kinship and behaviour in non-human primates I. S. Bernstein
3. Cooperation and reciprocity in birds and mammals J. D. Ligon
4. Kinship and fellowship in ants and social wasps P. Jaisson
5. Successes and failures of parent-offspring recognition in animals M. D. Beecher
6. Kinship, kin discrimination and mate choice criteria C. J. Barnard and P. G. M. Aldous
7. Genetic components of kin recognition in mammals E. A. Boyse
8. Kin recognition in amphibians B. Waldman
9. Kin recognition cues of vertebrates Z. T. Halpin
10. Recognizing kin
ontogeny and classification P. G. Hepper
11. Parental states as mechanisms for kinship recognition and deception about relatedness R. W. Elwood
12. Fetal learning
implications for the development of kin recognition S. R. Robinson and W. P. Smotherman
13. Information processing and storage during filial imprinting M. H. Johnson
14. The honey bee as a model kin recognition system W. M. Getz
15. Mutual mother-infant recognition in humans R. H. Porter
References
Index.

"...useful, well edited and carefully balanced." Nature "This book updates an exciting and fast-moving field. It should appeal to a broad range of biologists and psychologists. The volume's strengths are its conceptual orientation and multiple investigative approaches." David W. Pfennig & Paul W. Sherman, Science "...a series of outstanding articles that examine how animals are able to recognize their kin...important for those professionals and graduate students interested in animal behavior." Choice "...extremely worthwhile. It is a must for kin recognition researchers, and it should also appeal to students of human and nonhuman behavior." George J. Gamboa, BioScience "...will be of great value to both investigators of kin recognition, and to the author or authors who produce the first complete synthesis of this field." Andrew Cockburn, Quarterly Review of Biology "...Hepper's volume contains many cautionary admonitions that primatologists would do well to heed." Donald Stone Sade, Iinternational Journal of Primatology